33k in the air
Staff Sergeant
- 1,354
- Jan 31, 2021
Nice summary.
To an extent the bombs dropped are the official fiction, given how to count what happened to the bombs of aircraft that went missing, was it before, or after the target or an alternative?
The day bombers are recorded as dropping 32 different types of HE, and 22 different types of incendiary bombs, counting the clusters as a different bomb type, the night bombers 42 different HE types and 23 different types of incendiary bombs, plus 1,584 twenty pound fragmentation bombs on 4 July 1944 and 119 tins of deckers in July 1941.
Various minor types like 4,000 pound RDX (6), GP (217) and MC (537). What the graphic calls 4,000 pound MC is 4,000 pound M2.
2,000 pound AP, 1,051 by day and 1,239 by night. Interestingly mines dropped in canals in 1940 are 1,500 pound HE bombs in the records.
The 500 pound incendiaries were US ones. US 500 pound incendiaries dropped by Bomber Command,
360 on 5/6 April 1944
86 on 10/11 April 1944
166 on 26/27 April 1944
Total 612, all by Lancasters.
Also dropped on 26/27 April 1944, 109x250 pound TI, 55x250 pound spot fires and 460 flares.
(Mosquito 35 marker bombs, 8 spot fires, 18 flares, Lancasters, 74 marker bombs, 47 spot fires, 442 flares)
Number 16 incendiary cluster,
day raids, used 22, 25 and 27 March 1945
night raids used 13 February, 7, 8, 16 and 18 March 1945
Day raids incendiary clusters dropped,
No 4, 829
No 14, 19,010
No 15, 4,336
No 16, 426
No 17, 3,091
No 14 X, 1,167
No 15 X, 122
Night raids incendiary clusters dropped,
No 4, 28,686
No 14, 75,664
No 15, 11,243
No 16, 1,027
No 17, 2,614
No 14 X, 4,317
No 15 X, 131
Source Air 14/927 to 931, RAF Form 1273, Bomber Command Summaries, and Air 22/203 the 1945 War Room Manual, or else random number generator alpha 9c.
Are those documents available online?
If not, would you mind sharing more of the data that it contains?