Sunday, October 24, 2021

good morning jack

  










now our fate lies with victory in the air








Cities are now the front line.

 

Logic, based on a presumption, makes it so.



Hitler made no plans to invade England.

His mind had already turned to Russia.

They alone stood in the way of German greatness.

Britain was militarily finished.

Churchill would come to realize this. 



* * * * *



Disposition of Forces / 10 July 1940


The challenge for Britain is to focus your air defense 

to meet the attack of enemy bombers no matter the direction.

This approach requires being able to see over the horizon

to detect a pending attack, determine the air fleet's size and

its intended direction.  


Radar will neutralize the Luftwaffe's numerical superiority.


The RAF will not be required to broadly disperse its fighters.

The air force will be saved the costly expense of constant patrols

by RAF fighters to provide the nation's watchtowers.  An efficient

management of radar information enables the RAF to concentrate

its attack on a fleet of bombers using aircraft from various bases.





Map Legend

 








As good as it gets in 1940 
but its short range give opposing
RAF pilots a lethal shot at
plodding German bombers.


M E S S E R S C H M I T T


s p e e d                                348 mph

r a n g e                                410 miles

g u n s                                    2 x 20 mm cannon

CANNON PROJECTILES EXPLODE 

                                               2 x 7.92 mm mg

MG - MACHINE GUN


 

Fighter protection for German planes bombing Britain

was limited to the short range of the Messerschmitt Bf 109.

 






Hugh Dowding

RAF COMMANDER



Designed the British air defense

fully appreciating the decisive role

radar would need to play in

preventing the RAF from being 

overwhelmed by German numbers.






German Heinkel He 111s fly low over the Channel

in attempt to evade British detection.








A German bomber already showing its age

by the time of the Battle of Britain.  Without the Bf-109

this Heinkel would be a sitting duck in an RAF attack

because its own defensive field of fire is too easily evaded.


H E I N K E L


s p e e d                                200 mph

r a n g e                                1,224 miles

p a y l o a d                            4,410 lb

c r e w                                    4 - 5

a r m a m e n t                        6 - 7   7.92mm MG 







RAF pilots came from across the British Commonwealth.


RAF losses were too great to rely solely on England for pilots.

But even with a reliable source of qualified recruits it still

takes a year to fashion them into fighter pilots.  Too often,

rookie replacements were expected to match wits with an

experienced Messerschmitt pilot.  RAF generals were given

no choice but to throw any flier available into the fiery mix.







Rugged and likable by those who flew it

the Hawker Hurricane was still a transitional fighter,

still constructed in part with cloth and wood,

it was better suited to attacking bombers

than taking on a Messerschmitt one on one.


H A W K E R


s p e e d                            324 mph

r a n g e                           600 miles

a r m a m e n t                8 x .303 in. MG / 4 each wing


 





The Spitfire was the equal of the Bf 109.  



S U P E R M A R I N E


s p e e d                        355 mph

r a n g e                        575 miles

a r m a m e n t              8 x .303 in. MG


 

T A C T I C S

 

the one clear advantage German pilots

had over their RAF counterparts.

Luftwaffe pilots flew in pairs with one

always assigned the role of wingman -

making sure no one pounces on you

from out of nowhere.  The British,

on the other hand flew in groups of three.

The weakness here was that there was 

always one plane set up for a relatively

easy blindside kill.







London burns.  


The RAF is a punch-drunk fighter set up for 

a knock-out blow.  Instead, Hitler suddenly

turns his attention away from destroying the RAF.

It's taking too long.  Time to pillage the village

of one's enemy.  This switch to the strategic strategy

of bombing cities gives the RAF a desperately 

needed respite.  Their fliers find time for needed rest.

Bombed air bases are repaired and the nation's

stock of fighter aircraft are replenished.








The Brits fight on with steeled will.

The Americans take notice.








A grainy image from a Spitfire gunsight 

records the final moments of a German bomber

and its four members on board.  

The Spitfire riddles its target

with .30 caliber rounds coming from eight 

machine guns, four in each wing.  All that is left

for this crew is riding this nine ton piece of machinery

to its gravity induced fate.








Invasion barges collect in harbors along the English Channel.


what it's all about


The Luftwaffe needs control of the air if an invasion of Britain

is to be anything more than wishful thinking, which it barely is.

Hitler's Operation Sealion is ill-conceived and rushed. 

But that is left for him to find out.




________________________




l o v e    

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©  Tom Taylor 



coldValentine



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