ORIGINAL: wdolson
The RN would have likely held back the heavier ships to oppose the larger German ships if they had been committed. If the German large ships had been committed, the RN would have outnumbered them.
.....Everything either has to be landed at a port, or via inefficient boats not intended to unload cargo over a beach. The expeditionary force would be bogged down with low supply on beaches that are heavily mined with barbed wire and other beach defenses. Bomber Command which was not involved in the battle to this point is engaged attacking the landed forces and/or the supply ships coming in.
Bill
warspite1
Just picking up on two points Bill, the first for context as the disparity in forces needs to be emphasised. This to dispel any notion that RN heavy units could be committed to deal with the KM
heavy units or assist the cutting of the supply route. The second is to put right a factual inaccuracy - another fallacy about the BoB that sadly seems to have become "fact".
1. Larger German ships. In September 1940 this amounted to:
Admiral Scheer 11-inch PB
Admiral Hipper 8-inch CA
Possibly 3 x 6-inch CL
Home Fleet capital ships only
Nelson and Rodney 16-inch BB
Repulse and Hood 15-inch BC
Valiant and Barham 15-inch BB
Furious CV
2. Bomber Command was very much part of the BoB and the defence of the UK. And I am not talking about the attacks on Germany itself (in the context of the war, sadly a non-event in 1940).
What cannot be ignored is the day and night Bomber Command attacks on German airfields (yes we did that too) and, equally important for this discussion, the "Battle of the Barges".
As I previously mentioned Bomber Command had accounted for some c.10% of Barges by the time Hitler called for the postponement of the operation (214 had been lost or damaged by the 21st September). Just as worryingly for the Germans were the losses at the key invasion ports. For example, by that time Boulogne was 30% short on its Barge requirement.
No doubt the fact that even light bombers contained more than one aircrew (unlike fighters) was a factor here, but nonetheless, more RAF Bomber Command personnel died during the BoB than fighter pilots.
BTW, and at the risk of "embarrassing myself" [8|] the youngest VC of the war went to an 18-year old Scot, John Hannah (during an attack against invasion shipping in Antwerp on the 15th September 1940) [&o]
