 | The ETO's finest single engined ground attack aircraft| Aviation Discuss The ETO's finest single engined ground attack aircraft in the World War II - Aviation forums; I cite:
"but of which aircraft that saw at least 6 months of significant combat was the hands down ... |
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04-05-2005, 03:56 PM
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#91 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 1,260
| I cite:
"but of which aircraft that saw at least 6 months of significant combat was the hands down best ground pounder."
Best ground pounder? The Stuka.
It did not only gained at least 6 months of siginificant combat, but the whole 6 years of the war.
Putting the "ground puonding" issue aside for one moment: You doubt the accuracy of the Stukas? A myth? Devote then some of your time to consult the records of the Royal Navy and ask them for their opinion of Stuka diving on their vessels, especially in the mediterranean.
The Thunderbolt and the Typhoon, fitted with bombs, attacking naval targets would have made an interesting view.
Back to ground attack, I can assure you the Stuka destroyed BY FAR, more enemy war material (tanks, artillery, communication lines, etc.) than the Typhoon or the Jug ever came close to achieve.
Myths? I can assure you the allied guys have the most prolific of the mythologies. It is the kind of mythology that has dragged you down.
You have not read that much on the eastern front to verify the destructive capabilities of the Stuka, and that is a major issue.
If you ever get to read more on the subject you might learn the Stukas delivered hell from above to the massive infantry and tank armies of the soviet union, and that Stuka support was essential for the striking victories of the Wehrmacht in the east.
The Typhoons and Jugs over Normandy did not came anywhere close, EVER, to achieve what the Stukas did in the east. If you have any reasonable doubts on this, please ask further.
About your silly remarks on Erich, I can assure you his words are his words and you can expect quite an impact from them.
__________________ In a national survey, 92% of the French people believed they are not ugly: 93% of them were wrong. |
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04-05-2005, 04:15 PM
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#92 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 715
| Yeah, it's really hard to hit a ship when you're dive bombing. That proves its accuracy  Try hitting the area covered by a tank.
" The Thunderbolt and the Typhoon, fitted with bombs, attacking naval targets would have made an interesting view."
I imagine that the Typhoon and Thunderbolt would have done just fine. Especially with rockets.
" I can assure you the Stuka destroyed BY FAR, more enemy war material (tanks, artillery, communication lines, etc.) than the Typhoon or the Jug ever came close to achieve."
There you go anchoring your assertions in the irrelevant again. Please note (*This question is not of which aircraft had the most significant impact on the war but of which aircraft that saw at least 6 months of significant combat was the hands down best ground pounder.)
Why don't you just answer the question I posed because it gets to the heart of the matter without resort to historical significance and the like: Let's say you are a commander. You want to inflict the greatest amount of damage on enemy troops, vehicles, armor and fortified positions for supplies. You can choose waves of attacks by equal numbers of either Stukas or Thunderbolts. You would choose Stukas?
Alternatively, if you were an enemy commander wishing to advance your troops, vehicles, armor and supplies, would you rather be harassed by Stukas or Thunderbolts?
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04-05-2005, 04:19 PM
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#93 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: Saffron Walden/Sheffield
Posts: 3,001
Country: | At least Thunderbolts and Typhoons can defend themselves against enemy fighters
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04-05-2005, 04:23 PM
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#94 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 715
| That's another thing. Try using the vaunted Stuka in an enviroment of less than complete and absolute air superiority.
It's also a big, slow target with a liquid cooled engine. Try using it in a environment with even moderate ground to air defenses.
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04-05-2005, 04:27 PM
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#95 | | Konfused with a 'K'
Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Turin, Italy
Posts: 20,412
Country: | Bronzewhaler82 (An old member of the site) said it best about the Stuka:
"The Stuka was a fabulous aircraft, unless one of the following was in the area:
1) Enemy Fighters.
2) Anti Aircraft Fire.
3) A Foot Soldier with a Rifle.
4) A General with a Handgun.
5) A Child with a Peashooter.
6) An Old Man on the street with a Dirty Look on his Face." 
__________________ with my one last gaping breath id apologise for bleeding on your shirt... |
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04-05-2005, 04:56 PM
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#96 | | the old Sage
Join Date: May 2004 Location: Platonic Sphere
Posts: 9,481
Country: | re-read my post. I said D-5 not a Bvariant. In any case any thunderbolt or tiffy in an area of non air superiority may give a better acct of itself in the fighter role than a stuka although the Stukas did shoot down some fighters. Again I point out the fighter bombers and not ground attack a/c that you so dearly love were designednot for attacking ground targets primarily. the Stuka varinats were. you mention that the Ost front stukas were not so successful .........eh ? you have the Freiburg archival records of the SG to prove that correct ?
I have friends in the JUg 9th AF fighter groups with all sorts of wild claims that they made agasint GErman Panzer formations in Normandie......you can easily get my drift and I think we have covered all of this quite well as to the actual effectiveness of the Allies in knocking out German armor there.............bah !
I do not wish to get into an heated argument but in the ETO the Stuka D-7 was wildly used agasint US and Bristish ground targets with much success. The D-7 was armored......ooooooooooh surprise had excellent amrs with the 2cm and the effective rounds to tear most anything up and I realize the jug and the tiffy did as well agasint MT............I can alos plainly see we aren't going to agree for debates sake either.... |
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04-05-2005, 08:07 PM
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#97 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 1,260
| "There you go anchoring your assertions in the irrelevant again. Please note (*This question is not of which aircraft had the most significant impact on the war but of which aircraft that saw at least 6 months of significant combat was the hands down best ground pounder.)"
Bronzewhaler82 (An old member of the site) said it best about the Stuka:
"The Stuka was a fabulous aircraft, unless one of the following was in the area:
1) Enemy Fighters.
2) Anti Aircraft Fire.
3) A Foot Soldier with a Rifle.
4) A General with a Handgun.
5) A Child with a Peashooter.
6) An Old Man on the street with a Dirty Look on his Face."
Arenīt these two quotes worth the inscription on a golden plate?
You really need some WW2 lessons. You ought to read more. I mean it, alllied propaganda stuffed individuals are boring.
You shouldnīt apply for playing a game you do not know how to play.
Read and research more; donīt come back to me until you are a bit more prepared to do so. So far your knowledge, if any, is wanting.
I have no further use of these guys.
__________________ In a national survey, 92% of the French people believed they are not ugly: 93% of them were wrong. |
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04-05-2005, 08:30 PM
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#98 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 715
| Speaking of Golden Plate inscriptions: You shouldnīt apply for playing a game you do not know how to play.
Read and research more; donīt come back to me until you are a bit more prepared to do so. So far your knowledge, if any, is wanting.
What a condescending ass.
By the later stages of the war, the Stuka was obsolete. By all means, please educate us all and answer the following: Let's say you are a commander. You want to inflict the greatest amount of damage on enemy troops, vehicles, armor and fortified positions for supplies. You can choose waves of attacks by equal numbers of either Stukas or Thunderbolts. Which do you choose and why?
Alternatively, if you were an enemy commander wishing to advance your troops, vehicles, armor and supplies, would you rather be harassed by Stukas or Thunderbolts?
On another note, I'm still waiting for you to substantiate your earlier claim that, "Furthermore, it would surprise you to know, it was the aerial attackers who took the biggest casualies, when they were greeted by flak batteries and ground fire from panzergrenadieren of the panzer divisions across Normandy. So instead of panzers, more Allied ground attack planes died during such attacks."
You still haven't explained how it is that you know that more allied fighter-bombers than tanks got the short end of the stick in attacks by those aircraft on German armor. And here's a hint of logic for you. Merely proving that not many German tanks were taken out by allied airpower does not prove your assertion. You do see that don't you?
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04-06-2005, 12:25 AM
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#99 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 715
| Here's something of interest.
From Antony Beevor, "The Spanish Civil War" (New York: Peter Bedrick Books, 1982) at page 22.
The Luftwaffe training wing, the Lehrgeschwader, conducted extensive high-altitude bombing exercises at Greifswald with disappointing results. Bombing from an altitude of 13,000 feet, experienced crews with no opposing ground fire in He111 and Do17 level bombers placed only 2 percent of their bombs inside a circle with radius of 330 feet. At 6,500 feet, their average increased to between 12-25 percent. The Ju87 dive bomber proceeded to put 25 percent of its bombs in a circle with a radius of only 185 feet.
That's quite accurate. Plenty accurate to get tank crews to abandon their vehicles. When used as the spearhead of an armored assualt, one can see how easily an enemy's armor could be shocked into paralysis making them easy kills for advancing German tanks.
As a defensive tool, an enemy armor advance can be similarly broken up and disoriented.
The above data was most certainly not obtained with a D-5. On the D-5 variant, the dive brakes were deleted since it was used almost exclusively in the schlacht role. It often flew at night only because it was such easy prey for air to air as well as ground to air threats.
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04-06-2005, 12:41 AM
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#100 | | the old Sage
Join Date: May 2004 Location: Platonic Sphere
Posts: 9,481
Country: | David, the D-5 as with all Ju 87's was a slow bird but during late 43 till wars end during day ops the SG units provided high cover with Fw 190A's and F's. |
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04-06-2005, 04:14 AM
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#101 | | Master of Ewes
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 19,959
Country: | Quote:
You really need some WW2 lessons. You ought to read more. I mean it, alllied propaganda stuffed individuals are boring.
You shouldnīt apply for playing a game you do not know how to play.
Read and research more; donīt come back to me until you are a bit more prepared to do so. So far your knowledge, if any, is wanting.
I have no further use of these guys.
| look Udet, if that IS your real name, we're all hear to learn, you atitude is not helping, if you think someone is wrong then by all means say you think they're wrong, however you do not make comments like this ok?? we're a pretty laid back forum however people with atitudes like this are rarely tollerated and why's that?? because as a general rule people don't like getting spoken to like that............
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"Reminds me of the time I sank the Tirpitz" comments a Spitfire pilot, "One pass of course, old boy." |
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04-06-2005, 07:17 AM
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#102 | | Konfused with a 'K'
Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Turin, Italy
Posts: 20,412
Country: | Quote: |
Originally Posted by Udet "There you go anchoring your assertions in the irrelevant again. Please note (*This question is not of which aircraft had the most significant impact on the war but of which aircraft that saw at least 6 months of significant combat was the hands down best ground pounder.)"
Bronzewhaler82 (An old member of the site) said it best about the Stuka:
"The Stuka was a fabulous aircraft, unless one of the following was in the area:
1) Enemy Fighters.
2) Anti Aircraft Fire.
3) A Foot Soldier with a Rifle.
4) A General with a Handgun.
5) A Child with a Peashooter.
6) An Old Man on the street with a Dirty Look on his Face."
Arenīt these two quotes worth the inscription on a golden plate?
You really need some WW2 lessons. You ought to read more. I mean it, alllied propaganda stuffed individuals are boring.
You shouldnīt apply for playing a game you do not know how to play.
Read and research more; donīt come back to me until you are a bit more prepared to do so. So far your knowledge, if any, is wanting.
I have no further use of these guys. |
Hey man, it was a joke...you actually belive that I think a stuka could be shot down by a kid with a peashooter?  Lighten up!
__________________ with my one last gaping breath id apologise for bleeding on your shirt... |
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04-06-2005, 08:33 AM
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#103 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: UK
Posts: 3,571
Country: | I'm not so sure Cheesy.
Lucky shot with a pea shooter.
Pea enters pitot tube.
Air speed indicator fails to register resulting in full throttle Landing back at base.
Runway over shoot whizzo prang fineto 
__________________ "Only thoses who lose freedom know it's true worth" Unknown French woman interviewed June 1944 |
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04-06-2005, 08:37 AM
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#104 | | Konfused with a 'K'
Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Turin, Italy
Posts: 20,412
Country: | Yes, but thats a long shot 
__________________ with my one last gaping breath id apologise for bleeding on your shirt... |
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04-06-2005, 08:46 AM
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#105 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: UK
Posts: 3,571
Country: | Not really Cheesy You must have heard of the great pea massacre of 1944 when ten stukas where bought down by the famous Birds Eye Battery of Bognor 
__________________ "Only thoses who lose freedom know it's true worth" Unknown French woman interviewed June 1944 |
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