ykickamoocow
Airman
- 31
- May 27, 2018
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Possibly from the moment the LW or the politicians decided to create living hero warriors.
Certainly the German pilots who had been in Spain were the best but if my mememory is correct only around two hundred fighter pilots participated in Sapin similar to the Russians numbers I believe.Basically the question is in the title but this is something I have often wondered when talking about planes shot down and stuff like that, wondering if a kill against a German fighter aircraft in 1944 would be as hard or worth as much as a kill of a German fighter plane in 1940 when the Luftwaffe was at the peak of its powers in terms of technical edge over opponents and more importantly in terms of their fighter pilot training.
Is an ace who got his kills in 1944/1945 considered as good as an ace who got his kills in 1940/1941 considering that by 1944 the Germans were sending out pilots with a lot less training? Also, is the training something that needs to be taken into account when talking about how various aircraft did against the Luftwaffe, for instance how the Mark 1 Spitfire went against the Luftwaffe at its height, while the P51-D went up against the Luftwaffe when it was in decline.
Is that an accurate claim, and if so how would it affect discussions on allied WW2 aircraft, trying to take into account the decline of the Luftwaffe in terms of pilot training, technical innovation and general numbers?
Or am I completely reading this wrong, and a kill against the Luftwaffe in December 1944 would be worth as much and be just as hard as it would have been in July 1940?
I hope this thread makes sense. In my head it definitely makes sense.
Certainly the German pilots who had been in Spain were the best but if my mememory is correct only around two hundred fighter pilots participated in Sapin similar to the Russians numbers I believe.
Excellent table - thanks for posting!I've read arguments/opinions that the decline started early - during the Battle of Britain or even the Battle of France.
EDIT: coloured the chart for readability
View attachment 528264
I've read arguments/opinions that the decline started early - during the Battle of Britain or even the Battle of France.
EDIT: coloured the chart for readability
View attachment 528264
Even in the BoB pilot quality was suffering. Have a quote of a commander someplace on my hard drive saying new pilots required more training before going into combat. Will post if I find it.
''The seeds of defeat of the German fighter force in 1944 were sown over the fields of Kent in 1940'', JG26 Top Guns of the Luftwaffe p71.
So, essentially German fighter pilot quality was on a downward slope from the end of the Battle of France until VE Day. Just how did these buggers think they were going to defeat the globe?''The seeds of defeat of the German fighter force in 1944 were sown over the fields of Kent in 1940'', JG26 Top Guns of the Luftwaffe p71.
So, essentially German fighter pilot quality was on a downward slope from the end of the Battle of France until VE Day. Just how did these buggers think they were going to defeat the globe?
Still, I'd bet the average Luftwaffe fighter squadron of 1945 would have better trained pilots than an IJN or IJAF fighter squadron of the same time.