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...Incidentally,in response to a comment way back in the thread,there was no plan to withdraw the RAF North of the Thames unless the Germans mounted an invasion because this was considered to leave too many vital targets unprotected. Such a move,prior to an invasion,would be an admission of defeat.
Cheers
Steve
Even this would be hard pushed to catch a PR Spit. Generally speaking the PR Spits roamed almost at will over occupied countries and Berlin throughout the whole war, why would this be any different in home airspace?E-4/N then..
A problem with using quotes from leaders at the time was that they KNEW what their own situation was but were GUESSING at what their opponents situation was.
I'm not sure that PR Spitfires could have been used in this Recon role. Not least of all because in July 1940 there were only 12 of them and because in June 1940 they had been transferred to Coastal Command.
Alfred Price has written,
"During the summer of 1940,as the Battle of Britain raged over southern England,the lone Spitfires of the PRU ranged far and wide over north-western Europe and returned with photographs of enemy movements and dispositions."
It seeems they were doing what they were supposed to do,and I can find no reference to them reconnoitering Luftwaffe raids.
Cheers
Steve
It was only a guess, clearly they used something Presumably normal Spits with orders to get out once the job was done.
I'm not sure that PR Spitfires could have been used in this Recon role. Not least of all because in July 1940 there were only 12 of them and because in June 1940 they had been transferred to Coastal Command.
Alfred Price has written,
"During the summer of 1940,as the Battle of Britain raged over southern England,the lone Spitfires of the PRU ranged far and wide over north-western Europe and returned with photographs of enemy movements and dispositions."
It seeems they were doing what they were supposed to do,and I can find no reference to them reconnoitering Luftwaffe raids.
Cheers
Steve
Now they were not PR Spits but Spit Mk IIAs, when LW high flying 109E fighter-bombers proved to be hard to intercept, FC formed No 421 Flight to fly "Jim Crow" missions on 8 Oct 40, one or two Spits would patrol the coast and over the Channel at high altitude in order to report on movements of enemy a/c, and the tactics they adopted in combat. 421 became later on No 91 Sqn.
Juha
Thanks for that.
8th October lies outside what the British at least consider the Battle of Britain.
Cheers
Steve
If there had been need the unit would have been formed earlier.
Even this would be hard pushed to catch a PR Spit.
Generally speaking the PR Spits roamed almost at will over occupied countries and Berlin throughout the whole war, why would this be any different in home airspace?
A PR Spit would only have to do its job, spot the raids with bombers and those without, then clear off. Compared to the 109 it had fuel to spare and a higher ceiling. Turn inland and either climb or simply go flat out.
Historians of air warfare like Cox and Boog,historians of the intelligence war like Thomas,and military historians like Taylor have studied this in considerably more depth than any of us and reached a diametrically opposite conclusion to you. They all believe that a better informed and better coordinated campaign by the Luftwaffe in 1940 could,not would have defeated Fighter Command.
You don't have to accept my view or theirs,but I have ploughed through many of their(and others) publications and some of their sources and their arguments are persuasive for me.
Your opinion is yours and you are entitled to it just as I am to mine. I feel I have some illustrious backers for mine.
With that I bid you good day. I shall not be returning to this thread as I have no more to add.
Cheers
Steve
Historians of air warfare like Cox and Boog,historians of the intelligence war like Thomas,and military historians like Taylor have studied this in considerably more depth than any of us and reached a diametrically opposite conclusion to you. They all believe that a better informed and better coordinated campaign by the Luftwaffe in 1940 could,not would have defeated Fighter Command.
You don't have to accept my view or theirs,but I have ploughed through many of their(and others) publications and some of their sources and their arguments are persuasive for me.
Your opinion is yours and you are entitled to it just as I am to mine. I feel I have some illustrious backers for mine.
With that I bid you good day. I shall not be returning to this thread as I have no more to add.
Cheers
Steve
Not quite. They were lighter without guns, ammo, armour and were adapted for extra speed, gaps filled extra polish and additional fuel tank behind the pilot. Also changes were made to the cockpit for better visibility. Compared to a normal Spit they were faster, climbed better and had a better ceiling.No. Even a common Emil could do that. The PR Spit wasn't anything special during 1940. Just a regular Spit, with some polish and marginally higher top speed. Some had huge bulges on the wing, that definitely did not help to make them faster.
Remembering that you are over the UK without radar vectoring I don't see how it can be easier to guide your fighters onto the recce aircraft.Because when roaming over Europe the problem with PR (Spit or any other) aircraft was to locate them and vector the fighters on a good vector to make contact.
Jabo's were difficult to intercept as they were low, picked up relatively late and went for home as soon as the job was done. A formation is spotted much earlier, the recce aircraft will have more time to get to altitude as they are on their own and don't have to wait for a squadron take off and forming up, plus the better climb perofrmance and can be guided to a safe spot to make the climb by ground control.It was the difficult part, since the interceptors would need a good time to climb to their altitude, and make a good vector. Once that happened, catching them wasn't all that hard. This was why Jabo 109s were so difficult to shoot down in 1940.
And the red light will be blinking so much earlier telling them to turn for homeIf a PR Spit is used to spy on formations, the root of the problem is eliminated. Enemy fighters are already in contact, all they have to do is to point to nose towards the singe dot in the sky and firewall the throttle.
No one is saying it was without risk, but as mentioned the 109 Rotte would be soon out of fuel trying to chase down an aircraft which is faster, climbs better and has more fuel to spare. The main danger is of course the recce spit not seeing the 109s.That should work if the PR Spit would had have performance or endurance advantage but it simply did not. What you have in mind is a magic uninterceptable plane, which the PR Spit was not. Good tactics can help, but a lone aircraft tailing a large formation is a extreme high risk job once fighters are near. What is likely to happen is that a 109 Rotte leaves the bombers chases down and shoots down the lone plane, just like they would do with any other Spitfire. PR Spits weren't any different. And at this point, you are probably better off polishing regular fighter Squadron machines for the occasional odd job.