Out of the Big Three WW2 bombers (B-17, B-24, Lancaster), was the Flying Fortress the most redundant? (1 Viewer)

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Regarding the question of the B-17 versus the B-24, the book I mentioned previously, The B-24 Liberator — A Pictorial History by Allan G. Blue, has a section devoted to that question. Some excerpts:



 
Maybe not moot, maybe already preparing for the post war situation.
The study was specifically about the bombing of Japan. At the time the study was being prepared the atomic bombs not been dropped and the invasion of Japan was to be the way forward. Very few people knew of the existence of the A bomb before August 6 and it did not enter into US military planning.
Regarding the question of the B-17 versus the B-24, the book I mentioned previously, The B-24 Liberator — A Pictorial History by Allan G. Blue, has a section devoted to that question. Some excerpts:

IIRC the Marauder wound up with the lowest overall loss-rate per sortie of two- or four-engine bombers.
Of course it did, it attacked much less dangerous targets than the heavies. Rand Paper RM-402 "Aircraft Vulnerability In World War II" discusses this topic in detail.

"Despite the other variables of missions which affect the damage and loss, inspection of the of missions grouped according to geographic areas attacked shows a dependence on location which may be reasonably attributed to the peculiar circumstances associated with attacks on each region. These circumstances include:
1. The character of the AA defenses which must be crossed
2. Whether the target is approached largely over land or over water
3. Whether the target is in occupied territory or Germany
4. The strategic importance of the target to the enemy
5.The depth of penetration, because the deeper the penetration
a. More AA positions flown over
b. More time for enemy to mobilize fighters
c. Longer bomber exposure time to fighters
d. Longer time bombers are without escort
e. Further damaged bombers must fly"

"Throughout the war, however, there was an appreciable difference in the loss rates to German and non-German targets, which reflects primarily the disposition of the German defenses and the greater mission distances involved."

"Table 14 Summary of 227 Daylight Attacks on 104 targets for 17 August through 31 December 1943" gives a great deal of detail on loss rates that I am to lazy to reproduce, but I will summarize as follows:
South Germany 16.8%
Central Germany 15.5%
Rhine-Ruhr Area 11.3%
Hamburg Kiel Area 8.8%
N.E. Germany (&Poland) 8.0%
Emden-Bremen Area 6.1%

France, Holland, Belgium Over 200 Mi.fr. Bases. 4.5%
Norway 2.0%
France, Holland, Belgium Under 200 Mi.fr. Bases 1.6%


Note that this is for 1943 when losses were at their peak. The B-26 loss rate for 1943 would be higher than the overall loss rate you quoted. If the B-17s and B-24s flew the same missions as the B-26 their losses would be corresponding low.
 
Regarding the question of the B-17 versus the B-24, the book I mentioned previously, The B-24 Liberator — A Pictorial History by Allan G. Blue, has a section devoted to that question. Some excerpts:
My favorite attempt to improve the facilities in the nose of the B-24 is the grafting of the B-17 nose on a B-24

I have walked through the bomb bay catwalk in a B-24 and I will attest that it is tight. This was on the ground in summer clothes. i cannot imagine doing it in the air wearing flight gear.
 
The accident rate for the B-26 got progressively lower as the war progressed. Improvements in training and the adoption of the longer wing contributing greatly. Both A-26 and A-20 had higher accident rates.
The accident rate got progressively lower for ALL aircraft as the war progressed. In 1944 the B-26 was still significantly worse than the B-25. 1942 was a was by far the worst year for accidents. Training was rushed for good reason. The Japanese were running a muck in the Pacific, the Germans were still doing well in Russia (until Stalingrad) and North Africa. There was a shortage of instructors as well. One of the excuses given for the P-38 and B-26 is that there was no proper twin engine training. The reality is that there was no one to conduct it. Very few pilots had twin experience in 1942 and virtually no one had experience in high performance twins like the B-26. If an aircraft is difficult to fly it is a major flaw when you are in the midst of a crash program (no pun intended) to expand your air force.
As to the A-26 it is interesting to note that the FEAF didn't want it. They wanted to keep using the B-25.
 

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Just finished reading South Pacific Air War volume 5 and the B-17s were just starting to become effective in combat (by using low-level bombing and skip bombing) in Nov / Dec 1942. Many other types were coming in but nothing had the range of the B-17 except the PBYs and maybe the B-24s. But did they ever do skip-bombing with B-24s?

B-24 of course did seem to become the ultimate maritime patrol aircraft, but their success rate in bombing attacks on ships was low in every case I know (spotty admittedly as i don't know the full operational history)
I agree with that - from the same book, B-17s and B-24s routinely got into engagements with large numbers of A6M or Ki-43 without any fighter protection and survived, sometimes with serious damage, sometimes without any. It was definitely nothing like NW Europe in that sense.

From Shores Mediterranian Air War series, the B-24s were actually quite effective in destroying Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica airbases in Tunisia. They didn't take many losses because they were heavily protected by escorting fighters. But the B-24s raids in particular seemed to destroy a very large number of enemy aircraft per raid, as in 20-30 vs 3-4 on most of the earlier raids with light bombers and fighter bombers. I think their role in Tunisia is somewhat unsung, they were important there.

Tidal Wave was of course a disaster but it did put a dent in what turned out to be the most vulnerable and critical Axis industry of all- oil production.


B-17 definitely seemed to be tougher in general, and flying higher means a little harder to hit with heavy flak. I have also read that B-24 was hard to bail out of safely.
 
AFAIK - No. 5th AF General Kenney left that for B-25s and A-20s.
One issue with the B-24 in the Pacific was the relative lack of Bomb Groups / Squadrons compared to the ETO and MTO. Ultimately by 1945 these were:-

5th AF - 22nd, 43rd, 90th & 380th
13th AF - 5th & 307th. In addition there was the 868th BS which specialised in low level radar directed bombing including shipping usually operating in small numbers.
7th AF - 11th, 30th & 494th.
11th AF in Alaska - 404th BS in 28th CG.
10th AF in India - 7th BG
14th AF in China - 308th BG

There had been some swapping of units between the various Air Forces in the Pacific during the course of the war.

But the bulk of the anti shipping war in the Pacific was in the hands of the USN. They had a number of PB4Y-1 squadrons (USN designation for the B-24) from early 1943 most of which later converted onto the P44Y-2 Privateer. Their history can be read about in these books.

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All I know about B-24s vs ships (USAAF types too not just PB4Y) are some specific examples of specific raids and mini-campaigns against certain Japanese task forces, convoys and individual ships and so on, from 1943-through to 1945. And these didn't typically go well in the sense that they never seemed to hit anything. I don't know the whole operational history of the B-24 in the Pacific but I do know several specific incidents in some detail.

(and I don't know it all, not because I can't find books on it but because my interests / time have focused on other aircraft and other campaigns, though I'm getting into reading more about the Pacific again now that rigorous operational histories with actual results corroborated by records on both sides etc.)

The interesting thing about the B-17s in the latest Clairngbould book is that they did actually score some hits doing skip and low altitude bombing. No doubt B-25 / A-20 were better for that due to being smaller targets, and probably a bit faster down low, but they also didn't have the range of a B-17. As far as I know the B-17s never hit any ships with high altitude bombing though, or anyway not in any account I have read so far (I wouldn't rule it out I've just never seen a case).
 

I would say in the Pacific and China there was generally somewhat of a lack of USAAF units in general or anyway not as much as you had in NW Europe or even in the Med. Longer supply chain and somewhat lower priority, and the Navy was bearing the brunt of the fighting.

Certainly when it came to sinking IJN ships it was the USN and the Marines which did the most damage, though the Army played their role too once 5th AF got established.
 
T think the true measure of the utility of an airplane - particularly a warplane, is what was kept after the war.
I think the measure of the utility of a warplane is how long they stayed in service when the war they were in ended -
In the WW2 case, the B-24 was immediately shelved - they're completely out of the inventory by the end of 1946 - sent to the scrapyards as fast as they could be transported. The same for the Martin B-26, the P-38, and the B-32. (Although one Lightning did hang around at Eglin AFB long enough to get re-designated "F-38" in 1948, with the Great Renumbering). The Navy kept its PB4Y-2s, Which you have to admit is not your Standard B-24, and the RAF and RCAF flew their Lancasters into the late 1950s.
 
All well known - My daughter's GGF was in the 30th BG and flew this B-24



Point was the B-24 was not used for skip bombing
 
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