The Me162 and Me163 were a bit faster than all the others, and it helped them a lot in their interceptor role... but they couldn't turn very well... they were extremely vulnerable when not fast... and the technology was still a bit young.
Especially the 163, which was pretty much shot up at the bomberstream like a rocket, had a very short "maneuvering window" of time, and then had to try and land. Even fueling them was an invitation to disaster...
No, I bet the P-51 and P-47 drivers were not too anxious to trade places with the first jet jockeys...
But, getting back to the "fairness" argument, how come there's all this careful planning about "jet day"? Shouldn't the 262 or 263 simply be available at the part of the tour time where it would have figured in history? Or, is it just because there's no ALLIED jet to make things all "even Stephen", that's why they're all perked up and tightly controlled???
More holes poked in the tired, unimaginative Arena Paradigm
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I also realize what's being bandied about in this Brewster discussion. Point is, if a plane's going to be made available, don't you think all the representative versions... the ones that actually saw combat... should be in the set, giving people a choice of which to use?
As for the FM2, that's a viable one for late(r) war, like for the Jeep CVs... provided everyone doesn't stop using F4Fs in earlier war action. That would simply be a more subtle kind of 'ueberplaning'. Flying only the 'best' version of a type instead of soldiering on with the most representative version.