parsifal
Colonel
what you guys are saying about wildcat are pefectly valid, but are equally so for the Fulmar. The Fulmar made possible some rather desperate battles which, had they not been fought, may well have changed the war. They frequently fought at odds of eight or 10:1 against them, and whilst they could not claim the numbers shot down of enemy aircraft as the wildcat can rightly claim, they can claim to have been there on time, and to have achieved "mission accomplished". Without the Fulmar, Malta could not have been held, and the troops on Crete would have been lost...both these battles were critical in their own particular ways. Without the Fulmar, the British could not have mounted successful challenges to Mussolinis Mare Nostrum, and because this WAS the key to North Africa, the whole middle east was at risk without these plucky fighters.
I do not believe the Wildcat can be claimed to be supoerior to the A6M at least for the first six months of the wart, but it could hold its own. By sheer grit and determination it was able to achieve its mission in the same style as the Fulmar. What I dont subscribe to, and never will, is that either fighter, or the crews that flew them had an essentially easy time of it, because they were superior in performance and/or numbers to their opponents. They were not superior to their foes, and in the beginning, neither did they enjoy any numerical advantage. Two myths about the allied victories in the first part of the war. The numerical advantages flowed after the critical victories had been won. This was true for most of the actions that the RAF and the FAA fought in until well into 1942 by which time defeat at least had been staved off
I do not believe the Wildcat can be claimed to be supoerior to the A6M at least for the first six months of the wart, but it could hold its own. By sheer grit and determination it was able to achieve its mission in the same style as the Fulmar. What I dont subscribe to, and never will, is that either fighter, or the crews that flew them had an essentially easy time of it, because they were superior in performance and/or numbers to their opponents. They were not superior to their foes, and in the beginning, neither did they enjoy any numerical advantage. Two myths about the allied victories in the first part of the war. The numerical advantages flowed after the critical victories had been won. This was true for most of the actions that the RAF and the FAA fought in until well into 1942 by which time defeat at least had been staved off