WalterM140 wrote: 
 
 The Brits ignored American advice on how to use the B-17.  Admittedly, the 
 B-17C was not ready for the big leagues. 
  
 Could that be why they ignored the advice? 
 
 Perhaps. 
 
 I'll suggest that there was -no way- given the British experience in WWI that 
 they were going to the heavy daylight bomber route in WWI.  And I don't blame 
 them a bit for that. 
 
Assuming that your second "WWI" above should read "WWII", I'd point out that the 
Brits did go the "heavy daylight bomber route" in WW II, initially and later. 
Losses on the early raids to Wilhelmshaven etc. by Wellingtons (both 'heavies', 
and reasonably well-armed by the standards of the day) convinced them that 
"self-defending bomber formations" weren't.  They lacked a long-range escort 
fighter at the time, and the BoB delayed any development of same, but they 
continued to fly some daylight missions with heavies, within escort range by 
Stirlings in 1941 and '42, beyond escort range by Lancs in 1942.  The latter were 
more in the nature of special missions, but the escorted Stirling missions were 
relatively routine.  The Stirling was ill-suited to daylight missions against 
well-defended targets, but the RAF did give the missions a tryout.  And after air 
superiority had been won and escort could be provided, the heavies flew an 
increasing percentage of daylight missions in 1944 and 1945. 
 
Guy 
 
 
 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
			
 
			
			
			
				 
            
			
			
            
            
                
			
			
		 
		
	
	
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