Originally posted by Bruno
Cowboys and Indians by Jeff Ethell posted by Neil Page
Neil Page did the English Translation for JG 300. A Chronicle of a Jagdgeschwader in the Battle for Germany. Volume 1: June 1943 to September 1944 by Jean-Yves Lorant and Richard Guyat
I am sure WW know who Jeff Ethell is.
The article is a decent read. Some things to look for:
'As far as the eye could see stretched wing after wing of...'
'Buried deep in the stream'
Dahl's radio request:
'Have the enemy in sight in northerly direction over Trier - 6500m (21325ft) - the Pulks are without escort cover. Shall I attack?'
'Nosing up after running through the low box..'
Anyway, for those who don't want to pick up a book the Ethell article is representative of almost all Sturm pilot accounts.
You missed the sentence that preceded that which you posted...
"The B-17s were at 25,000 feet"
Did you happen to notice that one of the bomber groups involved was the 303rd? From Toad's link again...
15 August 1944
Airfield near Wiesbaden, Germany
Crews Dispatched: 39
Crews Lost: 9 A/C, 23 KIA, 48 POW, 10 EVD
Crewmembers Lost or Wounded: 1 KIA, 2 WIA
Length of Mission: 6 hours, 46 minutes
Bomb Load: 4 x 1,000 lb G.P. M43
& 4 x 500 lb M17 Incendiary bombs
Bombing Altitudes: 25,600, 25,500 & 24,900 ft
Ammo Fired: 50,050 rounds
Thirty-nine 303rd BG(H) B-17s took off, flying as the 41st "B" CBW formation. Thirty seven aircraft dropped a total of 147 1,000-lb. M43 and 146 500-lb. M17 incendiary bombs on the primary target. Hits were made on one hangar with a near miss on another. The airfield landing ground sustained numerous hits, the entire area was blanketed by incendiary bombs. Three hits were made on a railroad line. Bombing was from
25,600, 25,500, and 24,900 ft. Notice the altitudes of the squadrons.... Not 1,000 yards apart, but just 700 feet from low squadron to high squadron. Notice also that the lowest was a lot higher than 6,500 meters (an estimation by the German pilot, I'm sure).
Oh, and yes, you could say that I have heard of Jeff Ethell. After Jeff died in the P-38 crash, Warren Bodie recruited me to fill his co-writing spot on a part-time basis. Warren and I shared several bylines before he found a full-time aviation writer to fill the position permanently.
My regards,
Widewing