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Regarding this thread, best air force WW2, quantitatively, the US Forces stand alone. Qualitatively, I believe the US wins hands down. Not to denigrate the other air forces because they made a lot of chicken salad out of chicken feathers but the US had the designers, manufacturers and most of all the financial ability to, once they got going build more and better AC than anyone else.
Syscom3, the Me-262, Ta-152H, Fw-190 Dora-13, Ar-234, He-162, Ar-232, Me-163 Ju-388 were very real in WW2 though.
The Ta-152H first saw service in late 1944 and it was far superior to any Allied fighter throughout.
The Me-262A1 first flew in 1943 and was far superior to any Allied fighter.
The FW-190 Dora-13 first saw service in late 1944 and was better than any Allied fighter.
The Ar-232 saw service beginning in 1943 and was the first truly modern transport a/c.
The Ar-234 Ju-388 both saw service in 1944 and were both the best recce a/c of the war.
Hi Bill,
Pardon my English, it's sometimes difficult for me to make clear statements in English. What I meant was that on average, in 1939/1940, the operational USAAF aircraft were inferior to their German and English brothers, being P39/P40B against Bf109/Spitfire etc.
Your English is far better than my Italian, French and Spanish combined
The P38, P51 and P47 might have been in the upper part, but so were the Spitfire (1936), Bf109 (1934), Fw190 (1939), Typhoon (1941) etc. And most of them much older than the american design.
Totally agreed - but the P-38 emerged in 1939 along with Fw 190 and Typhoon and except for the disastrous 'publicity mission, which crashed the prototype and set the program back two years might have put a P38L quality version into mid 1943. (another 'what if'
You're right, I don't have accounts of Tempest doing longrange escorts. The british bombed at night and if they needed escort fighters it would have been nightfighters, for which either the Tempest or the P51 would have been wholy unsuited. The Americans had the requirement with their daybombing and used their 'own' P51. My mentioning of the Tempest only had the purpose of showing that the british could and did design a fighter with the same range as the mustang which was at least as capable as the P51. So the Tempest wasn't assigned to the role, but on contrary to the Ta152 has been used for a longer period of time, showing it's capabilities.
I am a great fan of the Tempest V and not denigrating the 'what if' possibility. The USAAF would have loved to had this fighter in production and in 8th AF inventory in 1943.. there might not have been a Mustang Story
I'm not opposing that the USAAF was the best A/F in WWII, but the argument of quality of the planes is not a very strong one IMO. Of course their planes were of great quality, but so were the British and German's. The question still remains, would the USAAF have been as good in circumstances like the Uk in the beginning of the war or Germany in the latter half of the war?
Dragon how many men were in a US Group, aircraft ,pilots ,maintainers admin logistics in total?
In a RCAF fighter wing it was 54 aircraft 78 pilots 345 maintainers and 300 admin ,logistics etc. for a total of 728 all ranks and trades
Irrelevant, because in 1944, the USA was ascendent. In 1945, the US just got stronger and stronger.
Ultimatley, its who has what in the end, not what the score is at the start.
In every conceivable catagory, with the exception of point defense fighter, night fighter and jet fighter, the US was supreme.
Syscom3, the Me-262, Ta-152H, Fw-190 Dora-13, Ar-234, He-162, Ar-232, Me-163 Ju-388 were very real in WW2 though.
The Ta-152H first saw service in late 1944 and it was far superior to any Allied fighter throughout.
I thought the first operational Ta 152H-1 was in mid Jan 1945. When did it replace a Squadron for first time? How many squadrons were ultimatel deployed. The 51H was deployed in March to operational squadrons in March, ditto F7F to USMC in PTO
The Me-262A1 first flew in 1943 and was far superior to any Allied fighter.
I wouldn't argue that it wasn't superior but point out that it didn't have enough of an edge over the P-80 to compensate for inferior pilot. The P-80 could have been pressed into combat in 1945 - at least in same stage of development and production status as He-162 which as I recall did not see combat in squadron unit strength until April 1845
The FW-190 Dora-13 first saw service in late 1944 and was better than any Allied fighter.
Soren - I have seen flight test docs pertaining -13 Dora but have not seen where it went operational into squadron units? Which units received them first and when?
I agree excellent performance, disagree that it is flat better - depends on mission and operating altitude doesn't it? It was faster at higher altitudes than 190D-9 because of engine choice for extreme high altitude - but less than Ta 152, for which it was the 'bridge'. The 51H would have been a formidable adversary as well as latest Tempests and Spits, dropping in comparison above 33-35,000 feet, but would the -13, even in large numbers with reliable 213E engines been 'batter than Meteor and P-80?
The Ar-232 saw service beginning in 1943 and was the first truly modern transport a/c.
The Ar-234 Ju-388 both saw service in 1944 and were both the best recce a/c of the war.
Regarding the Ta-152H, the H-0 saw service before the H-1 in 1944, the H-1 entering service in Jan 45.
So, how many Ta 152H-0 went to operational squadron - and which squadron/Gruppe?
The Dora-13 didn't see service in many numbers, ~15 a/c IIRC, however with a 770 + km/h top speed at alt and 612 km/h top speed at SL it swiftly out-peformed any Allied fighter. It also featured many of the advanced features of the Ta-152.
Understood. How many had fully functioning 3 stage Jumo 213E's? to achieve the high altitude performance? Otherwise it's a D-9, isn't it, or maybe less?
The Me-262 was faster, climbed faster turned better than the P-80A, so even if the P-80 was rushed into production it wouldn't have mattered. Besides the Me-262A1 was ready and flying in 1943, a good deal earlier than the P-80.
I thought we were discussing end of war, and while the 262 was 'flying' when did it go to it's first operational combat unit - JV 44? and in Jan 1945 would you say it was 'far superior' to P-80 or Meteor. I would buy 'better' but far superior brings into play aspirations of lower quality pilots having a chance against pros because the airplane is that good - would you say that was the case against the Meteor and YP-80 say in March-April 1945
I don't know about the std. Constellation but the Ar-232B could haul very big loads. Remember that the Constellation of the 1940's is a whole different animal than the Super Constellation of the 50's!
The C-69 L049 was 7800 # payload, at 275mph for 3680 miles and 18,400 # payload for 2290 miles. I can't find a reference that shows the Ar 232 carrying more than 6,000 at 191mph for 660miles. Point me to a better source?
Also the Ar-242 was allot better in the way that it could load larger pieces of equipment than the constellation by virtue of its wider hull and rear loading ramp.
I like that feature- hence my comment on C-82 and 119. But payload and speed is crucial for transport, and while only 69 were produced as C-69 before war, that was a lot more than the Ar 232, which the LW never really contemplated to replace the Ju 52. Why?
Anyway if we were to go by max loading capacity and speed the Germans had quite a few other a/c, the Ju-290, Ju-252 (VERY high speed load capability!) BV-222 just to name a few. In terms of highest and biggest loads carried the Me-323 easily takes the prize though, being used to transport panzers amongst other heavy material to the frontline.
I didn't judge - I compared the C-69 and C-46 and C-47 utility versus the Ar 232 which you posed as 'best'. If that wasn't 'best' what do you propose as alternative?
Me-323
I love Luftwaffe aircraft especially the Bf 109 which is my favorite aircraft. I just think it is funny how an airforce that is "superior" in all regards to the allied airforces and can never do anything wrong did not win the war.
Does anyone else wonder this as well?
What I'm wondering about is why do people want to twist what I'm saying ??
Did I ever claim that the LW was ahead in EVERY REGARD ???
What I'm saying is that in terms of quality equipment the LW was the best, but in terms of quantity it was obviously behind.
Also important to the success of an AF is properly trained pilots, wittout this it almost doesn't matter what a/c you have, and the LW seriously lacked these trained pilots in 44 to 45.
just for arguments sake as i agree the USAAF was the best in size and in projecting power but was it as efficient as I mentioned earlier a RCAF fighter wing was 54 aircraft 78 pilots 345 maintainers and 300 admin ,logistics etc. for a total of 728 all ranks and trades so for an extra 10 aircraft you have 170 more personal .The pilot strength was typically 32 (4 lights of 8 pilots) per squadron, plus at least 4 from HQ (GP CO, Exec, Ops and asst Ops).
For a fighter Group (wing) the total number of personnel was closer to 900, bomg group larger because of number of ground crew and air crew for multi engine, large, ships.
A fighter ground crew was Crew Chief, Asst Crew Chief and Armorer. Specialized ground personnel included armament, communications, service group mechanics (engine change core teams, sheet metal, hydraulics, electrical, etc) in the Service Group plus MPs, Base Defense, Admin, Chaplain, Medical officers, etc.