- Thread starter
- #21
VinceReeves
Airman
- 47
- Feb 5, 2013
Nor were nightfighters unless being vectored onto a target,which could not be the case before an integrated night time air defence system was established. Until then,to paraphrase Dowding,they were simply flying around over London hoping that a target might turn up.
I agree that with the advent of a functioning,radar guided,command and control system the Defiant became a functional night fighter,but just about any aircraft could have been.
The Defiant was simply available in substantial numbers following its failiure to fullfil its intended role as a day time interceptor. It should be remembered that this failiure was due in part to the presence of single engined escort fighters in the Luftwaffe formations. Noone in 1939 imagined that France would be defeated and that such aircraft would obtain bases within range of mainland Britain.
Even then the speed advantage of a Defiant over a bomber cruising at 230mph made interception difficult as the RAF admitted in 1939,albeit in the context of daylight operations.
Cheers
Steve
According to Wiki though, 210 Mk.II Defiant night fighters were produced in addition to the original day fighters, so it's not just a case of what type happened to be hanging around.
Apparently Alec Brew's "Turret Fighters" book states that the Defiant was intended as both a day and night fighter from the beginning. Tho' I got that from elsewhere on the net, and not from the book itself.
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