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![]() "DeepSea" wrote in message . 136... snip .... . The RAF bombers didn't do high altitude stuff, _most_ of the bombing _against England was dive bombing_, Really? Please define _most_ and _dive_ bombing, in your statement. FWIW, AIUI, _Dive_ bombers were used against the Chain Home sites at the beginning of the Luftwaffe's Bombing campaign - and against such defined sites the dive bombers would have been an appropriate resource to task, but AFAIK the bombing campaigns against Liverpool, Coventry, Plymouth, Portsmouth, Southampton, London et.al were carried out at night by waves of 'level' bombers. Your information may of course be more accurate - I await your disclosures with interest. BTW; as you specifically mentioned 'England', I've not addressed the question of whether dive-bombers were used against Scotland, Northern Ireland and/or Wales. -- Brian |
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"Brian Sharrock" wrote in
: "DeepSea" wrote in message . 136... snip .... . The RAF bombers didn't do high altitude stuff, _most_ of the bombing _against England was dive bombing_, Really? Please define _most_ and _dive_ bombing, in your statement. FWIW, AIUI, _Dive_ bombers were used against the Chain Home sites at the beginning of the Luftwaffe's Bombing campaign - and against such defined sites the dive bombers would have been an appropriate resource to task, but AFAIK the bombing campaigns against Liverpool, Coventry, Plymouth, Portsmouth, Southampton, London et.al were carried out at night by waves of 'level' bombers. Your information may of course be more accurate - I await your disclosures with interest. Maybe not. I'm not a historian, I'm an engineer with an interest in history. That being said, here's what I (think) I know. Most - (significantly) more than half Dive Bombing - technique that involves the release of bombs at high speed/low altitude. My comments are derived from a talk I attended last year while at the US Army's General Staff College. The talk was given by a British Army corporal who served as a courier in the early days of the Battle of Britain. He was wounded (badly) in one of the attacks, and spent the rest of the war recouperating and learning to walk again. He used the terms "most" and "dive bombing" during his talk. Over the course of about an hour and ten minutes, he described being on the recieving end of the German strikes. He only saw "level" bombing on one occasion (directed at an area target), but at a relatively low level, estimated to be less than 10,000 feet, and at night. BTW; as you specifically mentioned 'England', I've not addressed the question of whether dive-bombers were used against Scotland, Northern Ireland and/or Wales. I have no knowledge of bombings against Scotland, Northern Ireland and/or Wales whatsoever - any insights you have would be appreciated. DS |
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In article , DeepSea
wrote: Dive Bombing - technique that involves the release of bombs at high speed/low altitude. High speed/low altitude is not what dive bombing is all about. Speed and altitude are residuals of the dive bombing process. Dive bombing is getting the aircraft "pointed" at the target, necessitating a dive. The bomb is released in the dive and the a/c pulls away. High speed is not a requirement, and as practiced in WWII, not even wanted. Hence the addition of dive (speed) brakes on the A-36 version of the Mustang. After bomb release, the aircraft is at a lower altitude, but only by necessity. My comments are derived from a talk I attended last year while at the US Army's General Staff College. The talk was given by a British Army corporal who served as a courier in the early days of the Battle of Britain. He was wounded (badly) in one of the attacks, and spent the rest of the war recouperating and learning to walk again. He used the terms "most" and "dive bombing" during his talk. Over the course of about an hour and ten minutes, he described being on the recieving end of the German strikes. He only saw "level" bombing on one occasion (directed at an area target), but at a relatively low level, estimated to be less than 10,000 feet, and at night. You were very lucky to have been able to attend such a rare event. Those veterns are rapidly dying. I hope the interview was taped. cheers -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur |
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![]() Harry Andreas wrote: In article , DeepSea wrote: Dive Bombing - technique that involves the release of bombs at high speed/low altitude. High speed/low altitude is not what dive bombing is all about. Speed and altitude are residuals of the dive bombing process. Dive bombing is getting the aircraft "pointed" at the target, necessitating a dive. The bomb is released in the dive and the a/c pulls away. High speed is not a requirement, and as practiced in WWII, not even wanted. Hence the addition of dive (speed) brakes on the A-36 version of the Mustang. After bomb release, the aircraft is at a lower altitude, but only by necessity. My comments are derived from a talk I attended last year while at the US Army's General Staff College. The talk was given by a British Army corporal who served as a courier in the early days of the Battle of Britain. He was wounded (badly) in one of the attacks, and spent the rest of the war recouperating and learning to walk again. He used the terms "most" and "dive bombing" during his talk. Over the course of about an hour and ten minutes, he described being on the recieving end of the German strikes. He only saw "level" bombing on one occasion (directed at an area target), but at a relatively low level, estimated to be less than 10,000 feet, and at night. You were very lucky to have been able to attend such a rare event. Those veterns are rapidly dying. I hope the interview was taped. cheers What was the 'A-36' version of the Mustang? Cheers, Ricardo |
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![]() "Ricardo" wrote in message o.uk... Harry Andreas wrote: In article , DeepSea wrote: Dive Bombing - technique that involves the release of bombs at high speed/low altitude. High speed/low altitude is not what dive bombing is all about. Speed and altitude are residuals of the dive bombing process. Dive bombing is getting the aircraft "pointed" at the target, necessitating a dive. The bomb is released in the dive and the a/c pulls away. High speed is not a requirement, and as practiced in WWII, not even wanted. Hence the addition of dive (speed) brakes on the A-36 version of the Mustang. After bomb release, the aircraft is at a lower altitude, but only by necessity. My comments are derived from a talk I attended last year while at the US Army's General Staff College. The talk was given by a British Army corporal who served as a courier in the early days of the Battle of Britain. He was wounded (badly) in one of the attacks, and spent the rest of the war recouperating and learning to walk again. He used the terms "most" and "dive bombing" during his talk. Over the course of about an hour and ten minutes, he described being on the recieving end of the German strikes. He only saw "level" bombing on one occasion (directed at an area target), but at a relatively low level, estimated to be less than 10,000 feet, and at night. You were very lucky to have been able to attend such a rare event. Those veterns are rapidly dying. I hope the interview was taped. cheers What was the 'A-36' version of the Mustang? Dedicated ground attack/dive bomber variant. See: http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/p51_6.html Brooks Cheers, Ricardo |
#6
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In article ,
Ricardo wrote: What was the 'A-36' version of the Mustang? In brief, a dive bomber based on the early P-51 airframe, officially named "Apache". - Three-blade rather than four-blade prop. - Allison V-1710 engine, rather than Allison Merlin, as used in original Mustang. - Dive brakes included on inboard underside of wings, similar to Douglas Dauntless. About 500 made, used mostly in CBI and Mediterranean/North African theaters. The Collings Foundation is restoring one in Florida. |
#7
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![]() Steve Hix wrote: In article , Ricardo wrote: What was the 'A-36' version of the Mustang? In brief, a dive bomber based on the early P-51 airframe, officially named "Apache". - Three-blade rather than four-blade prop. - Allison V-1710 engine, rather than Allison Merlin, as used in original Mustang. - Dive brakes included on inboard underside of wings, similar to Douglas Dauntless. About 500 made, used mostly in CBI and Mediterranean/North African theaters. The Collings Foundation is restoring one in Florida. Thanks Steve, Each day we learn a little more... Ricardo PS Allison Merlin? - I thought Packard were the boys for the Merlin production. Here I'm going to learn something else... |
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In article ,
Ricardo wrote: Steve Hix wrote: In article , Ricardo wrote: What was the 'A-36' version of the Mustang? In brief, a dive bomber based on the early P-51 airframe, officially named "Apache". - Three-blade rather than four-blade prop. - Allison V-1710 engine, rather than Allison Merlin, as used in original Mustang. - Dive brakes included on inboard underside of wings, similar to Douglas Dauntless. About 500 made, used mostly in CBI and Mediterranean/North African theaters. The Collings Foundation is restoring one in Florida. Thanks Steve, Each day we learn a little more... Ricardo PS Allison Merlin? - I thought Packard were the boys for the Merlin production. Here I'm going to learn something else... Duuuh. Packard is right. I blame it on the poison oak what I got around my eyes currently. Glasses are a *good* thing... |
#9
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On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 08:16:27 -0500, DeepSea
wrote: Maybe not. I'm not a historian, I'm an engineer with an interest in history. That being said, here's what I (think) I know. Most - (significantly) more than half Dive Bombing - technique that involves the release of bombs at high speed/low altitude. My comments are derived from a talk I attended last year while at the US Army's General Staff College. The talk was given by a British Army corporal who served as a courier in the early days of the Battle of Britain. He was wounded (badly) in one of the attacks, and spent the rest of the war recouperating and learning to walk again. He used the terms "most" and "dive bombing" during his talk. OK, if you are an engineer, then you should start by considering that a "corporal" courier who was wounded by a dive bomber is probably not authoritative on what dive bombing is all about. Now, take your engineering prowess and consider the geometry of level versus high angle release of a bomb--by diving at the target (in the simplest iteration) you reduce the aircraft's travel over the ground and hence increase the accuracy. If you wish to go to higher levels of math, you need to consider dive angle, airspeed, bank, sight depression from flight path, wind drift both before and after release (aircraft first then bomb), accelerations (g-loads), aerodynamic drag of bomb and a few other things to begin to get what dive bombing is about. But, don't ask corporals--they may know something about their particular field, but it may not be dive bombing. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
#10
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![]() "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 08:16:27 -0500, DeepSea wrote: Maybe not. I'm not a historian, I'm an engineer with an interest in history. That being said, here's what I (think) I know. Most - (significantly) more than half Dive Bombing - technique that involves the release of bombs at high speed/low altitude. My comments are derived from a talk I attended last year while at the US Army's General Staff College. The talk was given by a British Army corporal who served as a courier in the early days of the Battle of Britain. He was wounded (badly) in one of the attacks, and spent the rest of the war recouperating and learning to walk again. He used the terms "most" and "dive bombing" during his talk. So you extrapolated from one man's experience the assumption that _most_ bombing of England(sic) was performed bt _Dive-bombers_? OK, if you are an engineer, then you should start by considering that a "corporal" courier who was wounded by a dive bomber is probably not authoritative on what dive bombing is all about. Now, take your engineering prowess and consider the geometry of level versus high angle release of a bomb--by diving at the target (in the simplest iteration) you reduce the aircraft's travel over the ground and hence increase the accuracy. If you wish to go to higher levels of math, you need to consider dive angle, airspeed, bank, sight depression from flight path, wind drift both before and after release (aircraft first then bomb), accelerations (g-loads), aerodynamic drag of bomb and a few other things to begin to get what dive bombing is about. But, don't ask corporals--they may know something about their particular field, but it may not be dive bombing. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com I concur with Ed Rasimus's comments above... ![]() It could be that the 'British Army Courier Corporal' - interesting that no Regiment or Corps was cited - did actually experience situations where _most_ of the _bombing_ was by dive-bombers. This was not the experience of the majority (= significantly more than half) of the British population suffering from the 'Blitz' on cities. {Isn't there a saying about one swallow not making a summer? Perhaps one Corporal's anecdotes do not a form a basis for a deduction}. The experiences endured by my mother and her neighbours {most of the menfolk were on active service} is summarised on the Liverpool blitz web-site http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/nof/blitz/index.html extract The seven nights of the 1941 May Blitz (1st-7th May) were the heaviest consecutive nights of bombing experienced by Liverpool during the whole of the Second World War. In those few nights around 681 planes dropped 870 tonnes of high explosives and over 112,000 incendiaries (firebombs) on the area, killing over 1,700 people and making around 76,000 homeless. /extract Not much mention of Dive Bombers there! The Luftwaffe _did_ have Dive-Bombers, these were aircraft specifically designed for Close-Air-Support of advancing troops and AIUI such aircraft were directed by their pilots along a line-of-sight towards their target; the aircraft's systems automagically performed a J-curve manoeuvre which had the effect of taking the aircraft away and above the target while the ordnance continued along the line-of-sight to impact. Such aircraft were tasked against known targets, predominantly the Chain Home stations and airfields. AIUI, the aircraft-weapon systems was a success but not many Teutonic aircrew made a second sortie. -- Brian |
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