you calling me dumb and yet you believe that the airplane was good because they said it "looked goon on paper" not due to combat action. did anybody ever build a plane that looked bad on paper? out of curiosity would you care to comment on g55 activities during the war? how many airplanes did it shoot down? where did it see combat? how long was it in service?
based on one of your sentences you only read wikipedia, didnt you. you sure you arent confusing the g55 airplane with the g55 car?
semp
G.55 was a vast improvement over the C.205, It did shoot down quite a few - confirmed victories - one of the first engagements were B24's escorted by P38s on March 29th in which 20 C205s tangled with P38s and left 6 G.55s (heavier firepower) shot down 2 of the B-24s and damaged 5, two others crashed on landing.
Order of Battle Jan-September 1944
Fiat G.55 Series I Flew with:
I Gruppo Caccia - All 3 Squadriglias flew G.55s
II Gruppo Caccia - 3 Squadriglias flew G.55s and Nucleo Comando which operated as a command flight (flew g55s as well)
Montefusco-Bonet flew G.55s as well as C.205s as above, however due to loss of personel and planes, it was absorbs into I Gruppo Caccia to replenish its G.55 inventory.
Far as its victories it shot down well over 100, (unconfirmed) It was in service late 1943 and formed the backbone into 1944, 109G's and 109K's slowly replaced the C.205s/G.55s/Re2005s after numbers declined. For example III Gruppo was transfered to germany for training on the 109k when the war ended, it used 21 BF109ks, 4 BF108s and a Ki35.
On the Allies side of Italy, nobody flew the G.55, since the factories were moved to the north for production on the 205s and G.55s, they mainly flew - C.202s, C.205s, P-39s, C.200s, CR.42s, Spitfire Vs.
As for numbers concerned - Its tough to say exactly how many G.55s were built, but it was well above 200, the exact number is going to be an issue finding, as most "post war" documents are tough to come by.
I have limited information on the G.55, but from what wikipedia says - I did some research and this is a true statement -
The Germans also brought with them several aircraft including a Fw 190 A-5 and a Bf 109 G-4 for direct comparison tests in simulated dogfights.
Oberst Petersen defined the G.55 "the best fighter in the Axis" and immediately telegraphed his impressions to Goering. After listening the recommendations of Petersen, Milch and Galland, a meeting held by Goering on 22 February 1943 voted to produce the G.55 in Germany.
What I concluded, is this statement is stretching the truth - in fact it was tested and found to out perform both the 190 and 109, in which Germany didn't want it to be known its "aircraft were second rate" - He did approach Galland about producing the G.55 in Germany, I have no idea if any were built in Germany, but what I do know is Germans took over the Factories in northern Italy that built it, so it could of been transferred and built,
from what I gather it was't which concludes the idea was probably shot down until to late.
My Sources:
All this comes from Regia Aeronauctica Pictorial history Vol. 1 and 2, by Christopher Shores
Regia Aeronautica - the italy airforce 23-45 by Chris Dunning
And the luftwaffe comments came from Courage Alone the Italian Airforce 40-43.
Anything else?