Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
Charnwood included the use of heavy bombers to shock and destroy German defenders, clear obstacles and boost the morale of the hard-pressed British Infantry. It started at 9:50 p.m. on July 7, 1944 when 467 Allied aircraft dropped 2,300 tons of bombs on the city. In forty minutes, the medieval city was reduced to rubble. This was the first time Bomber Command used heavy bombers tactically. The attack front was 4,000 yards wide. Naval gunfire was also used in the operation.
The major effects of the bombing were counterproductive. Because the bombs were dropped on an urban area, many French civilians were killed. The shock value was ineffective because the bombing was not followed by an immediate assault, while the defenders were stunned. Instead the ground attack started the following morning at 4:30 a.m. July 8th. Finally, the bombers used very heavy bombs (500 and 1,000 pounders) which created huge piles of rubble. This actually had the effect of delaying Allied tank movement into the city. After the capture of the city, a survey to determine the bombing's effectiveness found that there was virtually no sign of enemy gun positions, tanks, or German dead in the target.
DerAdlerIstGelandet said:Have you even been reading what others have been saying to you or are you just posting garble?
DerAdlerIstGelandet said:T......
Syscom small tactical raids by 9 bombers each does help win a war. Have you actually in person seen the destructive power of a 1000lb bomb? I have and 9 of them will tear up a rail yard and put it out of commision.
9 bombers attacking a runway and hangers takes out the enemies ability to launch fighters and bombers of there own.
.....
syscom3 said:Nine bombs on the Liege railyards would create nine holes in the yard which were very easily filled and repaired. It would damage or destroy the rolling stock there, but there wasnt much to begin with.
Even when the heavy bombers put a few hundred bombs on the big rail yards, the German repair crews found that they could get the rails back into place and start limited operations again after several hours. So to say nine bombs is going to destroy a railyard, woukld be stretching things.
And nine bombs on the runways? big deal. Fill them in without effort, or if it was a grass field, just plant a few flags for the pilots to know where they are and advoid them.
syscom3 said:Are you saying all of the airplanes on the base will be destroyed by only a couple of biombs? Even the ones that are dispersed will suffer losses? Hmmmmmm.
"precision bombing"... in WW2...... heheheheh, keep dreaming.
You mean if a telephone cable is broken it cant be fixed? Even the telepgraph? :O
And radios never worked? :O
Funny how many airbases kept operating even after large raids. And that goes for everyone.
syscom3 said:Two holes on the runway, easily repaired.
The other seven bombs take out the buildings but hardly impact operations.
I bet a raid like that put the airfield out of commision for an hour or so, untill the holes in the runway are filled in.