THE WORLD WAR TWO GROUP discussion
LAND, AIR & SEA
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Night Fighter Operations during WW2










the book is the first and the last he was regarded as the greatest Fighter ace of his time
i will make more comments later have to rush of and attend to something
cheers Rod





You may like my book Night Fighters, where I have interviews.



Galland was a good friend. His featured full length interviews was in my book The German Aces Speak. All of my Luftwaffe books have him quoted to some extent.
message 8:
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Geevee, Assisting Moderator British & Commonwealth Forces
(last edited Jan 04, 2014 08:50AM)
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Thanks Gerald I'd not been aware of the German approach - I must read more on night-fighting as a whole this year.
Rod many thanks for posting this and your recommendation along with the books Rick has posted (some I have on my shelves) and Colin's book/s set this thread up well.

I had the pleasure of talking to a Hurricane pilot of 213 Sqn a few years ago and he told me when in 1940 whilst based at Filton they were used as night-fighters. He described this as a great challenge as as soon as the engine started the flames of the exhausts destroyed any night vision the pilots had, and then once up the exhausts continued to glow and with no navigation aids they complained they were more dangerous to themselves and those on the ground than any enemy aircraft they might just bump in to by chance rather than judgement/information provided. He said he flew them again later when they were better adapted with some electronic kit.








Those look good, AR.




Wonder if anyone has the trivia I seek.
My query is this: are the large painted numbers at the end of runways, devised arbitrarily? Or, what exactly do they represent? I've just come across a statement in a book which suggests they are the compass headings upon which the runway lays. That is, when the pilot is lining up to land, the number of the runway is the heading they must turn on to.
If so, I'd find that pretty interesting! There's an elegance in something that efficient.


A broader, 'air war' question. In the same book I was reading recently, characters were portrayed in '43 as 'looking forward to the arrival of the B-29s' as if they were going to quickly 'take care of things' in the Pacific.
This is something one hears so little of; because as we know the war dragged on stubbornly for quite a while.
So what I want to know is this: for service personnel at the time, what were other 'planes on the way soon' which were thought (when they finally came online) were going to solve the whole war in one stroke? Planes or ships which were supposed to be the schnizz, and which everyone looked forward to as the big stick to thrash the Axis? I don't mean jets or missiles, fyi.
Tangentially: was there originally a version of Overlord which was planned for '43? But they missed the weather? Or inter-service rivalry set it back? This is something you may know off the top of your head (anyone here, I mean)


There were a lot of new weapons that barely made it or did not make it into combat. Our Pershing tank was interesting. Patton has been blamed for the delay in its development, but he only had influence on the decision, not the final say-so. There are endless pieces of equip the Germans were working on. Maybe most potentially deadly was their latest submarine type.


p.s. I think one of George Peppard's co-stars with him in that film, had also starred with him in 'The Blue Max' (if memory serves). I love 'Blue Max' with James Mason, Ursula Andress, and Peppard.

message 29:
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Geevee, Assisting Moderator British & Commonwealth Forces
(last edited Sep 14, 2015 12:02PM)
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NB: An addition to the post above which made me all misty eyed to see a Cent AVRE and I noted on some interest posts that the last Centurion withdrawn from British military service was a BARV (Beached Amroured Recovery Vehicle) that served with the Royal Marines until 2003.

The B-32 Dominator did fly some combat missions toward the end of the war in the Pacific. You get a brief introduction to it in:


Wonder if anyone has the trivia I seek.
My query is this: are the large painted numbers at the end of runways, devised arbitrarily? Or, what exactly do they repr..."
You have it right Feliks. The number is the magnetic heading of the runway. Runway 36 is a heading of 360 degrees Mag. If you see 36L or 36R, that means there are 2 parallel runways, left and right. Always good to check your aircraft heading before you land to make sure you are landing on the runway the tower cleared you to land on!


Wonder if anyone has the trivia I seek.
My query is this: are the large painted numbers at the end of runways, devised arbitrarily? Or, what exact..."
As I read from one general aviation columnist, 'You know you're getting old when you see them go out and change the numbers on your favorite runway.' As the magnetic poles do drift, runway numbers must be changed every long now and then.

I've read several times that our pilots hated the Bell P-39 Airacobra, but the Russians loved them due to reliability, good armored protection and deadly armament of one cannon and two or four machine guns.

Yep mine too, If I remember right, in Hampton Sides book Ghost Soldiers it was used for that particular operation.

On to Howards comment on the B-32, IIRC, it was intended as a backup incase the B-29 program didn't pan out. They did fly a few missions out of Okinawa at the very tail end of WWII. I read somewhere that the last Aircraft lost over Japan was a B-32, but I might be misremembering :)
The B-36 was a completely different airplane - much, much larger with 6 pusher engines on the trailing edges of the wings and in later models 4 jet engines two pods, one pod on the tip of each wing.
When I visited the AF Museum in Dayton, 20 yrs ago now, they had one hanging from the roof and it spanned both the main display hangers


Runways are named by a number between 01 and 36, which is generally the magnetic azimuth of the runway's heading in decadegrees: a runway numbered 09 points east (90°), runway 18 is south (180°), runway 27 points west (270°) and runway 36 points to the north (360° rather than 0°).
Runway - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RunwayW...
A little search came up with this. Hope it is true, since it makes sense.



When I visited the AF Museum in Dayton, 20 yrs ago now, they had one hanging from the roof and it spanned both the main display hangers "
I remember almost buying a model airplane of the Peacemaker when I was a kid (went with F4 Phantom instead). The plane itself (both the real thing and the model) seemed unwieldy and inefficient. I remember looking at it and thinking it was just way too much aircraft; way too many extras.

http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/Visi...


"Roundup" was the codename for a 1943 cross-Channel invasion. American leaders were eager to get into France as rapidly as possible, but the British were not. Shortage of landing craft is the main reason Roundup never happened, but also diversions to the 1942-43 Mediterranean and Pacific campaigns were big factors. On the other hand, some of those diversions happened because the decision to cross the Channel had been postponed until 1944.
Broadly speaking, the British were reluctant because they didn't feel confident in the ability of both Allied armies to defeat the Germans that early in the war. The Americans needed over a year to create their armies and ship a sizable fraction to the UK, so they couldn't force the operation to happen as quickly as they wanted. As it happened, the air forces also needed that year to break down enough of the German air force to dominate the sky, and some of the landing craft and all of the special artificial ports would not have been ready, either.
FWIW, "Sledgehammer" was the code for a 1942 invasion, but that was an contingency plan for an emergency; in case the Soviet armies collapsed, it would have been a desperate hope to influence a reeling USSR to stay in the war.

I've been told of a Czech fighter regiment, raised in the Soviet Union, that had flown Soviet-made planes. When the war was over, they had a chance to fly Mustangs, and said they preferred (IIRC) La-9s. That was a shock to hear.

But you gotta do the doctrine. The great ace Tommy McGuire died because he did what he constantly told other pilots not to do: he banked sharply at low speed and low altitude in a P-38.

Books mentioned in this topic
Mission to Tokyo: The American Airmen Who Took the War to the Heart of Japan (other topics)The Other Battle: Luftwaffe Night Aces Versus Bomber Command (other topics)
The Other Battle: Luftwaffe Night Aces Versus Bomber Command (other topics)
Pursuit Through Darkened Skies: An Ace Night-Fighter Crew in World War II (other topics)
Night Fighter over Germany: Flying Beaufighters and Mosquitoes in World War 2 (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Peter Hinchliffe (other topics)Michael Allen (other topics)
Dennis Gosling (other topics)
Peter Spoden (other topics)
Graham White (other topics)
More...
Members can discuss any aspect of Nightfighter Operations; weapons, individuals, aircraft & tactics during the Second World War in this area.