The Best Bomber of WWII: #4

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Yep, the 29 had many technical innovations (you can see the influence of the 29 all the way down to the B-1B!) and yes, the 24's wing was a marvel in its time.

But war is more than just technical stats. War is politics, money, and also being in the right place at the right time.
 
But war is more than just technical stats. War is politics, money, and also being in the right place at the right time.
And the B-29 was all of that. Aside from the atomic bombing and its participation in the war, it paved the way for the next generation of bombardment aircraft and it's legacy is still with us today.

It was, by far the best bomber of WW2.
 

I tend to agree the importance of the B-17 with respect to American airpower. No B-17 in the late 30's - no real Strategic airpower doctrine in place, probably no B-24 and possibly no B-29 because thye USN would have prevailed and restricted long range Army Air to continental US.

Probably the most important with the B-52 alongside.

That doesn't make the B-17 the 'Best' because of all the reasons advanced on performance as well as impact to the closure of WWII.
 
The B29 also had another innovation that was radical for its day, was the way the US Govt. decided on how to finance and produce it.

This was the first military contract in US history that was financed as "cost plus, fixed fee".

By removing the cost burden off of Boeing, technological advances could be incorporated into the design without Boeing worrying about going bankrupt if it didn't work out.
 
....and which also opened the way to the *polite cough* cost 'overuns' abuse we see today...

The abuse is quite rare and is almost always that the customer is changing specs or asking for more than what can be delivered.

Without a "cost plus" type of contract, technological innovation would always be incremental and very conservative.
 
....and which also opened the way to the *polite cough* cost 'overuns' abuse we see today...

All leading edge, complex projects, have the potential to overrun - whether IT or anti missle systems or airframe design.

DoD 7001 and 7002 were developed to start getting a handle on separation of direct and indirect costs, as well as getting a handle on tooling and manufacturing tools pricing between the contractors.

Until 7001 there was no cross footing between WBS and CLI except by prepared reports with no real commonality between contractors. The Defense Contract Audit teams were not only confused regarding contract project status but specifically how to pay the Contractor based on milestone achievement reflecting both target achievement but also incurred cost.

To support Syscom further - writing a contract to match agreed specs with enough specificity that agreement to deliverables is 'uniform' is a whole 'nuther topic. Scope creep comes in two forms. "Gee, that is not what I meant when I agreed to that language - let's negotiate' to "oops, I forgot to ask for this'.

If you ever saw a WBS PERT Chart for an airframe contract you would not have a clue regarding the complexity..
 

LOL. I have read many of the posts here - not all - and decided to comment on your question. My Pop was a B-17 driver as his first official front office job in late '44. One day he and I were sitting in the cockpit of a museum B-17 kinda quietly while I got a feel for it. Then it dawned on me about the absence of creature comforts. The mind does that. After scanning all the technical aspects of controls, placements, instruments and such the mind silently searches for something else. So I blurted out the question about where the heating stuff was. He looked at me and quietly sneered: "What heat? We froze our assets off in this blivit!" (Blivit: 2 pounds of excrement in a one pound bag) I had heard this description of various military types from him in the past. Reality check. Then came all the comments about carpet bombing, worthless gunners who couldn't hit the broadside of a barn yet died trying, highly trained bombardiers working with the latest equipment only to miss anyway because Mother Nature still had the last call between their altitude and the ground, nav/radioman given a gun he couldn't use anyway and after all was said and done a fast-attack squadron of low-flying far-ranging fighter-bombers could have done their job much more effectively and far, far more efficiently in one mission. Similar comments came from various other period pilots who flew various types at various annual reunions.

So, yea, the pilots did have some pretty poignant summaries of their missions, the equipment used to accomplish them, what should have happened and why it didn't. The common reason cited was theatre-specific inter and intra-military politics.
 
So, yea, the pilots did have some pretty poignant summaries of their missions, the equipment used to accomplish them, what should have happened and why it didn't. The common reason cited was theatre-specific inter and intra-military politics.

Kind of a broad brush comment isn't it? Any specifics come to mind?
 
Shooter, the Lanc put more bombs on target than the B17 and B24. Plus the heavier bombs dropped by the lanc actually did far more damage than the pint sized 500 and 1000 pounders used by the AAF.

Look through the post war USSBS for the facts.
 

Read back a few pages more and that was mentioned as well but the numbers stated in that post was related to the B-24s that served in the USAAF. Despite being broke the Brits did bring on the Lincoln and eventually utilized B-29s.

The Lanc's airframe was a hell of a lot more resilient than the B-24 although it was still early WW2 technology. The B-24 was a dump truck, quickly built to serve a role and it served well but due to high attrition rates and airframes as new as 1300 hours coming apart, it was destined for the scrap bin.
 

Shooter - this is a forum where bringing 'fists to a gunfight' has true meaning relative to fact based opinions - expect to be challenged - as we all do.

Regards,

Bill
 


File:Ussb-1.svg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

But daylight missions caused the Germans to come up and fight, where they were shot down by the tens of thousands.
Now you come up with numbers
 

The number for ETO/MTO USAAF might be close to one 'tens of thousands' which was an excellent achievement by itself but hardly 'multiples' of tens of thousands.
 
Do you have quantified record of that?
If the Lanc was so good after the war, why did the RAF by the Washington?
To Give the RAF a global strike capability that it didn't have at the time - this happening while the fist V bombers were being developed.

When someone claimed that 6000 B-24s were scrapped in a year, what porportion of the 18,000 built is that and how many survived out of the 7-7,377 Lancs made?
Another 1000 probably scrapped there after. Did you ever stop to think that it does cost money to maintain and operate an aircraft an in many cases operational aircraft were either stored or scrapped all together based on operational costs?
High time Lancasters were scrapped - the fact remains the aircraft served Bomber Command into the 1950s and served many other nations quite well in secondary roles up to the 1960s.

Errr, what model Lanc are you using????

Not wishing to embarass you with numbers from the B-24 or B-29 I list from the same source on page 27 the B-17G numbers, 8,680 built or more than 1,000 more than all Lancs combined.

Are you comparing the Lanc to the B-17, B-24 or B-29???? There is no doubt the B-29 was the best heavy bomber if not the best bomber of WW2. The Lancaster is a distant second.

Specifications (Lancaster)

Loaded weight: 63,000 lb (29,000 kg)
Powerplant: 4× Rolls-Royce Merlin XX V12 engines, 1,280 hp (954 kW) each
Performance

Maximum speed: 240 knots (280 mph, 450 km/h) at 15,000 ft (5,600 m)
Range: 2,700 NM (3,000 mi, 4,600 km) with minimal bomb load
Service ceiling: 23,500 ft (8,160 m)
Wing loading: 48 lb/ft² (240 kg/m²)
Power/mass: 0.082 hp/lb (130 W/kg)
Armament


Guns: 8× 0.303 in (7.70 mm) Browning machine guns in three turrets, with variations
Bombs: Maximum normal bomb load of 14,000lbs or 22,000lb Grand Slam with modifications to bomb bay

BTW you're not embarrassing me with any numbers from a non-technical history book - If I want or need the performance data I'll go to the flight manual.
B-17G;
EEW=38,000 Lbs.
MTO=65,500 Lbs and 72,000 Lbs OLTO.
Speed with R-1820-97s @1200 HP = 286MPH, 1380HP WEP Ea.= 302MPH @ 25,000'. Note that the B-17 is faster on less power than the Lanc indicating supirior aerodynamics.
Can you prove that? Do you have wind tunnel data???

The Lancaster as far as bomb load, plain and simple.

You've cited data from a history book - why don't you try to find yourself the Pilot's Notes or Flight Manual from each aircraft and find out what were the listed performance numbers of the aircraft and then compare them to the real operations the aircraft were subjected to.
For example, do you really think a B-17 was operated at 35,000 feet with a full bomb load????
 
Again where are you coming up with this data???The USAAF Heavy Bombers CLAIMED A little over 6000 and in actuality probably brought down more like 3000 if that many and that probably includes medium bombers as well. Here...

Army Air Forces in World War II

And if you REALLY want to lean about German losses, start here...

J A G D G E S C H W A D E R 26 "SCHLAGETER"

How many night fighters were downed?
By whom, the RAF? Bombers or fighters????

Ever hear of 100 Group?
 
Your proving a little knowledge is a dangerous thing
 
Shooter, let me put this out there for you...

"As the intensity of air combat over Europe grew, the USAAF began to experience a flood of victory claims from its air gunners. This was not surprising, of course. A given formation of bombers might have fifteen to twenty aircraft. Each had five or six people shooting at oncoming enemy fighters. If one enemy aircraft was shot down, dozens of air gunners might claim - in perfectly good faith - that they hit it. However, this led to utterly unrealistic claims of successes, so much so that on some days (as post-war investigations proved), USAAF gunners claimed to have shot down more German aircraft than had actually been in the air! Royal Air Force intelligence experts advised USAAF staff to divide their gunners' claims by at least six in order to obtain a realistic figure. The USAAF refused, somewhat indignantly, and only conceded the point after the war."

Bayou Renaissance Man: Weekend Wings #25: Air Gunners
 

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