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Again let's not focus entirely on Ceylon for Hurricanes, because there are a fair number of other examples. In Jan-April '42, when fighting greatly died down on British fronts v Japanese, the Hurricane results, as given in Bloody Shambles combat by combat as I count, fighter to fighter:Wake Island would be comparable to the Glads in Malta, but did not the F4F usually have the advantage of height in Guadaulcanal when facing the Zeros as opposed to the Hurricanes which were surprised to find the Japanese over Ceylon and were attacking from below.
The F4F never took a sustained beating in fighter combat. It did in some particular combats of course, but not in any period of months as Hurricanes did in 1942, and yes as Spitfire V's did defending Darwin in 1943. They did about as poorly as Hurricanes did v Zeroes and Type 1's in 1942, worse in fact than P-40's had done in 1942 performing the same mission in the same place v the same Japanese Navy fighter unit, not even just the same type of plane (the 3rd Air Group had been renamed 202nd Air Group by 1943); the P-40 result had been about 1:2 in favor of the Zeroes. Also we can note that AVG P-40's cumulatively to end June '42 had a ratio of ~3:1 in their favor against both Type 97's and Type 1's; to compare to the Hurricane results.Every allied aircraft was taking a beating including the Spitfire over Darwin are we to assume because the Spit was clobbered by Zeros the Wildcat was better then it or can we assume tactics changed to focus on the strong points of the aircraft.
That's what I was also trying to imply, you simply assume that because the results don't meet your preconceptions and/or simple paper stats comparison.What I was trying to infer was the tactics in early 42 were probably changed a great deal in a few months . the learning curve was steep and by the time Guadaulcanal rolled around a consensus on how to use the tools at hand was formed . It was a different type of flying from the ETO where the RAF learned its craft also the hard way. How would of the F4F done in Malta I'll wager not well
I didn't read through the entire thread, but I gotta wonder about this one.
In a slow speed turning battle, I wonder if the Hurricane wouldn't have an advantage, if for no other reason than its very thick wing.
I remember receiving an issue of Popular Mechaincs as a kid and there was an article in there about a guy who built his own Hurricane (1/2 or 3/8 scale, I believe).
When asked why a Hurricane over the more popular Spitfire, he stated that the thick wing was easier to build in the scaled down mode he was working in.
I'm thinking that, although the wing does taper down quite a bit as you go out from root to tip, there may be enough of the "thick area" to improve low speed handling, over a more common wing that would've been fitted to any a/c of the day.
Also, is it just me or does the top speed listed for the Hurricane seem a little high?
342mph?
Seems I see speeds in the 325-335 mph range more common for the Hurricane.
Maybe it's just that particular version.
...so which one would I pick?
1/2 metal - 1/2 wood cloth... or ... A Flying Tank?
I'll take the tank, in "dash 3" varient, please.
If I can't outmanuver him, I will at least be in a more robust machine.
Elvis
I don't know what your basing this on . Are they smarter , did the US have a better training syllabus . I have a tough time swallowing this, I think they were better trained, particularly in aerial gunnery than the Commonwealth pilots and for that matter the AAF pilots in the early days of the Pacific campaign. .
The stats I gave are based on the losses recorded by both sides. Your examples give Hurricane claims. Likewise if we gave stats based on Japanese claims, the Hurricanes would look alot worse than the stats I posted. The accuracy of claiming was low in that theater and period. Using either side's claims gives a quite inaccurate picture.A quick flip through Ospreys "Hurricane Aces 1941-45" would seem to indicate that the Hurri did far better than the stats posted above. Jack Storey and Frank Carey shot down 7 nates just by themselves in that time period.
If you take look at one of their few offensive actions such as the raid on the Japanese airbase at Magwe on March 23 1942, a force of 9 Blenheims and 10 Hurricanes destroyed 16 Sallys on the ground and 11 Oscars in the air, 9 by Hurricanes. This for the loss of 2 hurris and 2 blens.