MIflyer
1st Lieutenant
I did research at the ASM on this topic.
1. Actually, in that era the US was the world leader in torpedoes. Not until they established a govt-owned and operated torpedo factory with the main objective of protecting govt civilian jobs did things go to hell.
2. Mitchell had special bombs made, 4000 lb, and instructed his pilots to drop them next to the ships, not on them. That massive explosion next to the hull was like getting hit by several torpedoes in the same spot, caving in the sides.
3. Wash Times screamed that billions had been wasted on battleships and airplanes could do the job instead, but the sober consensus was that battleships needed airplanes to protect them from air attack. As a result the USN built aircraft carriers.
4. In the mid-30's, when the YB-17's intercepted the liner Roma far out at sea, the USN was quite upset. When the Y1B-17 flew a month later and exhibited the same top speed as their new F2A but 10,000 ft higher, they knew the jig was up. The Navy panicked, secured an Army agreement to not allow bombers far from shore and insisted that the new F4F be a high altitude fighter. The F4F design revision saved our butts in the Pacific.
1. Actually, in that era the US was the world leader in torpedoes. Not until they established a govt-owned and operated torpedo factory with the main objective of protecting govt civilian jobs did things go to hell.
2. Mitchell had special bombs made, 4000 lb, and instructed his pilots to drop them next to the ships, not on them. That massive explosion next to the hull was like getting hit by several torpedoes in the same spot, caving in the sides.
3. Wash Times screamed that billions had been wasted on battleships and airplanes could do the job instead, but the sober consensus was that battleships needed airplanes to protect them from air attack. As a result the USN built aircraft carriers.
4. In the mid-30's, when the YB-17's intercepted the liner Roma far out at sea, the USN was quite upset. When the Y1B-17 flew a month later and exhibited the same top speed as their new F2A but 10,000 ft higher, they knew the jig was up. The Navy panicked, secured an Army agreement to not allow bombers far from shore and insisted that the new F4F be a high altitude fighter. The F4F design revision saved our butts in the Pacific.
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