Originally posted by GScholz
Of course ... BUT the LW pilots were the only ones that ACTUALLY did it.
EXACTLY! And that’s why Hartmann was a much better fighter pilot than the Spit pilot you refer to. The Spit pilot never got the chance to develop into a “Experten class” pilot. The Germans were the only ones that could accumulate the necessary experience.
Were the Germans somehow “genetically” better fighter pilots than their allied counterparts? Of course not. Were they better fighter pilots? Of course they were.
I think you missed it completely.
You are not taking into account the point where the stresses were counterproductive to the ability.
You argument would suggest that given a 1 v 1 situation, that Hartmann would defeat a Johnny Johnson, Richard Bong, etc. without question. There's no way to know that, just because the number of combat encounters was so much greater for Hartmann. ACM is ACM.
Again, the pilots writing about it, regardless of country, talk about a peak time where the experience is coupled with the aggressiveness, and how after a time that balance was lost due to fatigue, stress, etc. and they were not at their best despite the experience.
If it's purely the number of kills, that equates to skill, then why did any of the 100 plus guys get killed? Their skill should have been so far beyond any of the no kill guys they were flying against that the issue should not have been in doubt? Why did Bully Lang go down to P47s. With over 170 kills, I doubt the group of Jugs he was flying against that day had that total as a whole?
Is it possible he wasn't at his best after that much combat? Had he tempted fate one too many times?
I remember seeing before/after pictures of different pilots and the strain is evident. Someone used photos of 357th FG Ace Kit Carson to show this once and you could barely tell that the newbie Carson and the vet Carson were the same guy. Look in Knoke's book at the early photo and the one taken just before the war ended. You can't tell me the strain isn't written all over his face. Photo's in Hartmann's biography show the same thing too.
Infantry books tell the same thing. There is a time frame of greatest combat effectiveness, followed by a time of diminishing returns without a break due to the stress of combat.
You seem to be suggesting that Hartmann for example was at his very best after his last kill, because he'd had the experience. I'd suggest his best was long before his last kill, and I'd bet he'd agree with that.
There are too many factors to consider to just make a blanket statement that the LW pilots were better.
What we can agree on is that the highest scoring fighter pilots in WW2 were the LW drivers. I don't think we'll agree on the other stuff

Dan/CorkyJr