Hey Crumpp!
Well, welcome to the group of the BoB addicted.
As I mentioned before, and promised,- if you look more into it, it gets more interesting.
Now, keep your head a tad above the frame of time you two are tugging each other about and see things a little wider. I'll do a 1, 2 and perhaps 3 :
1: No matter where the haggle goes, the LW mounted roughly the same number of servicable 109's as the total fighter force of the RAF.
2: After some changes and tactic tests, the LW went to really heavy escort. They mounted 3 fighters for each bomber, - some being tied close, some flying high, some flying escort.
3: As a comparison, the USSAF escorts in deep penetration daylight bombings of Germany mounted much less fighters pro bomber, while covering many times the distance.
Little fact points for the database:
a. Calais- London is only 100 miles
b. South coast--London is only half that far.
c. Dover-Calais is easily a gliding distance from som 15K or less.
d. RAF responce time from scramble to interception was often not enough to be at the required altitude. They attacked uphill.
e. Park considered 3 squadrons to be the absolute maximum to get synchronised as a fighting force for interception. (36 at best)
f. on several cases the RAF fighters did not get through to the bombers. This applies mostly to the first phases of the BoB.
g. FC's radar was actually blinded on big patches throughout quite a bit of the battle.
h. The setup of FC made it impossible to use 13th group at all, - it was too far from the theater of ops. Same applied to several squadrons of 12th and 10th group.
Good for now
