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Suppose someone was willing to give a modern air force a bunch of
planes from WWII. The Luftwaffe can have several hundred Fw-190s. The US can have a pile of Catalina's (or DC-3s). The British can have as many Mosquitoes as they want. Are there any WWII aircraft that could still be useful in a modern war? Can a Fw-190 compete with an A-10/AH-64 if we're giving away Fw-190s? Can a B-29 do the same mission as an MC-130, if we're giving away B-29s but you still have to maintain them? Is there any WWII aircraft that would still be useful today? |
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![]() Are there any WWII aircraft that could still be useful in a modern war? Storch. C-47. Skyraider (AD-1) -- not operational before 1945, but in the pipeline all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#3
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![]() "Charles Talleyrand" wrote in message ... Suppose someone was willing to give a modern air force a bunch of planes from WWII. The Luftwaffe can have several hundred Fw-190s. The US can have a pile of Catalina's (or DC-3s). The British can have as many Mosquitoes as they want. Are there any WWII aircraft that could still be useful in a modern war? Against a modern air defence system ? Nope Can a Fw-190 compete with an A-10/AH-64 if we're giving away Fw-190s? Unguided rockets and bombs that require you overfly the target versus FLIR packages and guided weapons. What do you think ? Can a B-29 do the same mission as an MC-130, if we're giving away B-29s but you still have to maintain them? Nope Is there any WWII aircraft that would still be useful today? DC-3 for transport usage Keith |
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Charles Talleyrand wrote:
Is there any WWII aircraft that would still be useful today? Some air forces still use C-47s. Cheers David |
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"Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ...
"Charles Talleyrand" wrote in message ... Suppose someone was willing to give a modern air force a bunch of planes from WWII. The Luftwaffe can have several hundred Fw-190s. The US can have a pile of Catalina's (or DC-3s). The British can have as many Mosquitoes as they want. Are there any WWII aircraft that could still be useful in a modern war? Against a modern air defence system ? Nope Keith Again, more words of ignorance spoken like the non-authority Keith is. Hey Keith, it has already been done. On May 28, 1987 Matthias Rust, a West German amatuer pilot, took his unarmed Cessna and flew 400 miles through the USSR's air defenses (the world's greatest)to land on Red Square. We all know that if he had carried a nuke Moscow would have been history. No US military pilot had ever or will ever accomplish a similar feat. Rob God, I love proving Keith wrong. By all means Keith, keep saying "No/Nope" ![]() |
#6
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![]() "robert arndt" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Charles Talleyrand" wrote in message ... Suppose someone was willing to give a modern air force a bunch of planes from WWII. The Luftwaffe can have several hundred Fw-190s. The US can have a pile of Catalina's (or DC-3s). The British can have as many Mosquitoes as they want. Are there any WWII aircraft that could still be useful in a modern war? Against a modern air defence system ? Nope Keith Again, more words of ignorance spoken like the non-authority Keith is. Hey Keith, it has already been done. On May 28, 1987 Matthias Rust, a West German amatuer pilot, took his unarmed Cessna and flew 400 miles through the USSR's air defenses (the world's greatest)to land on Red Square. We all know that if he had carried a nuke Moscow would have been history. I doubt you would volunteer to fly a Cessna into combat in a modern air defence environment, I know I wouldnt No US military pilot had ever or will ever accomplish a similar feat. I would sincerely hope not. I dont relish the prospect of global nuclear war. Keith |
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#8
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From: David Bromage
Some air forces still use C-47s. Do any still use C-54s or C-46s? Chris Mark |
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#10
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Suppose someone was willing to give a modern air force a bunch of
planes from WWII. Are there any WWII aircraft that could still be useful in a modern war? This response assumes that by "modern war" you mean a fight against an enemy who knows he's at war and has meaningful radar-based surface-to-air and air-to-air assets. The former criterion lets out sucker-punching an undefended target in terrorist/insurgent fashion (postmodern war?). The latter criterion excludes third-world uglinesses whose technological level doesn't extend to SAMs and modern AAA and jet fighters. Period fighters would be pretty useless against modern ones except in "golden BB" scenarios. They might be able to evade and survive, but merely surviving isn't accomplishing a mission. With their energy, armament, and sensor and guidance systems based on slight augmentation of the Mk I Eyeball, it's hard to imagine what they'd have to say either offensively or defensively to an intelligently flown jet. ("Intelligently flown"? Well, I suppose that if the jet pilot were silly enough to play to their strengths while ignoring his own...) If the jet were pantsed by circumstance (taken unawares in a low energy state, or running on the memory of where the fuel used to be and thus unable to fight, or whatnot), that too would work, but overall one may bet heavily even on early jets. Something to game on a rainy day would be a saturation attack on a point target such as a CV battle group using large numbers of attack-capable fighters, torpedo bombers, or dive bombers. You might score, though probably at terrible cost. How you would marshal a suitably large force undetected is another question entirely, and that's probably what puts it into the realm of paperbacks. Heavy bombers of the period trying to drop iron bombs over defended enemy territory today -- sounds like a silly waste of men and machines even if escorted by period fighters. They might be useful as ALCM trucks if they could launch before being intercepted. Some of them could certainly still give yeomanlike service in antisubmarine warfare if granted modern sensors and weapons, or as ELINT or AEW platforms. Many of the twin-engine cargo planes could play a role in theater airlift if nothing more modern were available, and could drop paratroopers. Strategic airlift in those days was a technology-limited embryonic notion, with converted bombers hauling small amounts of stuff at the speed of a mortified tortoise. Aircraft that were follow-ons of WWII aircraft were successfully used as tankers for jet fighters, but it was a hairy enough proposition that the advent of the KC-135 was a big improvement. All in all, there are reasons jets and turboshafts elbowed their recip/prop predecessors into niche combat roles, and ultimately into the surplus market, as their capabilities improved. Their speed and power let you do more and have better odds of surviving the attempt. but you still have to maintain them? Ah, there's yet another question: whether these aircraft (no longer widely familiar, and not always easy to operate or to maintain) come out of the time warp with their aircrew, ground crew, spares, and a lot of high octane? Cheers, --Joe |
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