fastmongrel
1st Sergeant
Fine choice, now build 700-800 more Ansons or Oxfords to act as crew trainers to replace the Battles you aren't going to make. While both of those planes were built by thousands you need the extra 700-800 by the fall of 1940.
" From August 1939, 739 Battles were stationed in Canada as trainers in the Commonwealth Air Training Plan" and around 300 went to Australia. The 700-800 Ansons/Oxfords may be conservative.
The problem with the Anson it was a staple aircraft of Coastal Command not a particulary effective anti sub aircraft but it was pretty much all that was available in 1940 for inshore Scarecrow work keeping the U boats submerged. It was in short supply how many of those extra Ansons end up in CC squadrons. The problem with the Oxford is timing it only really got into large scale production just before the war how fast can its production be ramped up to replace all the Battles.
Last edited: