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plan_D said:Since the destruction of the Remegan bridge prevented an armoured thrust deep into the Ruhr-Rhine valley earlier than it really happened, certainly gives some credit to the slowing of the Allied advance.
Technically, the Ar 234 was one of the best bombers of the war. It had a record to prove that it wasn't a paper tiger, but it doesn't earn it's place amongst the best because of that record. It's technical ability, and advanced technology bring it forward into the race.
But once again, you're trying to skip the question of the payloads being useful or not. Once again, I never said the Ar 234 was the best bomber of the war. I'm merely trying to get through to you that an attack by nine planes carrying a grand total of 9,900 lbs of bombs is a useful load on a tactical strike. Are you going to admit your mistake of calling it useless? Or are you going to try and dodge out of it again?
And you never told me what these larger targets were, that would apparently to take hundreds of Ar 234s to attack effectively.
delcyros said:.... However, this credit should be given to the whole Manhatten project rather than to the carrier plane)....
plan_D said:The destruction of Remagen Bridge was part due to the Ar 234s bombing of it. This is one thing everyone agrees on. The collapse of the Remagen Bridge itself was due to many factors, but mostly the bombing done by the Me 262 and Ar 234 bombers.
You gave me a good laugh with this, syscom. It delayed the U.S advance by a week, and cost the Allies many more troops when they had to employ paratroopers in Operation Varsity. A week is a long time when you're attempting to sweep up enemy formations.
Your lack of reading ability amazes me. I don't believe I stated the Ar 234 deserves recognition for it's achievements in World War II. On the contrary, syscom, I stated the Ar 234 did very little in the war as a bomber. I, in fact, stated it had no effect on the war whatsoever.
I said that it should be recognised for it's technical ability, to which it proved it could achieve in the few combats it did take part in. Surely you understand that? Don't come back and say that the bomber didn't do anything, when we've already come to something nearing on an argeement that the Ar 234 did very little as a bomber.
The raiders on Liége railyards carried a single SC 500 (1,100 lbs) bomb. The payload used was not the Ar 234s maximum load. This has been established previously. The raid was set to impress, it was set to get the bombers in, destroy the target, and get out unscathed.
Troop concentrations? Ar 234s were used to attack the 101st Airborne Division in and around Bastogne. Hundreds were not used.
A harbour? They were attacked by strategic bombers, mostly. But when any raid took place on a harbour it took hundreds of planes, even when they were B-17s or Lancasters. Except the raid on Taranto, but they were aiming for the ships, not the harbour itself.
And blah blah blah isn't a tactical target.
plan_D said:If the U.S Army had already gone across the Rhine in force at Remagen. Why did it take paradrops during Operation Varsity to secure the eastern bank? The collapse delayed the U.S assault for a week, and cost more lives. The website is right, five Ar 234s were lost to AA fire over the bridge.
"Hordes" does not indicate a number, syscom. Single targets would be attack by dozens, rarely more than fifty. That would look like a horde, I suppose.
Stop steering away from the original comments, syscom. You claimed that 9,900 lbs worth of bombs is useless. Yet that payload destroyed the railyards, so they have use.
. And what bridge was this? was it as big as the one at Remagan? [/quote]You also claim that it would take hundreds of Ar 234s to attack a target, like a bridge. Yet it only took five Battles with a single 250 lbs bomb each to destroy a bridge on May 12, 1940.
Just admit you're wrong. It wouldn't take hundreds of Ar 234s to perform tactical jobs. It didn't take hundreds of bombers to attack tactical targets. And 9,900 lbs worth of bombs is a very useful load for tactical targets. Stop trying to steer away from it, you're just increasingly looking like an idiot. A single 1,100 lbs bomb can easily destroy gut a building, or crater a runway.
How do you know about the Ar 234 raids on New Years Day? You don't, that's right. So stop pretending that you know anything about them. You didn't even know they existed until I told you. Oh, and where did I say they contributed "mightly" to Bodenplatte? Stop claiming I say things that I never have.
DerAdlerIstGelandet said:So here is my question syscom. If you take a A-26 and put 1000lb of bombs on it and send 9 of them each to attack a rail depot. Are those 9000lb of bombs of no use like the Ar-234's. Just wondering your take on it.
DerAdlerIstGelandet said:Okay lets put it this way then.
One plane vs another plane. Not 9 bombers vs. 9 bombers.
When it comes to tactical bombers.
What tactical bomber would be more advanced and better than the Ar-234.
DerAdlerIstGelandet said:Not saying it was the best bomber, but I am saying in the role that it was used there is not a single tactical bomber out there that was more capable and advanced.
The main reason is this. It could get to the target fast, drop its bombs and get out faster and easier than any other so that it could live to bomb another day easier than other tactical bombers.