Originally posted by RAM:
See, you **REALLY** want me to dig for numbers of the German planes available in the MTO for the time the P38 started to be an effective weapon there?.
Hint: never were more than 250 planes.
Go figure.
RAM, gimme a bit but I'll pull some figures for you.
Most of the engagments of the P-38 squadrons vs the LW were at an enormous disadvantage (whether you want to include Africa or not makes little difference, numbers were approx. the same)
Usual was P-38 one squadron of 16 planes (sometimes less for one reason or another) vs 30 or so LW planes, the majority G6's and mixed-matched FW models, along with whatever the Italians could contribute for a given operation. I've heard many times this was because P-38 squadrons appeared to the LW ground controllers as a bomber formation on radar, so while there may not of been that many LW fighters in the theatre they nearly always showed up in force when engaging the 38s expecting to intercept bombers. Couple this with the face that mission were generally limited to lower altitudes in the Medd. so the flight looked even more like a bomber formation.
It's not quite as simple as it looks, the Allies did things alot differently in the Medd. (as did the LW). While the LW did practice mass scramble for bomber intercept most of the US squadrons went out in small numbers for individual objects, nothing like what was practiced over the rest of Europe.
If you search around you'll see the LW in the Medd. may of not had large numbers but they were at least coordinated to make the most of what they had, and that some of the allied pilots did suprisingly well considering what they were flying and what they were up against, as well as the LW for that matter.
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33rd FW www.33rd.org [This message has been edited by Jigster (edited 01-22-2001).]