Shortround6
Major General
And it was. Maybe not in the way originally intended but then the B-17 and B-24 could not be used as originally intended either. And not just the Norden bombsight, turns out the crews could not fly for hours on oxygen masks and heated suits alone. There was a definite time limit to high altitude flight using oxygen masks depending on altitude flown at.But I can say that although massive successes were learned through the B-29, the purpose was to be a bomber
And lets look at the British large bombers and how they were flown vs what they planned to do with them. The Whitley was always planned to be a "night" bomber. The Wellington was supposed to be a Day bomber (as was the Hampden) and the Manchester and Halifax may have been intended to be day bombers. Stirling was???? It was the failure of the Wellington to operate by day that forced the change to night bombing. Were they all failures?
Could the B-24 have done what the B-29 did in the Pacific? Forget about the atomic bomb, that is a red herring. Could B-24s have flown the distances needed with anything like useful bombload without requiring several times the numbers of aircraft, several times the number of air crew, several times the number of ground crew (on limited area Islands) and using more fuel?
Somebody may want to tell Tokyo that B-29s were failed bombers.
Over 16 square miles destroyed in one night.
Not done as "planned" in 1941-42 but what other "bomber" could have done that at the time (1945)?