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#16
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"vincent p. norris" wrote: I can't believe that either, George. That means that fatalities among pilots exeeded 50 percent. That's correct for fighter pilots who entered combat prior to about 1944. I don't understand that. Do you mean he was trained by, or for, the RAF in California in 1941? I've never heard of such an operation. He was trained by a contractor. A man named Clayton Knight served as a "headhunter" for the RAF. IIRC, he did the same sort of thing for China, finding pilots for the AVG. American RAF trainees trained in PT-17s and AT-6s in California before heading to Canada, where they took ship for Britain. Gover's class graduated 14 pilots to Canada in late 1941; 7 survived the war. I can believe that losses were quite high among pilots who fought through the entire war. OTOH, they were much lower among those who got into combat only a month or two before VE or VJ day. Which is why I said "prior to about 1944" in my post. George Patterson If you don't tell lies, you never have to remember what you said. |
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