Shortround6
Major General
The main problem with getting single seat fighters aboard carriers in 1939 or so was convincing the RAF high command that Germany and/or Japan was actually the enemy.
In the sense that the RAF thought that their real enemy was the RN and the Army who were trying to keep the RAF from it's rightful place as the Defender of Realm for next millennium and every shilling that went somewhere else (the Navy, the Lifeboat service or even the Girl Guides) was a threat to the RAF's mission and existence.
Fighter Command was a costly distraction and if only they could have convinced Parliament that if only the RAF had more bombers they would not even need fighters because no other country would dare to get in war with England and be destroyed by British bomber fleets in a few weeks.
A bit of exaggeration but the RAF was NOT planning on how to most effectively use whatever aircraft they were purchasing. They KNEW that the most effective way to fight a war was with long range bombing and everything else was a distraction. So a minor goal was to keep purchases of non large bomber aircraft to a minimum.
The RN carriers were short of both pilots and aircraft in the late 30s and first years of the war. You need to increase the number of pilots to fly the planes and you need planes. And every squadron of Hurricanes on a carrier (or part squadron) is a squadron of planes that are not defending mainland Britain and shutting up the politicians who are trying to divert the needed bomber engines/props and airframe materials away from where they are truly needed, Bomber Production.
Unfortunately the whole bombers conquer everything theory was just that, a theory. Not only unproven, but not even given the sketchiest of tests.
Fighter Command and the men who lead it and men who did the fighting (including maintenance) pulled the rabbit out of the hat.
There was no technical reason that that a folding Wing Hurricane could not have been in production in 1939 or early 1940.
But without a change in numbers in both the Norwegian Campaign and in the Med in 1940 things would not have changed much.
The Fulmar did OK those battles, yes there some times it could not catch some of the faster enemy bombers. But there were times where it was still in the air and still had ammo to stop or break up later attacks. If some of the carriers had gotten 1/2 dozen Hurricanes in addition to the Fulmars things may have been a lot better. But replacing Fulmars with Hurricanes on a one for one basis may not give that large an increase in actual capability.
The Butt Report of Aug 1941 was the first wide spread crack in Bomber Command belief system, which they tried to rebut in their own report. The internal battles last well over another year.
Giving the RN more input in their own aircraft designs doesn't do much good without also giving them more resources (factories) to build them.
In the sense that the RAF thought that their real enemy was the RN and the Army who were trying to keep the RAF from it's rightful place as the Defender of Realm for next millennium and every shilling that went somewhere else (the Navy, the Lifeboat service or even the Girl Guides) was a threat to the RAF's mission and existence.
Fighter Command was a costly distraction and if only they could have convinced Parliament that if only the RAF had more bombers they would not even need fighters because no other country would dare to get in war with England and be destroyed by British bomber fleets in a few weeks.
A bit of exaggeration but the RAF was NOT planning on how to most effectively use whatever aircraft they were purchasing. They KNEW that the most effective way to fight a war was with long range bombing and everything else was a distraction. So a minor goal was to keep purchases of non large bomber aircraft to a minimum.
The RN carriers were short of both pilots and aircraft in the late 30s and first years of the war. You need to increase the number of pilots to fly the planes and you need planes. And every squadron of Hurricanes on a carrier (or part squadron) is a squadron of planes that are not defending mainland Britain and shutting up the politicians who are trying to divert the needed bomber engines/props and airframe materials away from where they are truly needed, Bomber Production.
Unfortunately the whole bombers conquer everything theory was just that, a theory. Not only unproven, but not even given the sketchiest of tests.
Fighter Command and the men who lead it and men who did the fighting (including maintenance) pulled the rabbit out of the hat.
There was no technical reason that that a folding Wing Hurricane could not have been in production in 1939 or early 1940.
But without a change in numbers in both the Norwegian Campaign and in the Med in 1940 things would not have changed much.
The Fulmar did OK those battles, yes there some times it could not catch some of the faster enemy bombers. But there were times where it was still in the air and still had ammo to stop or break up later attacks. If some of the carriers had gotten 1/2 dozen Hurricanes in addition to the Fulmars things may have been a lot better. But replacing Fulmars with Hurricanes on a one for one basis may not give that large an increase in actual capability.
The Butt Report of Aug 1941 was the first wide spread crack in Bomber Command belief system, which they tried to rebut in their own report. The internal battles last well over another year.
Giving the RN more input in their own aircraft designs doesn't do much good without also giving them more resources (factories) to build them.