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Jumo 004A engine could have been mass produced during 1943.
Are you suggesting it was possible to mass produce a reliable jet engine before 1943?
I bet 1500 Meteors shooting down 150 Luftwaffe planes would be an example of hreat success...
Ok, I will show myself the door.
Oh I don't catch it. Most of us seem to think that 262 was a better fighter than Meteor III.
Juha
According to Adolph Galland, about 1,430 Me 262's were accepted for Luftwaffe service, but no more than about 300 total saw combat, with no more than about 50 - 60 in service at any one time. If anyone would know, he should know.
The few that saw combat shot down about 150 Allied planes.
Given the engine life issues, I don't think it did all that badly. It was a case of new technology not quite mastered in time to make a difference, but it certainly showed the way for future generations of jet fighters.
The 004A had vibration problems. The alloy compressor blades were switched out for steel units and bench tested with a 10 hour endurance with positive results. This was in December 1941. 3 months later it was carried up by a Bf110 for testing.Jumo 004B engine did not achieve 100 hour reliability until early 1945. The switch to hollow turbine blades caused vibration problems which required time to sort out.
Jumo 004A was an earlier variant of the same engine which Germany chose not to place into mass production. 80 prototypes were built to allow Me-262 airframe testing and to gain experience with jet engines in general.
The answer is yes. Like I posted earlier in the thread, *if* the RLM had taken Von Ohain and Heinkel seriously in the late 30's and sponsored the R&D nessecary, they could have had key issues worked out before the war began in earnest and production became a crisis resulting in mad scramble for materials, hiding production facilities and so on.Jumo 004A engine could have been mass produced during 1943.
Are you suggesting it was possible to mass produce a reliable jet engine before 1943?
And greatest number of 262 day fighter sorties flown was 76 on 10 April 45, USAAF lost 19 bombers and 8 fighters on that day, but 31 Me 262s were shot down. And because USAAF fighters strafed extensively on that day (they were credited with 309 strafing kills altogether) at least some of US losses fell to the Flak.
This combat record is what makes me hold the me 262 in such high regard, US fighters were staggered meaning that the me 262s climbing to take on the bomber formations were attacked from 6000ft then 8000ft and so on....yet they were able to score victories, imagine instead of me 262s they were Fw 190 D9, P51 D, or Spitfire 14, how well do you think they would have fared.
According to Adolph Galland, about 1,430 Me 262's were accepted for Luftwaffe service, but no more than about 300 total saw combat, with no more than about 50 - 60 in service at any one time. If anyone would know, he should know.
The few that saw combat shot down about 150 Allied planes.
Given the engine life issues, I don't think it did all that badly. It was a case of new technology not quite mastered in time to make a difference, but it certainly showed the way for future generations of jet fighters.
Not really, at most one Elektroboot could be constructed per day. If the Germans were to win the Battle of the Atlantic, they needed hundreds of operational subs at any given time. And that is assuming that these subs have the edge as they did in 1941.Personally having read up on the subject some I think the electro-boat (type 21 U-boat) had much more potential to alter things as they turned out to knock the UK out of the war - and given that in large part even it was firmly rooted in it WW1 U-boat tech I think that would have been a better bet for Germany, the large investment in the less capable type 7 class need never have happened saving resources giving the KM a much more deadly weapon at sea.
Pre-fab'ed construction (once the bugs were ironed out) could have had them spitting them out like sausages.
What the germans needed over quality was quantity, and the Me 262 didnt go to that. in fact, because of the difficulties in serviceability for the new type, it would be quite arguable that the type would have acted to decrease the effectiveness of German air defences. its the same argument as that which dogs the tiger tank fans.
I think that Adam Tooze either has VERY limited access to historical records or sees history from his own perspective.