CapAndGown
Posts: 3206
Joined: 3/6/2001 From: Virginia, USA Status: offline
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Feb. 1-4, 1944 I have been slow to update this AAR, but the game progresses. On Feb. 1 the Chinese attacked at Siangtan and achieved 2-1 odds, forcing our units to retreat and causing a large number of casualties. Disruption was the main reason we did so poorly. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ground combat at Siangtan (81,52) Allied Deliberate attack Attacking force 104137 troops, 655 guns, 0 vehicles, Assault Value = 3792 Defending force 69720 troops, 568 guns, 242 vehicles, Assault Value = 2047 Allied adjusted assault: 1765 Japanese adjusted defense: 708 Allied assault odds: 2 to 1 Combat modifiers Defender: disruption(-), preparation(-) Attacker: Japanese ground losses: 20374 casualties reported Squads: 690 destroyed, 170 disabled Non Combat: 402 destroyed, 261 disabled Engineers: 44 destroyed, 37 disabled Guns lost 71 (48 destroyed, 23 disabled) Vehicles lost 73 (39 destroyed, 34 disabled) Units retreated 17 Allied ground losses: 4434 casualties reported Squads: 13 destroyed, 395 disabled Non Combat: 13 destroyed, 298 disabled Engineers: 4 destroyed, 6 disabled Assaulting units: 74th Chinese Corps 8th Chinese Corps 94th Chinese Corps 2nd Chinese Corps 87th Chinese Corps 97th Chinese Corps 5th Chinese Cavalry Corps 79th Chinese Corps 1st New Chinese Corps 20th Group Army 26th Group Army 6th War Area 18th Chinese Base Force Defending units: 12th Ind.Infantry Brigade 7th Ind.Infantry Brigade 6th Ind.Infantry Brigade 3rd Ind.Infantry Brigade 1st Ind.Mixed Brigade 2nd Ind.Infantry Brigade 1st Ind.Infantry Brigade 15th Division 9th Ind.Infantry Brigade 116th Division 8th Ind.Infantry Brigade 4th Ind.Infantry Brigade 26th Division 23rd Army RGC Army 12th Army 4th Mortar Battalion Since then there has been a lot of air action in China, though not last turn. There is also a lot of maneuvering. The Chinese are getting frisky. An empty Moulmein was captured on the 4th by a bunch of British armor: Assaulting units: Provisionl Tank Brigade (AV 135) 255th Armoured Brigade (AV 209) 268th Motorised Brigade (AV 152) 50th Tank Brigade (AV 209) 2/3 AIF Pioneer Battalion (AV 31) Gardner's Horse Regiment (AV 69) 209th Combat Engineer Battalion (AV 29) 11th (East African) Division (AV 391) There are still 11 units in the woods adjacent to Moulmein marching in that direction. Not a lot of air action in Thailand. The allies had been night bombing the airfield at Truk with B-24's. Quite annoying, but not causing too much damage. Yesterday they decided to give it another shot with a large daylight attack. This one turned out no better than the previous ones. The Frank made its combat debut today. It did OK, though not spectacular. I would really like to get the "r" model with its 4 20mm cannons, two of them centerline mounted! The Tojo IIc did pretty well. I am fairly happy with this plane. Despite is relatively low speed (376 mph) it is competitive. The biggest problem is that it is under-armed. The Georges continue to be impressive, both in terms of survivability and lethality. The J2M3 Jack just started producing (currently 90/month). With a service rating of 2, a super-high climb rate and slightly higher speed and maneuverability, that plane should shine. (well, for a Japanese plane. ) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Morning Air attack on Truk , at 112,108 Weather in hex: Moderate rain Raid detected at 22 NM, estimated altitude 25,000 feet. Estimated time to target is 8 minutes Japanese aircraft N1K1-J George x 54 Ki-44-IIc Tojo x 77 Ki-84a Frank x 42 Allied aircraft F4U-1 Corsair x 18 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Morning Air attack on Truk , at 112,108 Weather in hex: Moderate rain Raid detected at 26 NM, estimated altitude 27,000 feet. Estimated time to target is 6 minutes Japanese aircraft N1K1-J George x 47 Ki-44-IIc Tojo x 65 Ki-84a Frank x 38 Allied aircraft P-38J Lightning x 25 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Morning Air attack on Truk , at 112,108 Weather in hex: Moderate rain Raid detected at 17 NM, estimated altitude 28,000 feet. Estimated time to target is 3 minutes Japanese aircraft N1K1-J George x 38 Ki-44-IIc Tojo x 59 Ki-84a Frank x 32 Allied aircraft P-38J Lightning x 25 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Morning Air attack on Truk , at 112,108 Weather in hex: Moderate rain Raid detected at 27 NM, estimated altitude 28,000 feet. Estimated time to target is 6 minutes Japanese aircraft N1K1-J George x 33 Ki-44-IIc Tojo x 41 Ki-84a Frank x 24 Allied aircraft P-38J Lightning x 25 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Morning Air attack on Truk , at 112,108 Weather in hex: Moderate rain Raid detected at 120 NM, estimated altitude 13,000 feet. Estimated time to target is 41 minutes Japanese aircraft N1K1-J George x 33 Ki-44-IIc Tojo x 38 Ki-84a Frank x 21 Allied aircraft B-24J Liberator x 39 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Morning Air attack on Truk , at 112,108 Weather in hex: Moderate rain Raid detected at 80 NM, estimated altitude 16,000 feet. Estimated time to target is 27 minutes Japanese aircraft N1K1-J George x 22 Ki-44-IIc Tojo x 30 Ki-84a Frank x 16 Allied aircraft B-24J Liberator x 9 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Morning Air attack on Truk , at 112,108 Weather in hex: Moderate rain Raid detected at 34 NM, estimated altitude 30,000 feet. Estimated time to target is 12 minutes Japanese aircraft N1K1-J George x 16 Ki-44-IIc Tojo x 23 Ki-84a Frank x 12 Allied aircraft F4U-1 Corsair x 18 [these pilots must have been higher skill, they were quite deadly. but only after the bombers were already shot up!] Altogether: 36 Corsair, 75 Lightning, 48 B-24 Casualties: Allied P-38J - 33 A2A, 9 ops = 42 (56% loss rate - 4 months production!) F4U-1 - 13 A2A, 4 ops = 17 (47% loss rate) B-24J - 11 A2A, 4 ops = 15 (31% loss rate) Japanese Tojo IIc - 11 A2A, 5 ops = 16 (21% loss rate from initially available, non-reserve AC) Frank "a" - 9 A2A, 2 ops = 11 (26% loss rate) N1K1 George - 13 A2A, 1 ops = 14 (26% loss rate) Although we lost 41 planes shot down or ops losses, only 19 pilots were lost (hopefully the WIA will return.) 9 KIA 10 WIA Overall, a good day. OTOH, between China, Burma, and Truk, the drain on our fighter production has us falling behind combat losses. I am ramping up Frank, Tojo, and Jack production. Currently we are producing 240 Tojo IIc's per month. That is going to increase to 300. For Franks, we are currently producing ~180/month. That is increasing right now to 210/month and will be increased further to 270/month. Jack production is at 90/month and is increasing first to 120/month, and then perhaps to 180/month. Georges are still being produced at 40/month, but I hope to be able to shutdown that line soon. I have not yet seen the Tony Id in action. I am using it as a night fighter at some bases and plan on having a number stationed at my oil facilities in a few months to intercept B-29s. I am afraid of using it on the front line, though, because of its relatively slow speed (360 mph) combined with its very poor maneuverability. Although the George is just as slow, it has a much higher maneuver rating than most of the allied planes it is facing. The most deadly allied plane I have seen so far, in fact, is the Spitfire VIII which combines high speed with high maneuverability. Nevertheless, the centerline mounted 20mm cannons on the Tony and its sevice rating of 2 should make it a decent bomber interceptor.
< Message edited by cap_and_gown -- 12/29/2010 6:49:22 PM >
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