Groundhog Thread Part Deux - P-39 Fantasy and Fetish - The Never Ending Story (Mods take no responsibility for head against wall injuries sustained)

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Throughout the war British area bombing and AAF pinpoint bombing never exceeded 50% of bombs landing within a THREE MILE radius of the target (Wiki).

The general benchmark for accuracy for Bomber Command was percentage of bombs within three miles of the aiming point. The percentage achieved varied considerably during the war as it was dependent on many factors. The overall value improved as the war went on.

In 1942 and through April 1943, the six-month average was about 25%. The introduction of H2S, Oboe, and Master Bombers raised the figure to about 55% from June through the rest of 1943. Starting in June 1944, the figure showed a steady upward trend, with rate topping 90% in 1945.

See the graph "Accuracy of Night Bombing of German Cities (Excluding Berlin)" on page 659 of The Crucible of War 1939-1945 by Brereton Greenhous, Stephen J. Harris, William C. Johnston, and William G.P. Rawling.
 
Almost all the factors needed to increase bombing accuracy London had. It is close, near the coast, has a very distinctive river and by day many unique large buildings, it is an ideal target by day or night.
 
Throughout the war British area bombing and AAF pinpoint bombing never exceeded 50% of bombs landing within a THREE MILE radius of the target (Wiki).

Additional point on accuracy from The Crucible of War 1939-1945 by Brereton Greenhous, Stephen J. Harris, William C. Johnston, and William G.P. Rawling, page 794.

From April 1 [1944] on, however, although area raids would continue to be mounted, High Wycombe's effort would increasingly be in support of Operation Overlord. In this respect there could be little doubt that, with bombing errors generally running less than seven hundred yards, the nine March raids on French railway targets had been outstandingly successful --- demonstrating, at times, 'an accuracy and concentration . . . far exceeding that . . . achieved by the American heavies by day.'*

* After the war, the United States Strategic Bombing Survey estimated that, bombing visually by day in clear weather, the Eighth Air Force was able to get half its bombs within one-third of a mile of the aiming point; bombing non-visually by day, in heavy cloud, it got only one-half its bombs within 3.9 miles of the aiming point.
 
Bombing doesn't target a city, it targets a specific factory, power plant, refinery, etc.

If the jabos get any lower than 20000' they will be easy to intercept since they will be a lot slower due to the attached 550lb bomb.
 
Bombing doesn't target a city, it targets a specific factory, power plant, refinery, etc.

If the jabos get any lower than 20000' they will be easy to intercept since they will be a lot slower due to the attached 550lb bomb.

"Bombing doesn't target a city, it targets a specific factory, power plant, refinery, etc." Really? So what do you make of the UK's "Area Bombing Directive" by which Bomber Command was tasked to attack cities rather than targeting specific facilities? The link I included about Jabos specifically differentiates between "area targets" and "point targets" where the area target is a city. Bombing and targeting are not synonyms.

"If the jabos get any lower than 20000' they will be easy to intercept since they will be a lot slower due to the attached 550lb bomb." Really? So the Jabo dives, gaining speed, releases the bomb, and then continues to dive, at higher speed, to get away....that makes them MORE vulnerable? Certainly the fighter bomber will be less manoeuvrable while carrying the bomb but speed, particularly in a dive, won't be impacted that much. To say they would be "easy to intercept" also ignores the fact that the Jabos were escorted...you keep ignoring this fact.
 
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Wiki's information is from the Strategic Bombing Survey.

BoB has nothing to do with the P-39. Most all the information I quote on here is from wwiiaircraftperformance.org.

All if have said is that 109E fighter bombers couldn't get above 25000' so by definition they couldn't have fought at 30000'.

And I don't think there was a significant amount of combat at 30000'. Just my opinion based on capabilities of the planes involved.
 

All if have said is that 109E fighter bombers couldn't get above 25000' so by definition they couldn't have fought at 30000'. But the escorting Bf109s could get to 30,000ft and did fight there.

BoB has nothing to do with the P-39.
But the whole reason we disappeared down this rabbit-hole is because you claimed that air combat over Western Europe was the same as air combat over Eastern Europe. You were then presented with plenty of evidence that the former took place at higher altitudes than the latter...but you keep ignoring the evidence and returning to your opinion-centric statements.
 
P-39 Expert you have already been told what interviewed Jabo pilots procedure was so why are you changing it. How do you target a refinery? I have lived near many most of my life and worked on them in the middle east, they are bigger than some cities. Your ideas on bombing are your ideas and feelings to suit your agenda they are not facts. Please preface your ideas and feelings as what they are.
 
It is only you that made this your game winning argument, you originally claimed no BoB aircraft could get to that height, inn fact they all could, it was just a matter of time. What you think about levels of combat doesn't matter, bearing in mind what Dowding said. Why do you thing your feelings and thoughts are more important than facts?
 
Bombing doesn't target a city, it targets a specific factory, power plant, refinery, etc.
Boy. for all the armchair aviation and military training you have, you seem to be unaware (or choose to ignore) that some nuisance raids were undertaken just to piss off the population, keep people up at night, expend emergency services, stretch defenses and finally diminish the will of the people to continue to fight (at least that's the ultimate goal). If you lob a few bombs over the CITY of London, you're going to achieve most of this objective, it doesn't matter what you hit. A poster quoted several pilots who flew these raids along with sources. Please, this is going from silliness to stupidity.
 

But were any of those Jabo pilots by any chance Chuck Jaeger?
 
So area bombing wasn't a thing?
If you look at this map which shows all the bomb hits in London, n places you can see 8 hits in a line. A Heinkel He111 releasing 8 bombs pointy end upwards was going to hit a long line not a point. Only special aircraft with special bombs and crews could target an individual point. Even dive bombers frequently missed, but by less than others. Bomb Sight - Mapping the London Blitz
 

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