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All the men on both sides did heroic things because men in power were stupid and greedy. Making an analogy to football doesn't take away from any of these men's bravery.
If you only have x many planes, let's say 50, if you only have 50 fighters than placing them in a bad tactical position so they get shot down is not a wise position. If the target is your airfield then any flyable aircraft should be scrambled, all other aircraft, fuel trucks etc should be dispersed as best they can. Holes in a runway can be repaired, if you get your 50 irreplaceable fighters shot down then you are defenseless. Defending a carrier is a different matter, if it's sunk you have nowhere to land.
I am only defending the Zero here, but I'm having to attack the Spitfire to do it. The Spitfire was more or less equal to the Me109 until late in the war when the Spitfire really surpassed the me109. They traded spots several times but were more or less well matched opponents from 1939 to late 1943 or early 1944. After the Spitfire IX was introduced, I believe it was the same with the FW190. The problem with the Spitfire V fighting a Zero is it had no ace in the hole. If I had to fight a Zero over Darwin, I would have chosen an ME109 over a Spitfire because it could dive. Climb up to bomber altitude, make a gun run, split S and dive away. The Zero couldn't counter that move, it is essentially what the US fighters did. Am I super biased for American planes? Well let's see, a P39 or P40 couldnt even get to 28,000 feet, it would take an F4F-4 about 35 minutes to get to 28,000 feet (Guadalcanal pilots reported 40 minutes to 30,000 feet) and that leaves at that time, the P38 of which there were about 0 available for that area. So, looks like I'm calling it down the middle, American fighters at that time were too heavy and underpowered to even consider this interception except for the P38. The only other options to me would be F4F-3 which were out of production and probably all used up, or the P43 Lancer which needed armor (easy fix) and actual fuel tanks instead of wet wings (not really doable at all without a whole new wing).
So, in closing, do I hate the Spitfire? No. Do I respect the Zero for its abilities from introduction until mid 1943 when more powerful US fighters arrived (hellcat Corsair more P38's)? Absolutely
But the Spitfire accelerated much much slower. Top speed matters little if the bad guy drops down on your tail and stays there long enough to dump a 5 second burst of cannon and machinegun fire into your plane. A P40, for all it's problems, if a Zero drops into your tail you immediately roll into your back, the P40 far exceeds the Zero on roll, pull back on the stick and drop like a rock (it ought to dive it couldn't climb worth anything) by the time the Zero rolled over the P40 was gone. It doesn't matter about how bad the P40 sucked at anything else, it had a bug out plan when things went south. The Wildcats plan was to wait until someone shot the bad guy off your back and hope it holds together (how encouraging to the poor guys flying it). The P39 was as screwed as the Spitfire, the engine was in the back so if it reviewed just a few hits it's going down.One last time, as per here http://darwinspitfires.com/index.php?page=spitfire-vc-versus-the-zero the Darwin MkV's and A6M's were both rated at 334 Mph, yet here Spitfire Mk.VB (Tropical) AB.320 Report a trop MkV fitted with the Merlin 45 was faster than the A6M and the Darwin MkV's at 337 Mph with a 90 gallon drop tank fitted, this spec MkV ticked every box in regards to fighting over Australia, with 4 20mm cannons this standard MkV was 40 mph faster Spitfire Mk.Vc AA.873 Report. As you can see, judging the MkV on just the Darwin battle is not a true indication of its performance.
I agree that the FW190 was beyond the Zero's capability if flown like a P38, climb, dive through firing, extend away and zoom back up. Same for the ME109, fly it like a P40 that could actually get up to altitude, dive through firing, extend away, zoom back up. Almost any fighter that can climb to altitude and has a good dive and roll could do well against a ZeroAnd I forgot to add I'm a huge FW190 fan, particularly the Dora's and Ta152's, below 20,000ft a well piloted Anton could take on both the MkV and A6M at the same time with an even chance of winning in my opinion.
IMO A capable pilot works wonders - everything being equal - the advantages the zero possessed were at the expense of armor protection,self sealing gas tanks,and making everything as featherweight as possible - this is what made it a good nimble dogfighter - the light weight also enabled the long range..Against earlier marks of Spit? All things equal the only real advantage i see it having is its lightweight contributing to its nimbleness - so knowing this a competent combat pilot would'nt get into a turning dogfight with one - As would probably be true for the 190 which IMO is a head and shoulders better aircraft -Its superior speed 4 20mm cannons and 2 14.7 mg's would make quick mincemeat out of the zero -How good was Zero against famous Spitfire or German FW 190?
Can a Zero beat them any chance at all?
The A6M would not have been ready for the BoB, seeing as it entered service in JAPAN during the same summer. If the Luftwaffe had augmented their 109's with Japanese aircraft, they would have been stuck with A5M's or Ki-27's….all these points you guys bring up has me wondering how the BoB would've turned out, if the Luftwaffe had augmented their 109's with Zero's...hmmm...
The problem with the Spitfire V fighting a Zero is it had no ace in the hole.QUOTE]
Except high speed manoeuvrability. Get above 300 kts and the Zero's controls stiffen considerably. Keep the fight at high speed and the Zero's advantages can be effectively nullified.
But the Spitfire accelerated much much slower. Top speed matters little if the bad guy drops down on your tail and stays there long enough to dump a 5 second burst of cannon and machinegun fire into your plane. A P40, for all it's problems, if a Zero drops into your tail you immediately roll into your back, the P40 far exceeds the Zero on roll, pull back on the stick and drop like a rock (it ought to dive it couldn't climb worth anything) by the time the Zero rolled over the P40 was gone. It doesn't matter about how bad the P40 sucked at anything else, it had a bug out plan when things went south. The Wildcats plan was to wait until someone shot the bad guy off your back and hope it holds together (how encouraging to the poor guys flying it).
There's a BIG assumption in your thinking: that both aircraft are doing about the same speed. That would be highly unusual, indeed it would involve sacrificing the Spitfire's true strength: high speed manoeuverability.
Do you see that I'm not just maligning the Spitfire?
My frustration is that you keep repeating that the Spitfire has no advantage over the A6M and that's simply not backed up by the facts. I'm not defending the Spitfire. I'm questioning your repetition of statements that don't jive with the known relative performance characteristics and limitations of the zero, and which don't reflect the broader experience over Darwin.
Prior to May 1943, the Spitfires defending Darwin shot down 14 Japanese aircraft for the loss of 4 aircraft. As noted previously, the 2 May engagement was pretty much a draw in terms of kills. These statistics would indicate that the Spitfire could operate successfully against the Japanese aircraft ranged against it.
Prior to May 1943, the Spitfires defending Darwin shot down 14 Japanese aircraft for the loss of 4 aircraft. As noted previously, the 2 May engagement was pretty much a draw in terms of kills. These statistics would indicate that the Spitfire could operate successfully against the Japanese aircraft ranged against it.
Your Ferrari/Jeep analogy is perfect here in my opinion. It's not nescesarily that the A6M is a superior plane, it's that it was superior under those conditions.This from the actual test between a Spitfire mark V Tropical and a Hamp:
View attachment 561563View attachment 561565View attachment 561566
"Unanimous conclusion is the Spitfire is outclassed by the Hamp at all altitudes up to 20,000 feet" that is from the 2 test pilots that flew the 2 planes in the test. We have the son of the Spitfire pilot that said his dad said he bent the tail of the Spitfire 9 degrees while doing this test. I know what a Spitfire in Britain could do, Ive read the tests. But this wasn't in England, it was in a nasty, dusty, primitive condition area where the Spitfire had to use a big bulky filter, the boost wasn't up where it was in England etc. Under these conditions the Zero, which didn't care about primitive conditions, was the better combat aircraft. A Ferrari is faster on a paved highway in England, but if your driving across a 500 mile long dirt road in the outback your probably better off in a old Jeep, Land Rover or Landcruiser.
This from the actual test between a Spitfire mark V Tropical and a Hamp:
View attachment 561563View attachment 561565View attachment 561566
"Unanimous conclusion is the Spitfire is outclassed by the Hamp at all altitudes up to 20,000 feet" that is from the 2 test pilots that flew the 2 planes in the test. We have the son of the Spitfire pilot that said his dad said he bent the tail of the Spitfire 9 degrees while doing this test. I know what a Spitfire in Britain could do, Ive read the tests. But this wasn't in England, it was in a nasty, dusty, primitive condition area where the Spitfire had to use a big bulky filter, the boost wasn't up where it was in England etc. Under these conditions the Zero, which didn't care about primitive conditions, was the better combat aircraft. A Ferrari is faster on a paved highway in England, but if your driving across a 500 mile long dirt road in the outback your probably better off in a old Jeep, Land Rover or Landcruiser.
I wonder if the Japanese would have done better in the Pacific War if they had some early defeats or big scares. Perhaps a major IJN defeat at the Battle of the Yellow Sea in August 1904, or even more recently, losing a carrier to RAF attacks during the April 1942 Ceylon raid. The Japanese need to be pushed to respect their enemy.You could take this sentence and replace "Germans" with "Japanese" and "Britain" with "Midway" and "British" with "Americans", and not change its accuracy one whit. The common denominator?...over-confidence and contempt for the enemy's capabilities, AKA, arrogance and complacency. A lesson to all warriors from Sun Tzu to Crimea and Kurdistan.(And especially US Naval Aviators: "I'll take any man from any land at any game that he can name for any amount that he can count! [In my short ranged, ordnance limited, 7G, itty bitty jet]".)
Cheers,
Wes
Well if you're going to selectively quote from the report, then here's another "The Zero could not get into a firing position behind the Spitfire if the latter evaded in diving aileron turns at high speed". That's EXACTLY the point I was making...that the Spitfire had better high-speed manoeuverability. So where does that leave your "the Spitfire didn't have an ace in the hole" comment?
A couple of other selective quotes "A vertically-banked climbing turn was difficult for the Zero to follow" and then there's the "up to 20,000 ft" issue. Bottom line is the Spitfire need to start high (ie above 20,000 ft) and use high-speed diving attacks. When it's already diving at speed, then the acceleration issue is moot.
Again, I'm not arguing which aircraft was better, simply pushing back against your very definitive and absolute statements that the Spitfire had no successful tactics against the Zero compared to the P-40 and F4F. I'm afraid that's just bogus, as the above report states.
I have a 161 mph sports saloon, average speed recorded is 19.1 mph."A Ferrari is faster on a paved highway in England"
I dunno, I had a 2014 Stingray and on paved roads, both it and any Ferrari were no faster than any other soccer mom SUV in bumper to bumper at rush hour...
This from the actual test between a Spitfire mark V Tropical and a Hamp:
"Unanimous conclusion is the Spitfire is outclassed by the Hamp at all altitudes up to 20,000 feet" that is from the 2 test pilots that flew the 2 planes in the test. We have the son of the Spitfire pilot that said his dad said he bent the tail of the Spitfire 9 degrees while doing this test. I know what a Spitfire in Britain could do, Ive read the tests. But this wasn't in England, it was in a nasty, dusty, primitive condition area where the Spitfire had to use a big bulky filter, the boost wasn't up where it was in England etc. Under these conditions the Zero, which didn't care about primitive conditions, was the better combat aircraft. A Ferrari is faster on a paved highway in England, but if your driving across a 500 mile long dirt road in the outback your probably better off in a old Jeep, Land Rover or Landcruiser.
I understand that. I addressed that in the part where I said: post #432The Spitfire in the above test was limited to 9lb boost, which placed a tremendous performance handicap on the Spitfire; 290 knots (at 15k ft) = 334 mph or about 32 mph slower than at 16lb boost. It's no wonder that the Spitfire put in a poor showing and showed low acceleration. In the RAF the Merlin 46 was approved for 16lb boost by Jan 1942:
View attachment 561589http:
and
http://www.wwiiaircraftperformance.org/Merlin_46_47_Power_Chart.jpg
about a 400hp loss of power at 15k ft.
SEE MY POST HERE:
A Critical Analysis of the RAF Air Superiority Campaign in India, Burma and Malaya in 1941-45
FOR MORE INFO ON THE TACTICAL USE OF 16LB BOOST IN MID 1942.