Greatest aviation myth this site “de-bunked”.

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lol I do, how can a person read an article on the raid to get the numbers right and then put Frankfurt instead of Nuremburg?

Sometimes, on the journey from the brain to the fingers, the electrical impulses get . . . confused.

Blame it on some random cosmic ray knocking it off course!
 
The Nuremberg raid was a shining example of Murphy's Law. When you read about the raid in more detail you will be left wondering not how so many crews were lost but how so many made it home safely.
 
The Nuremberg raid was a shining example of Murphy's Law. When you read about the raid in more detail you will be left wondering not how so many crews were lost but how so many made it home safely.
In the grim world of loss statistics the answer to that may be how many started the mission. It could be that the 95 planes lost represent what the LW could shoot down in ideal circumstances on a raid of that distance. So if 400 were used losses would be 25% and if 100 were used maybe a handful get home with losses close to 100%.

In another raid that went FUBAR for different reasons on Mailly le Camp (80 miles east of Paris) 43 planes were lost from 346 which is also 12% but is a much shorter distance.
 
I'd like to bust the myth that the Luftwaffe used Yak-18s as fighters in WW2.

From a recent article on how Speer increased war production.

View attachment 638310

(PS - are the tank and sub silhouettes even valid?)
The tank is definately a King Tiger, but that sub looks to be a miget sub.
I'm not a submarine expert, but that doesn't appear to be any type Germany used in WWI or WWII.
 
The raids on the Uboat pens in France accomplished very little. Once the pens were constructed nothing short of a Tallboy could damage them. Later in the war the construction of Uboats was somewhat slowed by bombing, but the real problem was the switch to prefabricated production for uboats simply didn't work. Nothing lined up in the yard requiring a lot of rework defeating the purpose of prefabricatio.
 

Agreed, bombing the U-boat pens was a fool's quest without the RAF's special bombs (and even then was, pardon the pun, hit-and-miss). But bombing the shipyards building them was a much better use of the American bombers with their smaller load-outs of GP bombs, I think.
 
Harris had the chance to make a real difference and likely shorten the war but he blew it with his quixotic Battle of Berlin. If he had kept his boot on Germany's throat, the Ruhr, the war may have been shortened. So much of the German economy depended on the Ruhr. The bomb loads were greater, the accuracy much better, the losses lower. It is ironic that Harris, who disparaged panacea targets, was seduced by the ultimate panacea target, the enemies capital.
 
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The available evidence certainly suggests that is the case.

Harris, while indispensable in forging Bomber Command into a formidable striking force, was too much of an ideologue wedded to the prewar theories of air power.
 
I would add the American version of this fable that the P38 was facing odds of 10 to 1 before the P51 showed up. Both sides typically fought in similar size formations. And as I have pointed out before escorted deep penetrations of German airspace didn't start until Big Week, with the exception of the January raid on Ludwigshafen. Incidentally the P51s flew the final leg over the target on that mission.
 
I don't recall seeing 20th or 55th FG claiming odds of 1:10 vs LW. Source?

As to Ludwigshafen being only LR escort prior to Big Week? How about multiple strikes to Halberstadt, Hamburg, Ludwigshafen, Bordeaux in December 43; Bordeaux 1-5, Halberstadt/Oschersleben/Bruswick 1-11; Brunswick 1-30 & 2-10; Ludwigshafen 2-11?
 

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