Shortround6
Major General
I would say that "used in combat" (especially in the spring of 1945) and "combat proven" are not exactly the same thing.
While research and development slacked off for a few years after the war, the cold war (especially after the Soviets exploded an A-bomb) tended to open the coffers and accelerate weapons development again.
With A-bombs, shooting down a good proportion of the attackers wasn't good enough, losses 5 times the Schweinfurt raids would not be good enough. 100% (or maybe 99%) of the attackers had to be destroyed BEFORE they reached their targets, not on the way home.
And yet it took years for the allies, with large sums of money, many engineers, not being bombed and with the help of German engineers to finish developing and put into production weapons that were only weeks away from combat in Germany in 1945?
Granted the Allies weren't using A-bombs so maybe the Germans only needed a weapon that worked 75% of the time?
While research and development slacked off for a few years after the war, the cold war (especially after the Soviets exploded an A-bomb) tended to open the coffers and accelerate weapons development again.
With A-bombs, shooting down a good proportion of the attackers wasn't good enough, losses 5 times the Schweinfurt raids would not be good enough. 100% (or maybe 99%) of the attackers had to be destroyed BEFORE they reached their targets, not on the way home.
And yet it took years for the allies, with large sums of money, many engineers, not being bombed and with the help of German engineers to finish developing and put into production weapons that were only weeks away from combat in Germany in 1945?
Granted the Allies weren't using A-bombs so maybe the Germans only needed a weapon that worked 75% of the time?