Freebird
Master Sergeant
Again, the FAA purchase policy/politics emerges beyond criticism.
No, whoever said that? You just havn't proven your point.
The RAF controlled new aircraft specs in 1937 when the Fulmar project began. If it was RN or RAF specs that was at fault, the Fulmar was a bit of a "dud" or at least a rather inadequate aircraft. (but was also all that was available.)
To find a target for their ship-borne strike planes, RN employed radars on ships, strike CV planes subs. They also employed many types of maritime patrol planes form Coastal command. And yet it castrates the main fleet air-defence air-superiority asset by purchasing the bomber-originated fighter, in order to have yet another plane that could spot a target. Is that a viable decision or what? .
Ok, for spotting "over the horizon" in the central Med or mid-Atlantic, shipborne radar is out of range unless they are probably within 20 - 40 miles (in '40 - '42} There are no Coastal Command aircraft available in the mid North Atlantic in 40-42, and pretty thin in every other ocean. Gibraltar Alexandria are out of range, Crete is Nazi occupied, and Malta has very limited capabilities in 41-42 due to the Axis blockade. What long-range radar equipped "strike CV planes" were you talking about in 40' - '42?
Could we agree that was the way FAA was admitting that converted bomber is not suitable for air defense air superiority tasks?
No. The Fulmar was certainly inadequate in many ways, as I have said. However the "Improved Fulmar" (AKA Firefly) was the best, most capable carrier DB/fighter-bomber in 1943 (IMHO)
So I think I can also agree with Tomo. The British in the end did give up the Fulmar concept so perhaps if they had come up with a decent single-engined fighter in the same time frame, the Fulmar would not have been needed.
Kris
Not at all.
Let's not get confused here - Fighters are not the same as fighter bombers! The Fulmar was never intended to be the RN "fighter"
There were 3 basic needs in the RN carrier force:
1.) Fighters
2.) Torpedo-bombers
3.) Dive-bombers/ Recon
1.) Fighters - The US had the Buffalo, Japan had the Zero. By early 1938, the RN had Sea Gladiators on it's carriers:
Aeroflight.co.uk said:As a stopgap measure, 38 RAF Gladiators were transferred to the Admiralty and designated Sea Gladiator (Interim). Although they carried hooks, they were not intended for operational use aboard carriers. A further 60 full-standard Sea Gladiators were also obtained. These differed from the RAFs Gladiator IIs in being equipped with catapult spools, arrestor hook and dinghy stowage (between the landing gear legs). Sea Gladiators first embarked in HMS Courageous with 801 Squadron in March 1939.
They also had Grumman Martlets (Wildcats) from the summer/fall of 1940. From the outbreak of war until the fall of 1940 the RN tested Hurricanes for shipboard use, these went into service in the beginning of 1941. The Fulmar was never intended to replace the Martlet/Sea Hurri, but was embarked on board for a different role.
2.) TB - In the summer of 1940, the RN had Swordfish, which although slow were reliable, easy to handle in bad weather. The Albacore had just been introduced, but did not perform as well as expected. However, the much superior Barracuda prototype first flew in Dec 1940, and production began just over a year later.
3.) DB/Recon - The Royal Navy had a long history of compensating for it's limited space aboard carriers by combining DB/Recon with a secondary fighter role to create the "Fighter-Bomber". Now please remember YOU CANNOT COMPARE A FIGHTER-BOMBER WITH A FIGHTER!!! A fighter bomber was never expected to take on single-seat fighters, that was the job of the Sea Glad/Martlet/Sea Hurri. It's role was to shoot down enemy bombers while the FAA fighters engaged the enemy fighters. The first (WWII-era) FB was the Skua, introduced in 1937. The Fulmar was basically the following plane in the "Fighter-Bomer" role - except it couldn't bomb
Fighter-Bomber to intercept enemy bombers while the fighters dealt with the enemy escorts -
And that was exactly how it was used by the RN!
Here's some info on loss/success for the Fulmar in the Med 40-42 based on my study of Shores' two books on Malta.
lost - 40
7 - enemy fighters
13 - enemy bombers
11 - op losses
9 - AA/Ground (air attack)/other
Kills - 67
5 x Z-1007bis
4 x BR-20M
15 x S-79
5 x S-84
1 x S-81
13 x Z-506B
9 x Z-501
5 x Ju-87
8 x Ju-88
1 x Ju-52
1 x Bf-110
Note - not one enemy single-seater kill for the Fulmars, but they shot down 66 bombers ( 1- Bf 110) for 20 Fulmars lost in the air. (not too shabby as it turned out!)
However the FAA didn't give up on the Fulmar concept - by the Fall of 1940 when it was clear that the Fulmar was outclassed, the FAA put a request for a replacement aircraft. (Nov 1940), the prototype flew just over a year later, and deliveries of the Firefly began just ~28 months after the request. For comparison, the SB2C Helldiver took well over FIVE years from proposal to service.
The Firefly basically fixed all of the Fulmar's problems.
1.) Range 1,364 vs 783 miles
2.) Ceiling 29,000 vs 16,000 feet
3.) Payload 2,000 lbs vs 250 lbs
4.) Dive capability - The Firefly had the Fairey-Youngman retractable flaps for DB ( low-alt) operation
5.) Speed 319 mph vs. 259 mph (and even 286 mph with bombload) Unlike the slower Fulmar, the Firefly could easily catch almost all enemy naval-strike bombers in service in the spring of 1943
Ju 87B - 238 mph
Ju 88A - 280 mph
BR20M - 286mph
Cant Z1007 - 283 mph
SM 79/84 - 267 mph
B6N2 Tenzan - 298 mph
Ki -21 Sally - 302 mph
G4M Betty - 266 mph
Ki -49 - 305 mph
6.) Firepower - To bring down enemy bombers it had 4 x 20mm cannon, compared to the .303's of the Fulmar. If you want enemy bombers shot down FAST, (before they bomb your carriers!) then 4 x 20mm is the way to go.
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