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In article ,
(Eunometic) writes: (ArtKramr) wrote in message ... Nuff said. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer The Me 262 seems to have shot down 150 aircraft for the loss of 100 of their own. Mostly shot up on landing or takeoff when they were even more vulnerable to this problem than piston enginer aircraft due to their slow throttle response. (A problem partially solved by the better control systems on latter engines like the Jumo 004D as opposed to jumo 004B4.) It has little to do with throttle responce, and a lot to do with the Thrust/Power relationship. It's a bit too late for me to type it all in again tonight - but please do some googling in r.a.m. on the subject. This loss rate is a dismal record; it wasn't that the 262 wasn't a good weapons system: it was simply outnumbered and heavily targeted by the allies and also and quite a few losses were experienced on the first missions due to the tactic of slowing down to take aim. It wasn't untill tactics were worked out to solve this that effectiveness improved. And placed into service long before it should have been. Some problems, like poor asymmetric handling at low speeds (One Engine out) were endemic to the design. But there were other problems - high speed snaking, and some rather ugly transonic behavior that should have been resolved before service pilots were turned loose in it. The Me 262 Pilot's Handbook has about 3 pages of handling limitations. The F-80A Pilot's handbook has 2 flight limit entries. You know, it's rather interesting that for all the work on high-speed aerodynamics that the Germans actually did perform, they never seemed to be able to translate it into the aircraft they built. The German Aviation Military/Industrial Complex's solution to compressibility/controllability problems in their airplanes was to put a Big Red "Thou Shalt Not..." notice in the Pilot's Handbook. Compare this to the work done in the U.S and Britain to sort out the transonic problems that were occurring - the developmetn of the DIve Recovery Flap (Which isn't a Speed Brake), improved control surface geometries, and, for that matter, the inclusion of Speed Brakes. In technolgy the Germans and allies were closely matched. Both sides produced major breakthroughs and both sides had areas where they fell embarrasingly far behined. The Germans were perhaps forced to focus on Break throughs because resources were massively against them after 42 but in the end the odds were against them. I do suspect that the breakthroughs would have broken up the superiority of the allies in some areas. Jet aircraft gave them a fresh start that would have equalised them where the allies ahd piston engined superiority in quantity and quality. Sure the allies would also have had jets but their existing technolgy would have had its value wiped out and would have made useless almost all piston engined aircraft: B26,A26,P47, B17,B24,B25 etc but they never got enough of their jets going in time. It's not that simple. There were a lot of factors - the most telling of which were evident in 1936, when the Luftwaffe, and the other German Armed Forces, cut back on armament production because they didn't have enough raw materiels to use the factory capacity they already had. One of the other things they should have done was build up a better training organization. A big limit was the lack of properly skilled pilots. By late 1944, there weren't enough fully capable pilots to make a differece, even if they were flying Mr. Arndt's Disks and herding around Reptilicus. There's no point in making jet airplanes if you have nobody who can fly them. I don't like the "Allies Invented Everyting" nor do I like the "Germans Invented Everyting" attitude. Anyone who knows how technology advances should realise what one man can do another will replicate almost immediatly. One of the mistakes of the Germans in the Radar war was to put so much secrecy on their radar vulnerability that they failed to develop effective countermeasurews to windows jamming becuase the requise people weren't involved. It should have been obvious that the British, who were behined in Radar at the time would soon catch up. That is a rather good example of the German's arrogance about their own technology, and their "Mirror-Imaging" of how a particular technology would be used. In 1939, and 1940 the Germans had the best high-frequency radar around. Their main thrust for it, however, was to use it to bulwark existing systems, specifically Antiaircraft and Naval Fire Control. And they did this well.Once they'd figured out that the long-wave pulsed signals that they were receiving was some sort of radar, they absolutely knew that they were far ahead of teh British, and didn't need to worry about it. What they missed, however, was that those primitive, inaccurate long-wave radars were part of an integrated Cammand and Control system that allowed RAF Fighter Command to concentrate their forces with an efficency not seen in aerial warfare before that time. That same blindness - that belief that the German stuff was superior because it was German, effected them in all areas. Alexander the Great however with 50,000 men once defeated Darius's army of 2-3 million with boldness and clever tactics. Uhm, I don't think that ther were 2-3 million people in the entire Persian Empire. Subsistance farming doesn't give you that sort of a reserve. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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From: Chad Irby
Date: 2/19/2004 10:23 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: In article , (B2431) wrote: They really should have mass produced the piloted version of the V-1. Large amounts of industrial migraines for the pilots. -- cirby at cfl.rr.com The hard part would be recuiting once they saw the same percentage of them dropping off the end of the ramp as with the V-1. The rest would probably go boom long before hitting any target, you know kinda like"skeet." Sounds like a perfectly good plan from the Allied point of view. Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired |
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![]() "robert arndt" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Nuff said. Or bombed it ![]() Keith And Germany laid waste to Europe and Russia not to mention costing Mass murder isnt considered a matter of pride by sane people Britain, France, and Belgium their colonies postwar. In point of fact Britain had taken the desision to grant its colonies independence long before the war. Australia , New Zealand and Canada were already independent and the Imperial conference of 1936 had set out the process for India and South Africa. Britain did remain indpendent and whole , unlike Germany. So glad Germany cost Britain its superpower status and robbed them of developing the A-bomb first (Tube Alloys). ![]() Of course they tube alloys project was merged into the manhattan project and they at least knew how to build a bomb. Something Heisenberg and Co never managed to achieve. Keith |
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![]() "Eunometic" wrote in message om... If it ever got down to the wire do you think the allies would be capable of producing the men for this kind of mission? Sure WWII aircrew had around the 50% chance of completing a tour of duty (about the same as Ed Rasimus had flying thuds over Vietnam). but to face odds like that or like 95% on a single mission? Today I don't you could find such people. Of course you can. Young people can always be manipulated by cynical propaganda and its disturbingly easy to turn idealism into fanatacism. Thats how they recruit suicide bombers fer crying out loud. As for WW2 there were many missions flown by allied aircrew where they didnt expect to come back The Swordfish aircrew who attacked the Italian fleet at Taranto expected to take 90% losses, those who attacked S&G during the Channel Dash kniew their chances of survival were essentially nil Keith |
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![]() "David E. Powell" wrote in message s.com... "robert arndt" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Nuff said. Well, the expense of WW2 screwed everybody up for a while. But given the choice of fighting or losing everything, the French and British probably would feel today the cost was worth it. In 50 years there won't be any significant number of French, English or European descended Americans to think that it was worth it. |
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"Peter Stickney" wrote in message
... In article , (Eunometic) writes: (ArtKramr) wrote in message ... Nuff said. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer The Me 262 seems to have shot down 150 aircraft for the loss of 100 of their own. Mostly shot up on landing or takeoff when they were even more vulnerable to this problem than piston enginer aircraft due to their slow throttle response. (A problem partially solved by the better control systems on latter engines like the Jumo 004D as opposed to jumo 004B4.) It has little to do with throttle responce, and a lot to do with the Thrust/Power relationship. It's a bit too late for me to type it all in again tonight - but please do some googling in r.a.m. on the subject. Yes ofcourse I understand; the T/W ratio was effectively low. The aircraft was fast because its jet powerplant didn't drop of in 'thrust' at higher speeds like a piston engined aircraft did. Still a proper controll system should allow the pilot to slam the throttle back (it went backward in german aircraft apparently) and the eingine should spool up while the control system took care of fuel and nozzle postion so that tubine temperature stayed constant. This loss rate is a dismal record; it wasn't that the 262 wasn't a good weapons system: it was simply outnumbered and heavily targeted by the allies and also and quite a few losses were experienced on the first missions due to the tactic of slowing down to take aim. It wasn't untill tactics were worked out to solve this that effectiveness improved. And placed into service long before it should have been. Erhard Milch wanted it on service by 1943. This was one of the few weapons that could have changed the course of the war if it entered service early enough. Some problems, like poor asymmetric handling at low speeds (One Engine out) were endemic to the design. But there were other problems - high speed snaking, and some rather ugly transonic behavior that should have been resolved before service pilots were turned loose in it. They likely would have eventualy debugged these; both the Meteor and F80 had problems upon entry into servive but I agree the Germans jumped this aircraft into service more prematurly than the allies for obvious reaons while the me 109 had to soldier on. The appearence of the aircraft looks like it would snake however. It is my understanding that the original location of the engines was mounted next to the fuesleage under the wings and that this was changed when the dimensions of the engine increased and presumably turbulence issues arose. There were versions using the He S11 engine in this position (models availble as is to be expected) Presumbly the fact that thrust was closer to the centerline would have improved stability. Also I recall a Quantas engineer telling me that the Beoing 707 had a snaking motion and a damper was fitted to the trim tab on the rudder that on the basis of an accelerometer (or possible gyro?) counter acted any snaking. It was I believe an all mechanical/hydraulic system. The Me 262 Pilot's Handbook has about 3 pages of handling limitations. The F-80A Pilot's handbook has 2 flight limit entries. I may have seen this handbook but I don't know if we are talking the same thing. Most of the limitations from what I can see relate to engine handling of the jumo 004B1 and Jumo 004B4. This was mostly caused by the crude fuel delivery and metering system system (the BMW003 was better and the Jumo 004D matched it). Also the use of J2 Diesel fuel (or K2 heavy fuel in an emergency) for reasons of safety, economy and its ease of synthesis meant that the engine was started on a parafinic gasoline and then switched over to the J2 again complicating starting. finally starting consisted of a small 2 stroke motor which itself had to be started and then only when the air was thick enough at lower altitides. The lack of duples injectors mad high altitude flameout easy and relights hard. Better control systems and duplex injectors helped solve all of these so the restriction may have enventually disappeared. As I understand Helmuth Schelp began to favour a central generating faciltiy and individual electric starters possibly to eovercome this and also for the larger jets like the 8000llb thrust BMW 009-016 a gas turbine starter so that a single fuel could be used. You know, it's rather interesting that for all the work on high-speed aerodynamics that the Germans actually did perform, they never seemed to be able to translate it into the aircraft they built. Lets face it they never got much outside the Me 109 in service and its was to old to grow gracefully anymore though I presume the Ta 152C and Ta 152H had good high speed handling. The German Aviation Military/Industrial Complex's solution to compressibility/controllability problems in their airplanes was to put a Big Red "Thou Shalt Not..." notice in the Pilot's Handbook. Compare this to the work done in the U.S and Britain to sort out the transonic problems that were occurring - the developmetn of the DIve Recovery Flap (Which isn't a Speed Brake), improved control surface geometries, and, for that matter, the inclusion of Speed Brakes. Was this flap ever used? In technolgy the Germans and allies were closely matched. Both sides produced major breakthroughs and both sides had areas where they fell embarrasingly far behined. The Germans were perhaps forced to focus on Break throughs because resources were massively against them after 42 but in the end the odds were against them. I do suspect that the breakthroughs would have broken up the superiority of the allies in some areas. Jet aircraft gave them a fresh start that would have equalised them where the allies ahd piston engined superiority in quantity and quality. Sure the allies would also have had jets but their existing technolgy would have had its value wiped out and would have made useless almost all piston engined aircraft: B26,A26,P47, B17,B24,B25 etc but they never got enough of their jets going in time. It's not that simple. There were a lot of factors - the most telling of which were evident in 1936, when the Luftwaffe, and the other German Armed Forces, cut back on armament production because they didn't have enough raw materiels to use the factory capacity they already had. One of the other things they should have done was build up a better training organization. A big limit was the lack of properly skilled pilots. By late 1944, there weren't enough fully capable pilots to make a differece, even if they were flying Mr. Arndt's Disks and herding around Reptilicus. There's no point in making jet airplanes if you have nobody who can fly them. They weren't intending to fight a long war of attrition which they would eventually loose I suppose. This training issue, why was it mucked up? They must have had their reasons? Or were those with sensible arguments suppresed? I don't like the "Allies Invented Everyting" nor do I like the "Germans Invented Everyting" attitude. Anyone who knows how technology advances should realise what one man can do another will replicate almost immediatly. One of the mistakes of the Germans in the Radar war was to put so much secrecy on their radar vulnerability that they failed to develop effective countermeasurews to windows jamming becuase the requise people weren't involved. It should have been obvious that the British, who were behined in Radar at the time would soon catch up. That is a rather good example of the German's arrogance about their own technology, and their "Mirror-Imaging" of how a particular technology would be used. In 1939, and 1940 the Germans had the best high-frequency radar around. Their main thrust for it, however, was to use it to bulwark existing systems, specifically Antiaircraft and Naval Fire Control. And they did this well.Once they'd figured out that the long-wave pulsed signals that they were receiving was some sort of radar, they absolutely knew that they were far ahead of teh British, and didn't need to worry about it. What they missed, however, was that those primitive, inaccurate long-wave radars were part of an integrated Cammand and Control system that allowed RAF Fighter Command to concentrate their forces with an efficency not seen in aerial warfare before that time. That same blindness - that belief that the German stuff was superior because it was German, effected them in all areas. God bring me an arrogant enemy. (to be fair there are pleny of people on these NGs who would underestimate an enemy) An Integrated air defense system makes sense for the British on their island. For the landlocked Germans, who had no channel, a philosophy of avoiding a war of attrition and winning the frist battles so as to avoid fighting on German soil prevailed. Very little was devoted to defense it was thought best to devote it to attack and support of the Army and this probably starved the development of such systems eg IFF. Also who would run it? Kammhuber was regarded with suspicion for his large line of radar defese stations. The over confidence was there, Georings rash statements prove it, but there was more behined it I think. Alexander the Great however with 50,000 men once defeated Darius's army of 2-3 million with boldness and clever tactics. Uhm, I don't think that ther were 2-3 million people in the entire Persian Empire. Subsistance farming doesn't give you that sort of a reserve. It wasn't subsistance farming: they had huge cities. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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In article ,
"eunometic" writes: "Peter Stickney" wrote in message ... In article , (Eunometic) writes: (ArtKramr) wrote in message ... Nuff said. The Me 262 seems to have shot down 150 aircraft for the loss of 100 of their own. Mostly shot up on landing or takeoff when they were even more vulnerable to this problem than piston enginer aircraft due to their slow throttle response. (A problem partially solved by the better control systems on latter engines like the Jumo 004D as opposed to jumo 004B4.) It has little to do with throttle responce, and a lot to do with the Thrust/Power relationship. It's a bit too late for me to type it all in again tonight - but please do some googling in r.a.m. on the subject. Yes ofcourse I understand; the T/W ratio was effectively low. The aircraft was fast because its jet powerplant didn't drop of in 'thrust' at higher speeds like a piston engined aircraft did. Still a proper controll system should allow the pilot to slam the throttle back (it went backward in german aircraft apparently) and the eingine should spool up while the control system took care of fuel and nozzle postion so that tubine temperature stayed constant. It still wouldn't have made any difference. The spool-up times would have been the same nontheless, whether it was teh pilot or teh fuel control moving the feed valve. The spool-up time has a lot more to do with the compressor/turbine spool's mass, and the turbine's ability to turn hot gas into torque. It ought to be noted here that you can't just jam the throttle open in most high-powered recips at low speeds, either. The torque reaction (Well, Torque, P-Factor, and gyroscopic precession) will snap you right over, and if the speed's low enough, you'll stall one wing & spin in. This loss rate is a dismal record; it wasn't that the 262 wasn't a good weapons system: it was simply outnumbered and heavily targeted by the allies and also and quite a few losses were experienced on the first missions due to the tactic of slowing down to take aim. It wasn't untill tactics were worked out to solve this that effectiveness improved. And placed into service long before it should have been. Erhard Milch wanted it on service by 1943. This was one of the few weapons that could have changed the course of the war if it entered service early enough. What Milch wanted, and what teh German aircraft industry could deliver, were two very different things. The German jet engines took an incredibly long time to go from prototypes to something tht could be marginally reliable enough to be placed on an airplane. Some of this was due to the shortage of what would now be called Strategic Materials, but a lot of it was trying to sort out the compressor, combustor, and turbine aerodynamics. The materiels problems weren't new - they'd been a factor in German industry since the mid 1930s. The other problems were the sort of thig that happen when you're trying to do R&D on something that's totally new. You don't know what problems are going to pop up, and how long it'll take to fix them. Of course, once they got the engines sorted out, they would have to deal with the airframe. And they had big problems there, as well, suc as the blanketing of the tailplane due to the choice of a conventional landing gear. That required a redesigned wing structure, and a new fuselage. The in-service date slipped nearly a year, despite the high priority of the work being performed, and there was nothing that could be done about it. Some problems, like poor asymmetric handling at low speeds (One Engine out) were endemic to the design. But there were other problems - high speed snaking, and some rather ugly transonic behavior that should have been resolved before service pilots were turned loose in it. They likely would have eventualy debugged these; both the Meteor and F80 had problems upon entry into servive but I agree the Germans jumped this aircraft into service more prematurly than the allies for obvious reaons while the me 109 had to soldier on. The appearence of the aircraft looks like it would snake however. It is my understanding that the original location of the engines was mounted next to the fuesleage under the wings and that this was changed when the dimensions of the engine increased and presumably turbulence issues arose. There were versions using the He S11 engine in this position (models availble as is to be expected) Presumbly the fact that thrust was closer to the centerline would have improved stability. Also I recall a Quantas engineer telling me that the Beoing 707 had a snaking motion and a damper was fitted to the trim tab on the rudder that on the basis of an accelerometer (or possible gyro?) counter acted any snaking. It was I believe an all mechanical/hydraulic system. The snaking had to do more with flow separation on the vertical fin & rudder, and the length of the nose destabilizing the airplane in yaw, than anything else. It was a problem, to some degree or another, with just about all of the early jets. As for the 707, That wan't snaking, that ws Dutch Roll, and is a result of the dihedral effect of a moderatly-highly swept wing. They also added a ventral fin under the aft section of teh tailcone, as well. It first cropped up on the B-47, BTW. The Me 262 Pilot's Handbook has about 3 pages of handling limitations. The F-80A Pilot's handbook has 2 flight limit entries. I may have seen this handbook but I don't know if we are talking the same thing. Most of the limitations from what I can see relate to engine handling of the jumo 004B1 and Jumo 004B4. This was mostly caused by the crude fuel delivery and metering system system (the BMW003 was better and the Jumo 004D matched it). Also the use of J2 Diesel fuel (or K2 heavy fuel in an emergency) for reasons of safety, economy and its ease of synthesis meant that the engine was started on a parafinic gasoline and then switched over to the J2 again complicating starting. finally starting consisted of a small 2 stroke motor which itself had to be started and then only when the air was thick enough at lower altitides. The lack of duples injectors mad high altitude flameout easy and relights hard. Better control systems and duplex injectors helped solve all of these so the restriction may have enventually disappeared. As I understand Helmuth Schelp began to favour a central generating faciltiy and individual electric starters possibly to eovercome this and also for the larger jets like the 8000llb thrust BMW 009-016 a gas turbine starter so that a single fuel could be used. Many of teh entries are engine handling entries, certainly. But by the same token, the U.S. and Brit jets don't have most of these limitations. Or the limitations on flight. (No negative G flights, etc.) Soem of this is due to the relative maturity of the technologies - The P-80 and Meteor III wre using second-generation jet engines, developed wit the lessons of the first engines in mind, and already in production before the Germans had soerted out their first generation jets. Part of that is systems design. The Me 262 should have had better fuel, electric, pleumatic, adn hydraulic system than it did. You know, it's rather interesting that for all the work on high-speed aerodynamics that the Germans actually did perform, they never seemed to be able to translate it into the aircraft they built. Lets face it they never got much outside the Me 109 in service and its was to old to grow gracefully anymore though I presume the Ta 152C and Ta 152H had good high speed handling. 109s could, and did, have compressibility problems. The Germans lost a Rechlin Test Pilot in 1937-38 during high-speed dive tests, for example. Fw 190-derived shapes also had problems. But there wasn't much effort put into exploring these issues, and dealing with them. As for the Fw190D and Ta-152 (Basically the same shape) Not really no. No better than a Mustang, and certainly not as well as a Spitfire. The German Aviation Military/Industrial Complex's solution to compressibility/controllability problems in their airplanes was to put a Big Red "Thou Shalt Not..." notice in the Pilot's Handbook. Compare this to the work done in the U.S and Britain to sort out the transonic problems that were occurring - the developmetn of the DIve Recovery Flap (Which isn't a Speed Brake), improved control surface geometries, and, for that matter, the inclusion of Speed Brakes. Was this flap ever used? Absolutely. It was a standard fit on late model P-38s, P-47s, and F8F Bearcats that I know of. The P-51 didn't need one, and the jets had Speed Brakes that could not only slow them below the critical speeds, but could be rigged to give a nose-up pitching mement to help dive recovery. One of the nastier "Own Goal" Amicide incidents WW II was when a Canadian Spitfire pilot mistook the C-54 carrying the first 200 Dive Recovery Flap kits for ETO-based P-38s for an Fw 200 Kondor, and shot it down. In technolgy the Germans and allies were closely matched. Both sides produced major breakthroughs and both sides had areas where they fell embarrasingly far behined. The Germans were perhaps forced to focus on Break throughs because resources were massively against them after 42 but in the end the odds were against them. I do suspect that the breakthroughs would have broken up the superiority of the allies in some areas. Jet aircraft gave them a fresh start that would have equalised them where the allies ahd piston engined superiority in quantity and quality. Sure the allies would also have had jets but their existing technolgy would have had its value wiped out and would have made useless almost all piston engined aircraft: B26,A26,P47, B17,B24,B25 etc but they never got enough of their jets going in time. It's not that simple. There were a lot of factors - the most telling of which were evident in 1936, when the Luftwaffe, and the other German Armed Forces, cut back on armament production because they didn't have enough raw materiels to use the factory capacity they already had. One of the other things they should have done was build up a better training organization. A big limit was the lack of properly skilled pilots. By late 1944, there weren't enough fully capable pilots to make a differece, even if they were flying Mr. Arndt's Disks and herding around Reptilicus. There's no point in making jet airplanes if you have nobody who can fly them. They weren't intending to fight a long war of attrition which they would eventually loose I suppose. This training issue, why was it mucked up? They must have had their reasons? Or were those with sensible arguments suppresed? Call it a blind spot on the part of the German General Staff. (It was around long before Hitler, and pervaded all of the Germans' Strategic Thinking from 1871 on.) They believed well and truly that they were the Jedi Knights, so expert in, and devoted to the Art of War that nobody eith would stand against them, or if they did, could stand against them for long. The lesson that they learned from World War I was that they didn't try hard enough, and that they didn't get the total support from teh civilian side of the Kaiser's Government that they needed. (The whole "Stab in the back thing. Of course, teh Civilians felt the same way, which left a political climate ripe for a replay of teh War, to show what they could really do. Stuff like Moltke the Younger's inability to be, say, flexible enough to actaully follow the Kaiser's Orders to not mobilize against France, and when mobilized to not automatically attack France, (Through a neutral country) allowing the situation to cool off, was sept under the rug.) So, they got surprised when the war continued. They had no plans for an extended conflict, for such a thing was unthinkable. There were also significant shortfalls in the numbers of Flight Instructors, and non-fighter or bomber pilots. This was a double-edged blade (More like a toggle-head harpoon, actually) in the trainig effort. When it became necessary to launch the airborne invasion of Crete, and, later, to attempt the resupply of Stalingrad and Tunisia, they stripped the flight schools of instructors to provide the transport pilots. They suffered catastrophic losses in these campaigns, and the training effort never recovered. The policy of leaving pilots in units for the duration didn't help, either. Combat pilots were never able to get any (relative) repite, and pass the lessons that they'd learned on to the new trainees. Instructors knew that they'd be instructing for their entire careers, unless they got drafted off to be thrown into another set of failures. That setup doesn't produce good pilots. When you add in the fact that they had no training frounds that, after mid 1943 weren't vulnerable to attack by Allied fighters, and teh uncooperative German weather, there was no way that they'd be able to produce anything like the number of Stick Actuators that they'd need. I don't like the "Allies Invented Everyting" nor do I like the "Germans Invented Everyting" attitude. Anyone who knows how technology advances should realise what one man can do another will replicate almost immediatly. One of the mistakes of the Germans in the Radar war was to put so much secrecy on their radar vulnerability that they failed to develop effective countermeasurews to windows jamming becuase the requise people weren't involved. It should have been obvious that the British, who were behined in Radar at the time would soon catch up. That is a rather good example of the German's arrogance about their own technology, and their "Mirror-Imaging" of how a particular technology would be used. In 1939, and 1940 the Germans had the best high-frequency radar around. Their main thrust for it, however, was to use it to bulwark existing systems, specifically Antiaircraft and Naval Fire Control. And they did this well.Once they'd figured out that the long-wave pulsed signals that they were receiving was some sort of radar, they absolutely knew that they were far ahead of teh British, and didn't need to worry about it. What they missed, however, was that those primitive, inaccurate long-wave radars were part of an integrated Cammand and Control system that allowed RAF Fighter Command to concentrate their forces with an efficency not seen in aerial warfare before that time. That same blindness - that belief that the German stuff was superior because it was German, effected them in all areas. God bring me an arrogant enemy. (to be fair there are pleny of people on these NGs who would underestimate an enemy) An Integrated air defense system makes sense for the British on their island. For the landlocked Germans, who had no channel, a philosophy of avoiding a war of attrition and winning the frist battles so as to avoid fighting on German soil prevailed. Very little was devoted to defense it was thought best to devote it to attack and support of the Army and this probably starved the development of such systems eg IFF. Also who would run it? Kammhuber was regarded with suspicion for his large line of radar defese stations. Just so. The over confidence was there, Georings rash statements prove it, but there was more behined it I think. As you said before, it was a reflection of their philosophy. They wer the War Gods, and nobody could stand before them, so they didn't need to work on defence. Alexander the Great however with 50,000 men once defeated Darius's army of 2-3 million with boldness and clever tactics. Uhm, I don't think that ther were 2-3 million people in the entire Persian Empire. Subsistance farming doesn't give you that sort of a reserve. It wasn't subsistance farming: they had huge cities. A huge city then would have been about 30-40,000 people. Even allowing for the exaggeration that occurs in the contemporary accounts, that number is rediculaous. Armies travelled on their stomachs, especially then, foraging for their food as they went. Even if you had that number of troops, you couldn't feed them. And think about it - how do you bring 50,000 men, with bows, spears & swords, into contact with that large a number? You don't. If such numbers were true, Darius would have angaved Alexander's army with a paltry 250,000 or so troops, holding it in place (Even if the Greeks slice them to fishbait) while the other 2,750,000 guys go take their enemie's homelands. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Hey, Germany Invented It... Face It | Erich Adler | Military Aviation | 51 | February 20th 04 05:39 PM |
China in space. | Harley W. Daugherty | Military Aviation | 74 | November 1st 03 06:26 PM |
Israeli Air Force to lose Middle East Air Superiority Capability to the Saudis in the near future | Jack White | Military Aviation | 71 | September 21st 03 02:58 PM |
Russia joins France and Germany | captain! | Military Aviation | 12 | September 9th 03 09:56 AM |
Chirac lost | JD | Military Aviation | 7 | July 26th 03 06:38 PM |