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![]() "WalterM140" wrote in message ... You are incorrect. The RAF operated B-17's in action in daylight long before the USA even entered the war. The results were heavy losses and poor results. The Brits didn't use enough B-17's ever, to say they had heavy losses. And the Brits flew them at very high altitudes, and often as single attackers. The B-17 wasnt available in numbers in 1941. By September less than 40 B-17C's had been produced and half of these were in service with the RAF as the Fortress I. Mass production of the aircraft began with the B-17E in late 1941. That single aircraft ended up over targets was a result of the extremely poor reliability of the aircraft, it was not uncommon for half the dispatched aircraft to have to return to base. Indeed the USAAC described the B-17C as being unsuitable for combat use. Except for elite units, British bombing accuracy throughout the war was poor. Yadda Yadda Yadda Keith |
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