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Keep pushin' the envelope Gaston and you are guaranteed to be an observer and not a participant. Make your points without the sarcasm.
I'm a bit flummoxed with you P-47 closing remarks. Based upon that single quote how do you make the leap in logic that the P-47s were in tight combat maneauvers with 2000lb of ordnance slung under their wings? I can envision lots of scenarios, wherein the ordnance was dropped or having a suprise advantage on the run-in as to just make a single high speed pass enroute to the target drop zone and then resume air-to-air. To many variables that you either didn't quote or are highly embellishing the unfolding of this encounter.
And per my post above, please post that Youtube URL before posting further. Thanks.
There you go: From 6:09 to 7:33, with several interruptions I suppose when the P-47 was out of the camera's view: That's at least four full 360° turns, some of them really high rate in the beginning...
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7YbUVbZ6xo
The P-47D is apparently a Razorback, and does nothing but full level turning... At least from the point of view of obsessive turning tactics, it is one of the most consistent and sustained turning battle I have seen: At no point does the P-47 do anything but turn...
To put it in perspective, I have never seen anything remotely close from Spitfire, Me-109 or P-51 footage... But would be glad to...
Quote: " Based upon that single quote how do you make the leap in logic that the P-47s were in tight combat maneauvers with 2000lb of ordnance slung under their wings?"
The key factor is the mention that 8 of the 16 were dispatched to protect the remaining 8: If the actual bomb run had already started, it would have been over in minutes, with the bombless P-47s attacking the Germans in gradually increasing numbers: That is not how it happened, because if it had, then there would be no specific number of "protective duty" P-47s dispatched, matching exactly two flights of four.
8 had to be assigned for protection, because they all still carried their bombs, which were the primary purpose of the mission.
Quote: "A gratifying result of this engagement was that a P-47, not considered a low-altitude aircraft, can maneuver advantageously with Me-109s almost on the deck, even though under the handicap of being on a bomb run."
If you are not carrying bombs, then you are not "under the handicap of being on a bomb run"
Furthermore, if one section had dropped its bombs prematurely (as the precise separation of duties you claim would entail), it would, first of all, have been mentionned, second, it would at least have been done without joining "maneuver advantageously" and "handicap" and "gratifying" all in the same sentence: Without bombs you can still "maneuver advantageously", but not with the "handicap of being on a bomb run", and, if you are made to drop your bombs, then that is not "gratifying".
You could argue the section of eight could be construed as a numerical "handicap" (probably what you are clinging to): But that would still entail losing half the bomb load prematurely, which bombs are the primary purpose of the mission: That is not "gratifying" by any stretch of the imagination...
The intended meaning of the sentence is that despite the handicap of bombs underwing, the P-47s could still out-maneuver the Me-109Gs on the deck.
Remove any one of the first two, and there is no reason to call it "gratifying".
I know this sounds completely unbelievable to your point of view, but that is the simplest explanation.
It is unbelievable, but true: The extent to which you don't believe what the sentence actually means simply underscores the extent to which you are wrong.
Gaston