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Number of Bombs Dropped in Theaters vs Germany, By Type of Bomb: 1943 to Aug 1945
Army Air Forces in World War II
Do you have source for this? While the 303BG is not the 8th AF I have looked at over 60 missions ( out of over 300) and found no mention of 1600lb bombs. this bomb has very little use for attacking anything but big ships. It is usually listed as an "AP" bomb and not "SAP" and carries less explosive than a 500lb GP bomb.
The ability to carry the 1000lb bombs end for end may depend on the bomb rack set up. the room may be there. The Mosquito bomb bay may still not offer the flexibility of the B-17 bomb bay (and that had restrictions of it's own).
Most B-17s could only carry four 2000lb bombs if they carried two of them externally. They could carry eight 1600lb of 1000lbs internally plus two externally but not very far. There is a B-17 manual on this site and page 53(?) shows the bomb rack chart for B-17Fs and Gs. Rack limits (barring typos or misprints) seem to limit the B-17 to loads of twenty four 100lb bombs, sixteen 300lb bombs, twelve 500lb bombs. Of course combinations could be carried but just because there is excess weight or volume available doesn't mean you can stick what ever you want in it.
Those incendiaries are in bundles and attached to racks and/or release mechanisms are they not? I guess it depends on which incendiaries are used (some were much more "bomb like") and if the Mosquito's (or other light/medium bomber) bombay had the "flexibility of the Lancaster's. The "roof" of the Lancaster bay seems to have been a grid that various attachments could be hooked to or put through holes from above by crewmen with access from above. Other bombers may not have had the same access or adaptability.
Do we have historical accuracy data for Mosquitoes bombing from 5,000 to 10,000 feet?
If true then why do people think the Mosquito was such a great light bomber?
The site where I have got data for British bombs in the past appears to be dead.
http://www.wwiiequipment.com/
The British 1000lb MC bomb was 17.75in in diameter and 52.5in long. The older 1000 GP was also 52.5in long, 16.15in in diameter. We know that the 4000lb HC "cookie" was 30in in diameter, and was not the full width of the bomb bay, and 110in long, and also not the full length of the bomb bay. If they couldn't carry two 1000lb MC/GP bombs side by side it is likely they could have carried them end for end.
If true then why do people think the Mosquito was such a great light bomber?
My mistake, the length dimensions I quoted for the 1000lb bombs were for the body. The overall length of the GP bomb could be 86.5in or 71in and for the MC bomb 72.6in.
So the 1000lb bombs could not possibly be carried end to end in a Mosquito bomb bay.
Thank you for the correction/information. Perhaps they could be carried side by side? it might depend on the release gear, and clearance going through the doors?
Going back to the original question, the Mosquito fine a plane as it was, could not really replace B-17s on a one for one basis. The B-17 had a rather restricted bomb bay of it's own, both in length and in width with the central catwalk/beam. It could how ever carry 100lb, 250/300lb, 500lb, 600lb, 1000lb, 1600lb, and 2,000lb bombs inside. It could also carry a variety of incendiary bombs, many of the early ones were in normal looking bomb casings and mounted to standard racks and were not the clusters that came into use later. These incendiary bombs were lighter in weight than the GP bombs for their volume and reduced the bomb load due to volume/rack space considerations.
To drop an equal "tonnage" of bombs to B-17s you need at least 2 Mosquitoes and more likely 2 1/2 Mosquitoes for many targets deep in Germany. 4000lb cookies excepted and from altitude the accuracy of the 4000lb cookie was worse than normal bombs.
It is quite possible that the Mosquitoes might have been able to deliver this tonnage with fewer losses but the loss rate was unknown when production decisions had to be made and while the Mosquito with it's two man crew certainly looks attractive compared to the crew of a B-17 aircrew are not interchangeable. You may not be able to turn gunners/radio operators into pilots and navigators. In US service many Navigators/bombardiers were actually men who washed out of flight school.
From the mission reports of the 303BG it seems that on occasion the B-17s used mixed loads but it may have been just as common to use one group or squadron with one type of bomb and another group or squadron with another type of bomb on the same target. this may be because the ballistics of the different bombs needed different release points. When bombing by squadron or group all planes should use the same bombs. It may be this mixed loading that gave rise to the B-17 could only carry 4000lb to Berlin claim. They could actually carry 5,000lb of GP bombs (either ten 500lb or five 1000lb) but only about 3,000lb of incendiaries.
We still have the timing issue. The decision to equip with Mosquitoes would have had to have been made well before most of the capabilities of the Mosquito became known or were developed.
You cannot bomb effectively without taking some risks. 10,000 feet is low enough for acceptable accuracy yet high enough to minimize the light flak danger.
I don't think bombing from very low altitude (say 500 feet) will work for a large aircraft formation. The Luftwaffe had warning of most air raids from acoustic detection and EW intercepts even before the bombers showed up on radar. Forewarned 3.7cm flak would murder enemy aircraft at that altitude.
You cannot bomb effectively without taking some risks. 10,000 feet is low enough for acceptable accuracy yet high enough to minimize the light flak danger.
I don't think bombing from very low altitude (say 500 feet) will work for a large aircraft formation. The Luftwaffe had warning of most air raids from acoustic detection and EW intercepts even before the bombers showed up on radar. Forewarned 3.7cm flak would murder enemy aircraft at that altitude.