Kevin J
Banned
No, as usual here we are getting in trouble by toying with imaginary scenarios. If the carrier elevator was too small for an SBD then they could not have operated an SBD to sink it. My only point is that the canard that dive bombers couldn't sink battleships is just that - a myth. Thank god for the US dive bombers, in particular the SBD, turned out to be so good at sinking enemy warships in general that they were able to make up for the fact that they lacked reliable torpedoes until well past the tipping point of the war.
Pre-war doctrine suggested that torpedo bombers were the only real way to sink ships, with dive bombers as kind of a backup. But the reality thank god was that our better quality dive bombers were more than up to the task. Wartime experience also showed that torpedo bombers were very vulnerable to defensive efforts and tended to suffer high loss rates especially against well protected military targets, whereas dive bombers could attack very difficult targets and survive sorties much better.
As for the Swordifsh, I'm sorry I know some people like them, and sometimes you just do the best you can with what you got, I certainly respect that. And I'll even concede with the early radar functionality, they provided some interesting all-weather capability. But I still think they were kind of an embarrassment and not a very good warplane by WW2 standards.
I really don't understand why the Swordfish gets knocked for being a slow speed biplane. Lets face it, what have we replaced it with in the 21st Century? Why, helicopters with the same sort of top speed, naturally.