CobberKane
Banned
- 706
- Apr 4, 2012
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Coomon sense and my natural instincts would lead me to agree. However Forum member Vincenzo provided some conclusive proof that over Malta in the very early days, the CR42 was actually somewhat effective against the Hurricane, and more effective against this type than the MC 200s that were also sent over Malta.
The problem with the CR42 and indeed all those early war italian types, is that they were in no way air superiority fighters. They were manouverable enough to stay out of trouble, and if an allied pilot was silly enough to get into a turning fight with them, could easily become a dangerous oponent. But they lacked the firepower, and the performance to force issues in the air....allied fighters could use energy and speed and usually altitude as well, to gain distinct advantage over the italians. To that extent, your comments about generational differences in performance I completely agree with
Er no, if we are talking "super Battle" not necessarily the case. At 280 mph, CR 42s cannot catch them, neither can a G-50 really. An MC200 is only 30 mph faster so will not really have time to approach from astern with any manouver in the mix. An aircraft forced to fly straight and level with in the face of 2 x HMGs is in for a tough fight. An MC 202 can catch the Battle, but the rate of closure is about 70mph. If there are any escorts about, it might be a difficult job even for them, particulalry considering that the fighters return fire is no greater than the defending Battles. And if the battles are flying in a tight defensive formation and the fighter is attacking individually, as they usually do, the defensive abilities of the "super battle" should be even more apparent.
Well, if ShortRound is on the money 'super-Battle might have struggled to make 270mph, and even if it did it would have been a clumsy mother. Regarding the trouble it might have given an MC200; how's this for a comparison? If we were to limit a Bf110 to 270mph it would surely still be better in most every other respect than 'super-Battle', wouldn't it? And if we take a MK 1 Hurricane as being approximately analogous with an MC200 performance wise, shouldn't the neutered Bf110 been a difficult target for the Hurricane? My understanding is that even with the full 350mph to use the 110 proved easy meat for the Hurricane, unless it had a significant tactical advantage. I know the MC200 had less firepower than the Hurricane, but 'super-Battle' would also be a whole lot slower than the 110. After all, Ki 43s with two .50s knocked down plenty of aircraft that were better performers than 'super-battle' could ever have hoped to have beenIncidentally, in the timeline you are talking about wouldn't our MTO 'super-Battles' have been facing the Lutwaffe as well? Bf109 E, F, and Gs as well as 110s were in the desert war weren't they
In mid 1941, the majority of LW types remained Bf 109Es. From April the 109f began to supplant the 109E, but the E remained the dominant type in the MTO until about April 1942. The main fighter defending Rommel Jan-June 1942 were RA units at least numerically. LW started to really ramp up their presence in North Africa after June 1942, but not enough to make a difference.
The effects of fighters on loss rates is one of the most overblown, overrated mallarkies of the post war wash up of the war in fact.
None MTO LW fighter unit had Emil in april '42 (same is true for march '42). imho the Emil was out to pure fighter unit in early fall '41, the Jabo staffeln probably used this some months more.
However Forum member Vincenzo provided some conclusive proof that over Malta in the very early days, the CR42 was actually somewhat effective against the Hurricane, and more effective against this type than the MC 200s that were also sent over Malta.
A moot point. The actual score for CR42 v Hurricane over malta is generally accepted to be 1 all,despite the 16 or so Italian claims for Hurricanes.
Steve
time ago i opened a thread asking what were the results of C.200 and G.50 vs Hurricane, comparing this with the around 3 loss for a 1 victory of C.R.42 in 1940/1 (this data came from JoeB/Nikademus report from best books on this fiels just now i don't remember the title). Limitating the example to Malta Nikademus report 8 42 losses for 3 Hurricane this from Shore's books on Malta
Now I'm confused. Are you saying that fighters in an offensive role,i.e. to prevent their bombers being "hacked out of the air" are important whereas defending such an offensive campaign with fighters is a waste of resources?
The Luftwaffe only became ineffective in its defensive role when the sheer weight of Allied numerical superiority mitigated it attempts to disrupt the bombing offensive.
We can argue about when that point was reached.The following is again from a post war US document based wartime on German documents. The Germans are being positive about developments in early 1944,we know now that this was misplaced optimism.
Cheers
Steve
None MTO LW fighter unit had Emil in april '42 (same is true for march '42). imho the Emil was out to pure fighter unit in early fall '41, the Jabo staffeln probably used this some months more.
Stopping or severely crippling the Japanese invasion fleet would need scores if not hundreds of aircraft, not a few dozen. The Malaya Command had, in addition to the 24 Vildebeests, 47 Bristol Blenheim's and 24 Lockheed Hudson's and 3 PBY's.
The Hudsons belonged to the RAAF and one squadron was effectively wiped out twice during the campaign. No 8 Squadron had suffered heavy losses and handed over it's remaining aircraft to No 1 Squadron and received new Hudsons, returned to the fight, continued to suffer heavy losses as was disbanded in Batavia in Feb 1942, personnel returned to Australia, reformed later. No 1 Squadron was not so lucky, about 160 personnel being captured at the end of the NEI campaign.
If anybody really thinks that the Battle (or super Battle) was a better bomber than the Lockheed Hudson I have bridge over the East River in New York for sale.
The Battle was a barely creditable "strategic" bomber in 1937-8. It was designed for and crews trained in level bombing. Turning it into a maritime