Geez, talk about pressure

What you gents looking for RAF or USAAF stuff or both?
I do think it speaks loudly to those LW honchos that somehow survived it all and racked up such high scores. The amount of targets they saw compared to the average USAAF pilot would have been no comparision.
I remember reading some comment by a 4th FG pilot who saw an enemy aircraft on only one occasion of his tour
Seems to me Yeager said he encountered enemy aircraft only five times during his tour as well.
I know when we argued about when the airwar was won in that one thread I posted those numbers of sorties vs losses and the losses percentage wise were miniscule for the Allies based on the amount of aircraft in the air.
That's the thing that is hard to comprehend is that sky over Europe covered with thousands of aircraft each day.
A couple of things just to throw out there to give a perspective on RAF engagements.
Two squadrons operated the XII from February 43 -September 44. During that time they claimed 59 enemy aircraft..
I have the logbook of a Canadian Spitfire Pilot who flew with 416, 41 and 91 Squadrons. In 289 combat sorties, totaling 704.25 hours of combat flying from December 9, 1941 to August 16, 1944 he saw enemy aircraft 5 times. and was in only one real scrap on July 18, 1943, otherwise it was chasing or evading on the other four occasions. One he was on a recco and bounced by 190s and outran them. On two of the others it was seeing 190s that didn't engage and the other one was early on in 1941 chasing a Ju88 that had been over England.
I have to believe that a LW fighter pilot flying in the same time frame on the Western Front, with the same amount of hours would have engaged in combat a heckuva lot more often.
And I have a list of 91 Squadron claims for the entire war from their formation in 1941. They claimed 73 aircraft in the entire war with their last two kills being in May of 1944.
Pop over to this site:
http://brew.clients.ch/RAF41Sqdn.htmI've got a lot of my 41 stuff there. 41 was fairly typical of a Fighter Command squadron. Look at the casualties to all causes during the course of the entire war. Roughly 180 lost to all causes.
Do the math and average it out for the rest of the squadrons.
Clearly the RAF and USAAF were target 'deprived' compared to those LW guys. At the same time I wouldn't want to have been climbing into the cockpit of a 190 or 109 from 43 on as the odds were against them bigtime.
Dan/Slack