We have enigma day here *nods* NEVER FORGET ENIGMA !!!!!!ORIGINAL: Gräfin Zeppelin
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NEVER FORGET ER GR ZA TE RA YQ END TRANSMISSION
Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition
We have enigma day here *nods* NEVER FORGET ENIGMA !!!!!!ORIGINAL: Gräfin Zeppelin
ORIGINAL: USS America
Take your hatred and filth elsewhere. Your infantile games have worn our your welcome here, troll!
ORIGINAL: Lomri
We have enigma day here *nods* NEVER FORGET ENIGMA !!!!!!ORIGINAL: Gräfin Zeppelin
ORIGINAL: nashvillen
GREEN BUTTON = GOOD
You claim the Red Tails trained for three years - please provide proof.
Because as far as I am aware, the 99th Flying Pursuit Squadron was activated in March 1941. The Tuskegee Flight School was only established in June 1941 and Pre-Flight stage training (mechanics, physics of flights, aeronautics, deflection shooting, thinking in 3D) only commenced in July 1941.
Primary Pilot Training started in September 41, while Basic Pilot Training started in November 1941, with Advanced Pilot Training starting in January 1942. The first class graduated on 6 March 1942 - after being in training for 9 months (the standard USAAF training period, with each stage - Pre Flight, Primary Pilot (65 hrs), Basic Pilot (70 hrs) and Advanced Pilot Training (80 hours) lasting 9 weeks each, for a total of 36 months). Please note that these aviation cadets graduated with around 215 hours' flight experience (the USAAF required at least 200 hours' flight time to graduate).
Contrast this with Imperial Japanese naval aviators who graduated with 500 hours' flight experience. Not a single one of the Japanese pilots at Pearl Harbor had logged less than 600 hours' flying time, some flight leaders had logged 1500 hours.
The 99th Flying Pursuit Squadron was only at full strength in August 1942 as they waited for more pilots to graduate. The 90th FPS was declared combat-ready on 15 September 1942 - they then, after a struggle to get a combat posting, was deployed to North Africa in April 1943.
Now, July 1941 to April 1943 (assuming the first graduates - of whom there weren't enough to fill a squadron - trained consistently from graduation in March 1942 to April 1943, which is unlikely given the general lack of resources the Tuskegee training centre suffered from - they had almost 2,000 men on base with only two training squadrons) I make as 21 months.
Also bear in mind that during their deployment in North Africa, and later Sicily, they were utilised exclusively in a ground attack capacity. Not sure they had much chance to brush up on their air-to-air skill?
What I am trying to diminish is the credibility of your argument, firstly, that they had three years' training (please prove this) and, secondly, that they were the finest squadron in the USAAF (again, please prove this).
They had they best operational record in the USAAF
I am not trying to diminish the great gallantry of the Tuskegee Airmen, who were an inspiration for surmounting the incredible obstacles that were placed in front of them at all times.
ORIGINAL: Frank
Starting 1939 till 1945 JG 52 shot down over 11000 allied and soviet planes, loosing 600 pilots .
Just for comparison.
There is absolutely no substitute for combat experience, as any veteran will tell you.
Training is vital, and can make a massive difference.
But once you get out there and somebody is actively trying to kill or maim you, you better learn quick. And there are some things you can only learn in combat, and not in training.
ORIGINAL: Historiker
He doesn't like Germans. Propably a dumb racist.
But who cares?
Nice [:)]ORIGINAL: Dixie
ORIGINAL: Historiker
He doesn't like Germans. Propably a dumb racist.
But who cares?
At least some of us do like Germans. I love Germans, but I couldn't eat a whole one. [:'(]
I made no personal attacks on you. Why do you persist in trying to label me as a racist?
Warspite1ORIGINAL: Commander Stormwolf
There is absolutely no substitute for combat experience, as any veteran will tell you.
Training is vital, and can make a massive difference.
But once you get out there and somebody is actively trying to kill or maim you, you better learn quick. And there are some things you can only learn in combat, and not in training.
Yes. It is. Explains how 303 squadron did well in hurricanes and some RAF squadrons did badly in spitfires.
But if we were truly smart, South Africa would have never fallen to the savages.. [:(]
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