Civettone
Tech Sergeant
Strange how you come up with information the next day and disregard it the other. During that Channel Phase you were talking about you gave the figure of a 1000 bomber sorties of which 70%* were directed against naval shipping (which to me also meant attacks on ports). I'm talking about 5000 sorties a day and this with better bombers and better crews. I just look at Pedestal (or even Crete?), look at the number of warships sunk by the Luftwaffe with a fraction of those sorties and see the number go up, even with British fighters.And in good weather, with 1,000 bombers, in a month in 1940 the Luftwaffe managed to sink a few destroyers and a handful of coasters.
How you can foresee the AA gunners of the Royal Navy shooting down ALL 1000 German bombers in two days ... isn't even funny anymore.
I am basing it on historical performance: the RAF lost twice the number of fighters although confronted with a smaller amount of German fighters. The LW sank quite a lot of ships in Pedestal, Crete and even Dunkirk. I just make the calculation. That's basing it on historical performance.Of course, that's about as realistic as your prediction, but hey, if we are basing things on what could possibly happen, rather than on historical performance...
(* I very much doubt that 70% was against shipping. Because although I quoted the BoB diares, I left out the night bombing as this was not relevant to the discussion we had at that time. What I can tell is that at least 70% of the missions were not against shipping. Not the same thing as missions of course...)
I didn't. It was a question. How far can you see from the air? All I know is you can see the British coast from the Belgian coast on good weather. Isn't that a 100 miles? Of course a ships, even a convoy, is too small to be seen at just a distance.A hundred miles? Where do you come up with such figures?
That doesn't make sense as the Germans found the H2S so much better than their own Rostock radar. Wouldn't that mean that the Fw 200C-4 (with Rostock) was already operational by then?No. The Germans entire stock of ASV radar aircraft in 1942 was a single He 111, fitted with a captured British radar, and operating in the Mediterranean.
I understand that but I still don't see how they come from 100,000 men to 10,000 men a day.However, the main point is that even with the same supplies each day, you have far less capacity.
Well, all I did was take a OOB. And coupled with The RN went on immediate notice every night from the beginning of February, against a nighttime passage through the Straits of Dover. then that makes me conclude the Channel Fleet was put on alert.I don't think you are reading what the source is saying. Those are the forces present in the area, and some forces that weren't even in the area at all. Few of those were "put on alert".
Well, that reminds me of that list of targets you listed during the Channel Phase. I also asked if you were deliberately misusing information. I also had the feeling when you came up with 3 fighters for every bomber. That's finding information and using it for your purpose. I haven't said anything more about it because I shouldn't doubt your intentions. Likewise, you shouldn't question mine. I interpreted the way I did. No bad intentions.Nothing about "assigned to operation fuller". That smacks of a deliberate attempt to mislead.
Doesn't matter. Most of the Luftwaffe would be send to France.If the Germans were planning an invasion, a few simple changes would be decreased RAF bombing of Germany, and increased attacks on the channel ports, and in particular Brest.
And moving British night bombing to France would result in a move of German nightfighters and Flak.
I doubt it. Tirpitz was still in Norway.Another would have been moving the fleet out of Scapa Flow if German heavy units were in the south to support an invasion.
Ok, taking the German minesweepers from the Baltic, including those from the double minesweeper production.Another would be even more mining of the beaches, and even more mining of the channel.
It is not reliable, ergo it's wrong?Answers.com is a mirror for wikipedia. Anyone can go in and change any of the figures. As such, it's not very reliable.
Like in the beginning of my post. A 1000 sorties all through July. And only half of them against shipping? And that's with untrained crews and less suited German bombers.What does the daily running of slow convoys of merchants through the channel in July 1940 prove about German capabilities to stop the RN?
Kris