Wild_Bill_Kelso
Senior Master Sergeant
- 3,231
- Mar 18, 2022
Did I mention night fighters? I think I said the RAF went to night bombing after early attempts as unescorted daylight bombing. I didn't mention night fighters at all, though they are certainly within the definition of WWII aerial combat. Everyone on all sides used them.
You said something about that not being in the definition of aerial combat when Reluctant Poster mentioned your view of only day fighters as being a bit narrow, and the only person using the word "absurd" is you.
This isn't the "Wild Bill Kelso" forum, its ww2aircraft.net and caters to almost all military aviation without specifically excluding civil aviation.
C'mon guy, the war was over in 1945. Don't start one in here because you want to control the narrative on somebody else's thread. Roll with it an get along. You'll be less stressed and happier. That can't be a bad outcome.
I just don't like it when people come at me over things that seems spurious, though sometimes it is a misunderstanding.
To wit, in this discussion, "Speed vs, maneuverabilty", with the emerging subtext of Japanese vs. US and European fighters, I don't think night time bomber streams are really part of the conversation, at least during the part of the war we are discussing here.
Wellingtons weren't getting into dog-fights over Aachen at 3:00 am, that i am aware of. They did play an important role in attacking Axis shipping in the Mediterraean (and other areas) which I have discussed several times, including in this thread. But I was under the impression that air combat meant airplane vs airplane. If it's "maneuverability for bombers" then so be it.