Fencer,
Would you be in agreement, then, that North Sea would then be the better choice after all, due to the July start date? Certainly, as in my initial thoughts, North Sea would offer FAR more room to position the Allied carriers.
Stoney,
From what I can dig up, this would then mean the Germans had TWO strategies in defense: Early on more permanent structures, while later as the sites had started to be hit, they altered their designs to make them easier to put back into commission again. Not quite MOBILE, but certainly less permanent. Even if the early sites were heavily armed, the later practice seems to suggest the Germans would have relied more on secrecy and air defenses in the surrounding area than heavy AAA on the site itself, while only major sites like Peenemundë retained the real heavy local air defenses. Granted, based on the dates the sites I listed here were bombed (available in the Wiki article on Crossbow) the July time frame would seem to indicate the earlier practice.
I do still believe that, due to the small probable size of the target, each Corsair Squadron should be given a specific sector to attack, with 2-3 V-1 sites in each sector. A Corsair with 2x500lb bombs, and 8x5" HVAR carries 2000lbs of ordinance. Multiply that by the max end of a 7-10 squadron (10 standard, 12 with +2 allowance) you're talking 20,000-24,0000lbs of ordinance for a site that may not require more than 2000-3000. Remove the rockets and you're still looking at over-kill. However, if each squadron must hit 2-3 sites in their sector of operations, you've just given the squadron commander a critical tactical decision: Keep his squadron together in hopes of making it through the air defenses to each site sequentially by numbers and attrition, or should he risk dividing his squadron in an attempt at striking all the sites at once in hopes that they can make it through on at least one or two, with enough ships left over to rearm and make a second pass on any that are missed?
Additionally, I also still believe the German pilots should be instructed ONLY to defend a specific sector, (or maybe a group of sectors) which contains both V-1 sites AND a potential alternate target (port, V-base, etc). That way the Axis won't know in advance if they're looking for Corsairs striking the V-1s, or TBMs or jabo F6Fs/FM-2s after a different target.
Also, I mentioned before but what sort of German iron would be available for July 1944? I know for certain Ju-88s and Bf-110Gs (Fw-190Fs I think would also likely be available) for the Luftwaffe strike packages, but what about air-to-air? Would the same Axis plane set as Kanalkampf be applicable?