Thankyou for pointing out the table is excluding certain losses. its that type of creative accounting that skews numbers and hides realities. A non-combat loss is just that, doesnt matter how it gets itself lost, if it is permanently lost or permanently unavailable, its a loss. if the loss is directly because it was because of enemy action, its a combat loss. If its a loss for any other reason, its a non combat loss. The US lost 180000 airframes during the war to all causes, of which about 20000 were combat related. Any other methodology of including or not including losses for whatever reason just skews the reult and hides the true effect. And it certainly means the results shown in the statistical digest, or cannot be compared in any way to BC losses, because we dont know what losses were included and what werent, and if not, why not.
I've presented the combat losses because in the link on BC losses there were only combat losses (BC - Statistics) so is right compare with USAAF losses in combat mission so i've hide nothing that was relevant. On the inclusion the data on BC talking of operational losses in combat mission they give the missing planes and that scrapped after back home (this with distintion if enemy related or not), the USAAF data give the losses on combat mission (to triple AAA, to enemy aircraft, to other causes) this data seem to me surely comparable maybe not the same to 100%.
No need to get rude my friend, just becausde your asserions are being chanllenged here. im not using or disputing the losses listed in the statisitical digest, because Ive seen such creative accounting excercises done by every belligerent at one time or another. If a source excludes certain losses from its account, for whatever reason, then the numbers listed in that account immediately become unable to be compared with anything because we dont know what losses were excluded and why. They may say why, but the number isd stil suspect. For example, what do you say about an aircraft that returns but is scrapped due to damage. is that a loss. By the parameter you are stating its not a loss. Since flak accounts for about 7 times the number of aircraft damaged, to those actually shot down, the methodology you are so strenuously defending immediately discounts by a dfactor of up to 7 times, the effect of the German flak guns. The whole argument of excluding certain losses from the accounting is just so non-sequitur and something Ive never accepted.
My smart friend. No a planes scrapped for damage is a losses, i've writed a planes scapped to wear is not a loss, in other worlds a planes scrapped because it's too old. However the BC missed 5,862 Heavyes, 288 were scrapped for EA and 781 not EA.
No, they are not. They are significantly different in size, and because they have selectively included obly certain types of lossess (eg excluded aircraft scrapped that returned to base) cannot be compared to BC losses. We dont know the parameters of the BC accounts, and whether what they include in their loss sheets are the same as those for the US.
Different size? show me that difference. imo both the report include airplanes scrapped that returned to base. As writed possibly not 100% same but limited difference.
Just because the table you are reading from displays losses in a certain way, and excludes certain losses, does not mean that an aircraft scrapped is not a loss. its just that your table doesnt include it as a loss. I can tell you that aircraft not avaiilable for operations, for whatever reason are treated as a loss from the force structure. thats not my idea, incidentally, its the way daily strength returns are reported in the military. actually the daily servicieability sheets are morre detailed than that, because they list permanent losses and how long damaged aircraft will be before they return, but an aircrafdt scrapped is counted as a loss, I can assure you.
i escluded losses in accident in not combat mission that however are not included in the BC data. You tell that USAAF data don't include scrapped i tell that were include...
I think you confuse loss with waste. afaik loss need a action. It' obvious that accounting purpose it's the same. A plane post out service can be selled or just lended, gifted a secondary air forces a planes loss maybe usefull only for junk ( recovery not damaged items)