CAPFlyer wrote:
James, you really need to step away from the historical.
Don't hafta do anything I don't wanna.

Quote:
We are speaking of a theoretical discussion on whether fighter-bombers would be more effective than multi-engine bombers in the ETO during WWII.
Oh, are we? I was exploring why Old's was told 'no', rather that setting up random criteria to justify my 'solution'.

Seriously, it's all very well, as you've outlined, but it's less realistic than arguing 'what if the 8th AF had jets' for instance. As I said several times, I was including the real forces available to the bomber generals, and the training and production system really feeding the US war machine of the time. Ignoring those is fine, but then we aren't looking at the
real scenario Olds was operating in.
Quote:
Theoretically, you would be able to put more pounds of bombs on the target ITSELF with a single-engined fighter than multi-engined bombers. This is because of two things - fall time & maneuverability.
The single-engined fighter will be bombing from a lower altitude and thus its bombs will not be falling as long and thus not have as long to be pushed around by the wind. The single-engined fighter will also be able to maneuver to throw off flak and ensure that the proper target is hit much more easily than a bomber (even if unencumbered by a formation).
The Soviets used IL-2's with excellent results for airfield and AAA attacks on the Eastern Front during WWII suggesting that single-engined fighter-bombers or attack aircraft would be able to penetrate and attack with accuracy not possible with the Norden bomb sight simply because it was unable to fully account for shifting winds.
Il-2 and single engine fighters were, AFAIK, never used over the huge strategic targets that the 8th AF and Bomber Command were attaching - cities and the Ruhr - Your scenarios above are invalid due to the weight of flak and the nature of the targets mean low level attacks were out. Think Ploieşti
except with a lot more flack. During a heavy Bomber Command raid, you couldn't fly over the target at anything less than (aprox) 8,000 ft minimum because of the size of the configuration - four engine bombers of the RAF were tossed about at height due to heat, explosions, junk in the air, and critically, smoke. Now you choose - either the fighter bombers can operate because they don't create that level of conflagration (ergo fail) or if the do create it they can't sustain it because they can't get in to bomb. (ergo fail 2) Oh, and you are looking at six times the number of aircraft and due to greater accuracy they are going to achieve a better result - except that's six times as many aircraft you want to put into the target at the same time. (For this kind of strategic bombing you need some time concentration as well as location concentration.)
Oh, yes, and another thing.

Numerous
strategic targets were deep underground or heavilly armoured, such as the U Boat pens, secret production facilities, etc. (In some cases, the only way those were destroyed was by using supersonic bombs from a very high altitude. Otherwise, just like in the cartoons, the bombs would bounce off.)
Most strategic targets were larger areas with more flak over that greater area. They also had significantly more flak protecting them than an airfield did.
All the proposals so far are about tactical level bombing, not strategic as understood in W.W.II; the destruction (not pinpoint raids - mass destruction) of the enemy's production capability and morale.
The RAF certainly undertook low level precision raids - the Amiens Prison raid being a good example of that, and the Mosquitoes used being 'fighter-bomber' types in a sense. However that only was viable for certain raids - not all.
If I understand Randy's point correctly, he's saying that due to the changed nature of war, what was 'tactical bombing' is 'the new strategic' - kind of makes sense to me, although I don't know enough, and I'll take Randy's word for that - however you can't reason backwards that what works now should work then. It didn't.
Olds' idea had some limited utility, like the Mosquito raids, and as Ryan says the P-38 may have had more application than the under-armed single-seat 'fighter bombers' but neither were able to provide decisive strategic bombing weight - IMHO.
Can I quit now?
