AW1Steve
Posts: 14507
Joined: 3/10/2007 From: Mordor Illlinois Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: TheElf quote:
ORIGINAL: Mike Scholl quote:
ORIGINAL: AW1Steve quote:
ORIGINAL: Doggie It's been my experience that anyone who dares to suggest that either the P-39 or the P-40 belonged in the same sky with the A6M gets set upon by "experts" who question his sexual preferences, IQ, moral integrity, and his parentage. Chuck Yeager thought the P-39 was a fine low altitude fighter, but then he was probably a moron. Sorry dude , Manfred Von Richoffen said it best , "It's not the crate , it's the man inside it". Actually, WW II proved this attitude wrong. Hermann Goering held the same view, calling his fighter pilots "cowards" when they couldn't stop Allied Bombing raids. As long as both side's pilots have adequate training, "the crate" is going to have a big influence. And even more will the service, support, and an adequate flow of replacements (planes and pilots). In the end, the Air War is a war of attrition..., and the Axis Powers only realized this far too late. I think you are both right. If you take the Baron's wisdom in the context of the times, he is talking about WWI and the chivalric nature of one on one meetings over no man's land. Certainly he says "It's not the crate , it's the man inside it" without premonition of the future of Modern Air Combat and really war itself, and while we began to see the implications of the factors you espouse Mike even in 1918, I think they don't become fully evident until 1942 to early 1943. WWI Air Combat, with a few exceptions, was a more personal war...but in those anecdotal cases where the old "duel in the air" from WWI occurred in WWII, it could still ring true. just my opinion... OK , lets put the question into WITP format. A 99 experince P-40 vs. a 50 Zero. Or a 99 experince P-39 vs the same Zero. Who wants to bet on the Zero if all factors are equal? While allied planes definately improved, and Japanese planes largely stagnated , allied pilot training sinificantly increased while Japanese plunged. And we all know what happened to the IJN pilot pool at Midway. Sure allied aircraft production and quality soared , but so did pilot quality.At Midway Marine aviators had flight hours measured in the twenties. A year later , you needed 10 times that amount just to get out of flight training. Other , more recent examples of my point include Vietnam. Prior to the founding of Top Gun , the US had almost a 1;1 combat loss (air-to-air) ratio. After the widespread desimination of Top Gun graduates thru the fleet , the USN ratio rose to close to 10;1 (approaching the Korea ratio). The USAF would lag behind , causing them to create the "Red Flag" system. Other factors , which go hand in hand with experince include tactics and proper utilization of the aircrafts characteristics. Examples being the "Thach weave", which gave the Wildcat a fighting chance , or Chenneault's tactics that utilized the P-40's Diving like a brick attributes. Basically I'm saying that a plane is a weapon , and the finest gun does little for a man who can't hit anything with it.
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