DarrenW
Staff Sergeant
The Corsair and Hellcats got mega kamikaze kills where the pilots did no evasive maneuvers.
Hmm, not sure how 'mega' is defined here, but it must be understood that the first officially coordinated Kamikaze mission didn't occur until October 25th, 1944 (during the Battle of Leyte Gulf). Yes, there were isolated cases before this date where Japanese pilots purposely crashed their aircraft into allied targets but the facts surrounding each attack are not very clear and some were most certainly products of Japanese propaganda.
According to NACS, by the end of October 1944 F6F and F4U pilots claimed a combined total of 4,076 victories and it's safe to assume that a very small percentage of these aircraft were actually being utilized in a dedicated suicide role. During the period of sustained Kamikaze attacks (November '44 - EOW) the two fighters claimed a total of 3,229 enemy aircraft. According to a USAF source there were approximately 2,800 Kamikaze attackers and of these it is estimated that 14% (392 aircraft) were successful at hitting their targets. The US Navy performed a study concerning the effectiveness of their anti-aircraft defenses during the period of Kamikaze attacks and came up with 1,192 suicide planes making it to the ships, and of this total 878 were effectively destroyed by AA gunners. What's more interesting to me is that during this same period there were almost 2.3 times more enemy aircraft attacking ships in a conventional manner (bombs, torpedoes, machine gun fire, ect.):
Dr Richard P. Hallion, 1999, "Precision Weapons, Power Projection, and The Revolution In Military Affairs" (USAF Historical Studies Office).
HyperWar: Antiaircraft Action Summary--World War II
This would leave approximately 1,500 aircraft that were lost to causes not attributed to intentional crashes or US anti-aircraft fire. It must be remembered that British ships were also targeted during these same 2,800 attacks but I have not seen any data concerning the success rates of their AA gunners or aircraft. Factor in suicide planes brought down by USAAF fighters over the Philippines, Okinawa, and the Japanese home islands and the original number of Kamikaze aircraft "available" to be shot down by F6F and F4U pilots dwindles even further (army pilots claimed almost 700 enemy aircraft during the Philippine campaign alone). There were also 194 claims made by FM-2 pilots from November '44 onward so those need to be considered as well.
I wish there was an easy way to uncover an accurate number of claims which were actual Kamikaze pilots and which were on conventional missions but there really isn't. The data is all over the place depending on your source. If we were to rely on what I presented earlier and use the US Navy's ratio of Kamikaze to non-Kamikaze attacks on ships we would end up with a figure of 1,345 suicide planes being claimed by F6F and F4U pilots (3,229 divided by 2.3), with F6Fs scoring roughly two-thirds of them. But this is assuming that the ratio of Kamikaze to conventional attacks stayed relatively constant throughout the war which I'm sure it didn't.
Has anyone here ever tried to nail-down these figures before? After looking at just a small sampling I'm overwhelmed concerning how to approach such a monumental task.
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