hudskit wrote: |
Tom- this perhaps skirts several issues as well as using the clarity of hindsight- 1) if you follow the timeline of aircraft development the B-17/B-24 series was a natural choice for creating a bomber force ...The open checkbook of the Air Corps prewar enabled them to put in orders for advanced aircraft such as the A-20 and B-25 that were able to bulwark our pacific defenses literally just in time during the opening days of WW2 . Not to mention if the Americans had introduced the next generation of technology such as the B-29 in the German theater (had it been needed)-the usefulness of the large long range bomber would have been reaffirmed again- I think what you see is more a a technology lag as that first generation of heavy bombers reached the end of it's usefulness as the second generation of fighters began to hit their stride. Lastly -I certainly hope that the need to destroy completely that perverse society known as the Third Reich is seen as a necessity of that time- for there are the twenty million or so ghosts of that conflict that would see it as so... Airing a slightly different opinion, Keith |
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Actually, I think both our essays compliment each other very well.
Mine was specific to Bill's dad's comment that a group of P-51's could have done the same damage with less risk of loss of manpower. My point was to emphasize the tendency to maximum man-usage, which included U.S. Navy single-engined aircraft often carrying a redundant third crew member in both the SBC-3 and the TBF (which were both eventually replaced by the single-engined multi-purpose Douglas AD-1 Skyraider that had a pilot only), just to boost the demand for numbers in the ranks.
Actually, first the Germans then the British (with their two-man Mosquito bomber that could carry a blockbuster bomb, obviating the continued need for Lancasters) showed how more could be done with less in the air.
Yes, I am aware that the development of the B-29 was leaked to the German heirarchy as a factor of intimidation, which also helped shorten the war.
Since I am somewhat of a B-17 fanatic, I also own a copy of the Osprey publication "Fortress of the Skies, The B-17 Flying Fortress in Combat", which is the history of the B-17 in WWII. You may not be aware of this but in fact, at first, because the B-15 was a flop, and they had a couple of very bad accidents with the prototype (Boeing Model 299), Congress nearly killed the entire project, and had they done so the USAAF in fact would have had no heavy bomber to enter WWII with. It was saved by a "behind-the-scenes" deal between Boeing exec's and a certain Air Corps general (the name escapes me at the moment), where Boeing actually went out on a limb for the USAAF, absorbing development costs by diverting funds from their airline development. The rest, as you know is history.
You may not know this, but Doolittle was instrumental in deciding to get more B-17's then '24's for the Eighth, since he and others felt it was a better airplane.
You know, the debate over the usefullness of a long-range stratigic bomber in these times of ICBM's, Cruise Missiles, etc, is still a topic of debate, especially since the "Cold War" is gone.
Pesonally, I see the big bombers as the USAF's equivalent of the USN's dreadnaughts, like the USS Iowa. Fun to have around and build models of.
OK?
Tom
P.S.
Did you know that the B-52's swept wing was a modification of the origional design due to "Operation Paperclip"'s acquisition of German swept-wing design development technology?
Tom T
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