![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#51
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Subject: Aircrew casualities
From: Guy Alcala Date: 9/22/03 2:51 PM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: 3F6F6FE0.3067CB20@junkpo Then it must have been 8th AF practice not to wear them, as numerous accounts exist of crews trying to buckle theirs on in a hurry. The RAF bomber crews didn't normally wear theirs either, aside from the pilots and the tail gunner. Guy The mind boggles (sheesh) Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#52
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Subject: Aircrew casualities
From: Guy Alcala Date: 9/22/03 2:51 PM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: "Evasive action' was a poor choice of words on my part; involuntary flinching before the breakaway, and doing the breakaway early for fear of collision/gunfire, was more what I meant. I never once saw that. It would be a foolish thing for the pilot to do. If he bore in and came out the other side it was a clean getaway, But if he flinched and turned away before he got to us he would expose his belly and vastly increase his chance of being shot down by the bomber's gunners. I guess young inexperienced pilots scared to death might do that. But not the old hands. Anyway. if you are a gunner in a bomber and a fighter comes at you don't count on his tuning way before his run is done. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#53
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Keith Willshaw" wrote: "Guy Alcala" wrote in message ... Mike Marron wrote: "Erik Plagen" wrote: Mike Marron wrote: Haven't you heard all the stories of the Luftwaffe strafing downed allied pilots coming down their chutes That;s all they were- "stories" or fairy tales! We never tried to shoot down Crew Members in their chutes! You are thinking of the Japanese. Nope, I'm thinking of the Germans. In fact, I've heard Chuck Yeager himself during an interview describe how the Germans were known to strafe downed allied airmen descending in their chutes. snip There were certainly instances (on both sides) of this happening, and it was widely believed (again, by both sides) that the other side was just looking for opportunities to do so, but it was an individual thing, not an order. It tended to be crews with better reasons to hate, i.e. a pilot whose family had been killed by bombing, or pilots of some of the occupied countries (the Poles come to mind). And there were the occasional bloodthirsty or just plain ruthless types on both sides. There was little reason for the Germans to strafe parachutes when they were on the defensive, because the crews were almost certain to be captured. There was more reason for the allies to do so when they were on the offensive, because any German pilot who survived was likely to be back in the air; most of the top German aces were shot down numerous times. The situation was the reverse in the BoB, where it would have made sense for the Germans to shoot British pilots as they descended, but was pointless for the British. There seems to have been one exception: in the case of the Me-262, US fighter pilots were ordered to kill the pilots, in their chutes or on the ground, according to Yeager and/or Clarence 'Bud' Anderson in their biographies. Guy During the BOB Dowding specifically ordered the RAF not to strafe German pilots who had bailed out over UK territory He made the point that under international law once the pilot had bailed out over enemy territory he was no longer an enemy combatant but a surrndering prisoner. German pilots over occupied territory or British pilots over the UK were fair game. Keith How about the Pacific casualties? With USN/MC aircraft like the SBD, SB2C, TBF/M off of carriers, plus the Navy/Marine and AAF aircraft, wouldn't the casualties be somewhat different than Europe? I'm thinking the TBF/M might have a higher casualty rate with the turret gunners-wouldn't those guys have a hard time bailing out than the pilot or radio operator/tunnel gunner? Posted via www.My-Newsgroups.com - web to news gateway for usenet access! |
#54
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
ArtKramr wrote:
Subject: Aircrew casualities From: Guy Alcala Date: 9/22/03 2:51 PM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: "Evasive action' was a poor choice of words on my part; involuntary flinching before the breakaway, and doing the breakaway early for fear of collision/gunfire, was more what I meant. I never once saw that. It would be a foolish thing for the pilot to do. If he bore in and came out the other side it was a clean getaway, But if he flinched and turned away before he got to us he would expose his belly and vastly increase his chance of being shot down by the bomber's gunners. I guess young inexperienced pilots scared to death might do that. But not the old hands. snip While the inexperienced pilots were more likely to open fire out of range or break off too soon, experienced hands could also do so. It was often a question of morale; the old heads had been in combat for a long time, and everyone only has so much courage to spend. Many were very tired, combat fatigued if you will, and there are many accounts by German pilots stating that this or that leader wasn't going in with their former aggression (often not going in at all, but finding something wrong with the a/c or themselves, breaking off and returning to base, or at best hunting for stragglers). I'd really recommend you read Caldwell's "JG 26: Top Guns of the Luftwaffe" for the German perspective of that unit's (and individuals) changing behavior throughout the war. Leadership and morale varied considerably, and both tended to deteriorate later in the war. Guy |
#55
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Subject: Aircrew casualities
From: Guy Alcala Date: 9/24/03 12:26 AM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: 3F71484E.B147DA0A@junk courage to spend. Many were very tired, combat fatigued if you will, and there are many accounts by German pilots stating that this or that leader wasn't going in with their former aggression You coulda fooled me. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#56
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Guy Alcala wrote:
Dale wrote: In article , wrote: chutes (in That's another reason why ball turret gunners had such a high casualty rate; there was no room in the turret for them to have their chutes, so they had to first make it back up into the fuselage, get their chute and put it on before they could jump. The waist gunners had it far easier. Hmmm. From what I've been told statistically the ball was one of the more survivable positions..regarless of what the silly History Channel "Suicide Mission" show stated. I've seen claims of that, but the stats don't seem to back it up, at least for the B-17. Okay, I've been able to retrieve a copy of Martin Middlebrook's "The Schweinfurt-Regensburg Mission," August 17th, 1943, which includes a breakdown of B-17 crewmen killed by crew position on that day. Middlebrook gives the following info (info is casualties in 4th Bomb Wing - Regensburg/1st Bomb Wing - Schweinfurt/Total number of casualties) Killed 34/68/102 POW 133/248/381 Evaders* 13/25/38 Interned 20/-/20 Rescued from sea 40/20/60 Total 240/361/601 *only includes those who actually made it back to England. Broken down another way, this is officers/enlisted: Killed 40/62 PoW 154/227 Evaders 13/25 Interned 8/12 Rescued from Sea 24/36 Total 239/362 He then goes on to write: "Concentrating now on the mortality rate, one is immediately impressed with the high proportion of men who survived from B-17s shot down during these daylight operations. On average less than two men in each standard crew of ten died in the B-17s lost that day; the actual figure was 1.7 men per crew. Even if the eleven a/c which either ditched or crash-landed without any loss of life are excluded, the mortality rate only creeps up to a little over two in the crew of ten. But these overall figures could hide large variations. The 91st bomb Group lost thirty-six men killed in its ten missing crews; the 381st had only five deaths in their eleven. This relatively high survival rate was not unusual for 8th AF operations; the outcome on other B-17 missions was roughly similar. A comparison with the survival chances in shot-down RAf night bombers shows almost the reverse position. The mortality rate in 213 RAF bombers shot down in RAF raids to Hamburg (four raids), Peenemunde and Nuremberg was 83 per cent! Unfortunately it would require a lengthy essay to explain the different factors involved." The relative danger of the crew positions in a shot-down B-17 can also be presented. The following crew members were killed in B-17s on the Regensburg and Schweinfurt mission: Pilot 15 Co-pilot 12 Navigator 6 Bombardier 6 Engineer/Gunner 11 Radio/Gunner 8 Ball Gunner 14 Right Waist Gunner 11 Left Waist Gunner 8 Tail Gunner 10 [Guy Note: this only totals 101. A pilot died in unusual circumstances on the ground, probably shot and killed while trying to evade capture. He was armed and seen running by other members of his crew before he was shot, and according to them he was the type who didn't plan to be taken alive.] ". . . There is not so much difference here from night operations. The RAF bomb aimer was the safest man in his crew, and pilots -- who have to remain at the controls until other crew members have parachuted -- always ran the greatest risk. The higher figures above for the ball-turret gunner reflect the known danger of that cramped and isolated position from which escape was so difficult. RAF bombers did not have ball turrets." ---------------------------------------------------- [Me again] Naturally, this can hardly be considered applicable to the entire war, but it is a fairly good sample size (from 60 a/c shot down) and probably gives a fair representation of the relative odds for each crewmember given the situation in August 1943. Most of the tactics, techniques and weapons also used by the Germans in 1944 and 1945 were in use by that time, although the balance between fighter and flak losses obviously shifted in 1944 and 1945, which might change the survival odds for some of the positions. Guy |
#57
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Subject: Aircrew casualities
From: Guy Alcala Date: 9/25/03 8:26 PM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: 3F73B305.D9AA9E02@junkpostof Okay, I've been able to retrieve a copy of Martin Middlebrook's "The Schweinfurt-Regensburg Mission," August 17th, 1943, which includes a breakdown of B-17 crewmen killed by crew position on that day. Middlebrook gives the following info (info One mission does not a war make. Especially Schweinfort Regensburg which may be be one he most atypical targets/missions of all. If I think back to the missions I flew with the 344th and had to name a "typical" mission, I couldn't do it. We had no typical mssions.. Each one was unique, except of course for the milk runs, which in themselves were not typical. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#58
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
ArtKramr wrote:
Subject: Aircrew casualities From: Guy Alcala Date: 9/25/03 8:26 PM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: 3F73B305.D9AA9E02@junkpostof Okay, I've been able to retrieve a copy of Martin Middlebrook's "The Schweinfurt-Regensburg Mission," August 17th, 1943, which includes a breakdown of B-17 crewmen killed by crew position on that day. Middlebrook gives the following info (info One mission does not a war make. Obviously, which is why I included the following caveat at the end of that post: "Naturally, this can hardly be considered applicable to the entire war, but it is a fairly good sample size (from 60 a/c shot down) and probably gives a fair representation of the relative odds for each crewmember given the situation in August 1943. Most of the tactics, techniques and weapons also used by the Germans in 1944 and 1945 were in use by that time, although the balance between fighter and flak losses obviously shifted in 1944 and 1945, which might change the survival odds for some of the positions." Especially Schweinfort Regensburg which may be be one he most atypical targets/missions of all. As far as tactics, techniques, and weapons used, Regensburg/Schweinfurt was quite typical of deep penetration missions to Germany in the summer and fall of 1943, well beyond fighter cover. Indeed, it was the first to go that deep, but was followed up by several more in September and October, with similar results. The only difference between this mission and others was that the 4th bW went on to Africa, but that is unlikely to affect the distribution of KIA in shot down B-17s. If I think back to the missions I flew with the 344th and had to name a "typical" mission, I couldn't do it. We had no typical mssions.. Each one was unique, except of course for the milk runs, which in themselves were not typical. Sure, but we're looking for statistical data on survival rates, and so far the only such data presented in the course of this thread is that which I provided in that post. Everything else has been perceptual or anecdotal. We now have some actual data (limited to a single mission though it is, and only 60 B-17 combat losses out of the 4,688 B-17s combat losses in the European war as a whole), which is more than we've had otherwise. Guy P.S. I'll be out of town for a couple of days, so will be out of touch for a while. |
#60
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
USCG enlisted aircrew wings | C Knowles | Military Aviation | 0 | August 17th 03 12:30 AM |
ADF aircrew with basal cell carcinoma removed | BCC Pilot | Military Aviation | 0 | July 10th 03 12:59 PM |