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The June 1 1940 date excludes aircraft such as the Mosquito and P-51.
Do the aircraft remain in the same configuration as when they first flew? F4U (and B-24?) wouldn't be that useful in that state.
What if rules:
1. You have to fight WWII with only two types of aircraft. For example, you could choose the Me 109 and the B-17, or you could choose the A6M and the the FW 190.
2. The aircraft must have been flying (first flight on or before) June 1 1940.
3. These two types must perform all aviation tasks from day fighter carrier fighter to torpedo bomber to night fighter to trainer to tactical and strategic bombing to cargo transport to paratrooper drops, etc.
The limitation to two aircraft types does cause a problem in that I would argue you need three: a single-engined fighter; a fast twin engined strike/night-fighter; and a big bomber/transport/MRP. It is difficult to see how this range of roles could be covered by only two aircraft, except by making them massively compromised (e.g. a Wellington night fighter?). And that's before carrier strike is considered.
And the Heinkel He 280, first flight Sept 1940.The June 1 1940 date excludes aircraft such as the Mosquito and P-51.
Well shoot, so we can't combine various nations?
I would have gone with the P-36 and the Ju88...
Your first-flight date limit seems a bit odd from a UK perspective. Given that the air fighting over France was taking place then, with the Battle of Britain starting in July, then a first-flight date would have to have been years earlier for the participants to be equipped with the planes in order for them to be available for the most important air battle of the war. So no choice for the RAF - it would have to be the Spitfire, which fortunately was rather good.
Unfortunately, the RAF's larger aircraft were not so good at the start of the war. The Ju-88 was surely the best multi-engined aircraft around at that time (until the Mosquito came along).
The limitation to two aircraft types does cause a problem in that I would argue you need three: a single-engined fighter; a fast twin engined strike/night-fighter; and a big bomber/transport/MRP. It is difficult to see how this range of roles could be covered by only two aircraft, except by making them massively compromised (e.g. a Wellington night fighter?). And that's before carrier strike is considered.
Totally agree in that it has to be three.
Personally mine would be
1 - Spitfire
2 - Beaufighter
3 - B24
Well, there's the problem; set the date too late, and all the aircraft fighting in 1939-40 are ignored. Set the date too late, and you're left with Meteors, P-80s, Me-262s, Vampires, and Ar-234s.
I'm open to suggestions for modifications of the rules.
If we want to fight ww2 in it's whole length (1st Sept 1939 on) with aircraft that were there before ww2 started, then I'd choose Spitfire and B-17.
Spitfire as a day fighter/interceptor, night fighter (same radar as installed on Defiant for starters), fighter bomber, LR hi-alt recon over contested airspace, long range escort fighter, navalized multi-role aircraft. B-17 as bomber (surprise), LR MPA, and converted as transport.
Alternatively, Fw 190 or Fw 187 instead of Spitfire.
So, would you be able to protect B-17s with only Spitfires?
My suggestion is to set the rule to exclude any design that was not flying before, perhaps, 1st January 1939.