Squire,
The recommendations I listed are not my own inventions. They were made either during the war or immediately after, based on the results achieved during the war and reported by the operational research groups. These things were known to work to improve accuracy.
How does that increase accuracy in any significant way? in any case various types were tried by the RAF and none increased bombing accuracy overall by any great degree.
That's not what the US operational research groups found. The 1000 lb bomb was more accurate than the smaller 250 and 500 lb weapons. The smaller bombs tended to tumble more on release before stabilising in the airflow, and were more affected by crosswinds, causing greater drift from the aiming point.
The Flak would tear you a new one and your losses would be severe and unsustainable over Europe.
Correct. I was discussing what would have made bombing more accurate though, not the implications of the tactics. Bombing form 11,000 to 15,000 ft was seen at the best for accuracy - lower and you were too affected by turbulence, higher and CEP starts to widen again.
The fighters would tear you a new one.
Correct, see previous answer. Formation sizes were reduced for some missions from about two thirds of the way through 1944 onwards. This had a positive effect on accuracy.
Debatable practicality but I think the idea might have had some merit.
It was shown to work. Several ops in 1945 against 'milk run' targets had much wider group spreads, with appreciable results.
Increases your losses to fighters
Again, see answers to #2 and #3. Several different combat box formations were trialed in the ETO and PTO. Smaller boxes had better accuracy. I'm not discussing practicality, I'm discussing methods of improving accuracy.
That would hardly "fix" the problems of bombing from alt in 1944. The B-17 was not some superbomber it had a norden sight and dropped iron bombs.
Correct, the B-17 was not a superbomber. However, it was a more stable bombing platform than the B-24, was easier to pilot and assemble and tended to 'wander' less during a bomb run. B-17 groups consistently had better CEPs than B-24 groups in 8th AF service.
There was a war on and I think they were as well trained as you could reasonably make them. Trained better than most in fact by 1944.
Better than most still doesn't reach the potential for accuracy that the USAAF had but failed to achieve. Better trained and more experienced crews had improve accuracy over fresh crews, particularly those that had seen no combat.
They already did that.
high altitude meterological forecasting was called for time and time again by experts, with almost bugger all reaction. They didn't even begin to start correcting for the jet stream until mid 1943.
That's a lot of bombers jetting their loads for nothing.
In 1943, you can find missions where 100-200 bombers failed to bomb because of lack of visibility. As the war progressed, this squeamishness about not bombing without visibility went away. Bombing thorough 5/10ths cloud dropped the number of bombs with 1000 ft of the aiming point from 30% to 9.4%. Bombing with H2X and 8-9/10ths cloud dropped this to 1%.
Nice to say but not practical in Europe.
Again, not discussing practicality.
They did that with H2S. They are a partial fix to the technology of the day.
Pathfinder aircraft were used in a minimal and ineffective way. A wider and earlier introduction would have done much to improve accuracy.
Targets burn
Yes, but incendiaries, particularly the small 5-40 lb ones, were vastly less accurate than even conventional dumb bombs.
On the practicality side of things, only a few of these techniques/changes I listed are immediately usable for an air campaign. I acknowledge that most of them will require revisions of tactics, major and minor. These were the known solutions, at the time, to improving accuracy.
Many of them were ignored because they'd lead to higher losses. Some, like reducing the % of incendiaries, were ignored completely, or even reversed.