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Sez Who? And how many was that?
The P-38 could actually hold its own in a turning fight with a Zero. It has been reported than Bong turned inside Zeros at fairly low speeds.
Don't know how many, the stat is according to the US Army Air Corps (USAAC) and US Department of Defense records. This is not surprising since the Lightning was one of the main (and often THE main) USAAC fighters for three+ years in the Pacific Theater.
I believe the Hellcat was the #1 killer of Japanese planes.
cheddar cheese said:Ive never read anything other than that the P-38 scored the most against the Japanese. Where'd you get that information?
1st Place: F6F with 5163 (just bombers and fighters)
2d Place: F4U with 2138 (just bombers and fighters)
3d Place: P-38 with 1700 (all types)
And USAAF in the Pacific (Cental, Southwest, and Aleutians) recorded some 3715 credited victories. The F6F beat that all by itself.
1st Place: F6F with 5163 (just bombers and fighters)
2d Place: F4U with 2138 (just bombers and fighters)
3d Place: P-38 with 1700 (all types)
And USAAF in the Pacific (Cental, Southwest, and Aleutians) recorded some 3715 credited victories. The F6F beat that all by itself.
KraziKanuK said:cheddar cheese said:Ive never read anything other than that the P-38 scored the most against the Japanese. Where'd you get that information?
That is because you missed the part that said 'USAAF'.
In the MTO and the Pacific The P-38 was the best. Historians credit it with 5,730+ in the PTO and 608 in the MTO ( included in the 2,500). Considering they did this while doing Close escort, ground attack and more experienced adversaries And less aircraft 10,000 P-38s (8,200+ kills total for the war) to 15,000+ p-51s (5,932 kills for the war) and 16,000 P-47s (7,000+ kills for the war) is even more remarkable.
1st Place: F6F with 5163 (just bombers and fighters)
2d Place: F4U with 2138 (just bombers and fighters)
3d Place: P-38 with 1700 (all types)
And USAAF in the Pacific (Cental, Southwest, and Aleutians) recorded some 3715 credited victories. The F6F beat that all by itself.
R Leonard said:Not in the Navy. And I can't find anything that indicates the Army did, either. As far as I know the only folks who got credit for ground kills were the AVG. Do you have an official source for that? I'd be interesting in seeing it.
Regards,
Rich
.There seems to be considerable differences in the numbers, and by the first quote, the F6F/F4U combined comes in second place. I have not been able to to attribute any of the above numbers, but what I have found is that one fighter group, the 475th (top scoring Group in the war), accounted for over 550 enemy planes. This would seem to raise doubt about your number of 1700, since there were many fighter groups using P-38's during the Pacific War