Hawker Hurricane Mk. IIB vs. Grumman F4F-4 Wildcat (2 Viewers)

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Wake Island would be comparable to the Glads in Malta, but did not the F4F usually have the advantage of height in Guadaulcanal when facing the Zeros as opposed to the Hurricanes which were surprised to find the Japanese over Ceylon and were attacking from below.
Again let's not focus entirely on Ceylon for Hurricanes, because there are a fair number of other examples. In Jan-April '42, when fighting greatly died down on British fronts v Japanese, the Hurricane results, as given in Bloody Shambles combat by combat as I count, fighter to fighter:
Zeroes: 2 combats over Ceylon, 27 Hurricanes lost for 3 Zeroes
Zeroes: 3 other combats with both sides known: 8 Hurricanes 3 Zeroes
Type 1's: 12 combats, 20 Hurricanes, 4 Type 1's
Type 97's: 9 combats, 8 Hurricanes, 5-6 Type 97's
1 Hurricane was lost in a combat with either Type 1's or Zeroes w/ no J loss, and 7 in combats where the Japanese side is not given. A few were Dutch Hurricanes, and a few combats were along with the AVG but only one has a real claim overlap, that's 5 v 6 Type 97's.

So the Hurricane combat effectiveness problem v the Japanese in the early campaigns was not a fluke of one situation. The Hurricanes were not outnumbered and surprised in every one of the 26 two-side documented combats, not nearly, but came out on the short end of all of them, except 2 combats v. Type 97's.

In the set piece interceptions over G'canal by F4F's, of Type 1 Land Attack Planes ('Betty') escorted by Zeroes, F4F's often had altitude advantage, but sometimes didn't. Plus, not all combats over G'canal involving land based planes in 1942 were those set pieces. Some were battles over convoys or carrier based planes of one side v landbased ones of the other, which occured at lower altitude. And a significant % were carrier fighters on both sides. At Coral Sea and Midway as already mentioned Lundstrom found the score between carrier based fighters was 14 (Zeroes, plus 2 Type 96's) v 10 carrier based F4F's. The numbers for Eastern Solomons and Santa Cruz are included above in Frank's numbers for all G'canal thru Nov 15 1942, but the carrier Zeroes did a bit better in the second two carrier battles. But overall the exchange in actions between carrier fighters was also around 1:1, where there was no tendency for altitude advantage on either side, and a general numerical advantage for the Japanese.

I suggest reading the references given above, count up and consider in their totality all the combats, and then see if a plausible case can be made that the Hurricane v F4F effectiveness difference can easily be explained by one factor like tactical situation. I don't see how.

Joe
 
Most of these losses occured early on in the conflict during the first 4 months what were the losses like later in the conflict . Every allied aircraft was taking a beating including the Spitfire over Darwin are we to assume because the Spit was clobbered by Zeros the Wildcat was better then it or can we assume tactics changed to focus on the strong points of the aircraft.
 
Hi Joe,

>The Hurricanes were not outnumbered and surprised in every one of the 26 two-side documented combats, not nearly, but came out on the short end of all of them, except 2 combats v. Type 97's.

Thanks for the great summary!

>I suggest reading the references given above, count up and consider in their totality all the combats, and then see if a plausible case can be made that the Hurricane v F4F effectiveness difference can easily be explained by one factor like tactical situation. I don't see how.

I believe the decisive factor is not the tactical situation, but rather the tactical doctrine.

I believe one might add that the tactical properties of a fighter aircraft include one important aspect easily forgotten in hindsight, it's "mystery factor" - the degree to which its tactical abilities are unknown to the enemy.

If a fighter pilot is not aware of the strength and weaknesses of the enemy aircraft compared to those of his own, he might fail to use the strengths of his own aircraft properly. In my opinion, that's why the Hurricanes lost against the Zeros though technically, the British fighter might well have been superior.

"Hurricane over the Jungle" by Terence Kelly contains an interesting account of Hurricane operations from Tjillitan on Java with 605 Squadron. On receiving a radio warning of an impeding attack, they usually scrambled a handful of fighters that climbed to 34000 ft, where the Hurricane would barely fly but where they never encountered a Zero. When they spotted the enemy formation below, each pilot would make a diving pass when he judged he was in a good position, diving at one enemy aircraft, then through the enemy formation and on to escape. Apparently, it was very hard to hit, and to find out whether one had hit, and according to Kelly 605 squadron didn't file any claims (partially because there was no-one to accept the claims anyway).

However, I consider this account interesting because it illustrates that even the Hurricane did have strengths that could be employed tactically, even when badly outnumered.

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 
Every allied aircraft was taking a beating including the Spitfire over Darwin are we to assume because the Spit was clobbered by Zeros the Wildcat was better then it or can we assume tactics changed to focus on the strong points of the aircraft.
The F4F never took a sustained beating in fighter combat. It did in some particular combats of course, but not in any period of months as Hurricanes did in 1942, and yes as Spitfire V's did defending Darwin in 1943. They did about as poorly as Hurricanes did v Zeroes and Type 1's in 1942, worse in fact than P-40's had done in 1942 performing the same mission in the same place v the same Japanese Navy fighter unit, not even just the same type of plane (the 3rd Air Group had been renamed 202nd Air Group by 1943); the P-40 result had been about 1:2 in favor of the Zeroes. Also we can note that AVG P-40's cumulatively to end June '42 had a ratio of ~3:1 in their favor against both Type 97's and Type 1's; to compare to the Hurricane results.

Tactics would certainly be *one thing* to look at, but if possible in a substantive way, not just as some fudge factor along the lines of: "results don't jibe with our preconceptions, must be 'tactics'". And then preconceptions about the airplanes should also be reconsidered; as well as general preconception about how to measure them, for example that stuff like max speed and climb rate strongly dictated fighter v fighter combat success; did they actually? An F4F could turn better than either of the British planes (or the P-40) and an F4F pilot could track a target in deflection a lot better looking down the plane's stubby nose. Perhaps those were more important plane performance factors than we assume, against such opponents as Zero and Type 1. I don't know that the F4F was really inferior to the Spit V as fighter v fighter combat machine against a plane like the Zero or Type 1. The actual 1943 would seem to undercut any clear certainty about that.

But I don't believe 'plane' and 'pilot' and 'other' factors can necessarily be neatly separated. I started responding to a flat statement that the Hurricane did well v Japanese fighters 'early', and better 'it was thought' than the F4F; that at least is clearly not so.

Joe
 
What I was trying to infer was the tactics in early 42 were probably changed a great deal in a few months . the learning curve was steep and by the time Guadaulcanal rolled around a consensus on how to use the tools at hand was formed . It was a different type of flying from the ETO where the RAF learned its craft also the hard way. How would of the F4F done in Malta I'll wager not well
 
What I was trying to infer was the tactics in early 42 were probably changed a great deal in a few months . the learning curve was steep and by the time Guadaulcanal rolled around a consensus on how to use the tools at hand was formed . It was a different type of flying from the ETO where the RAF learned its craft also the hard way. How would of the F4F done in Malta I'll wager not well
That's what I was also trying to imply, you simply assume that because the results don't meet your preconceptions and/or simple paper stats comparison.

But was there in fact a lot of inter-air arm consultation about tactics among say between RAF, KNIL air corps, USAAF and the USN between early and mid 1942? no. What the USN knew from the early battles from the other air arms was this was a tough opponent, that's about it. James Thach invented his 'weave' (aka Beam Defence Manuever, unique USN tactic) in part based on reports about the Zero from China in 1941. He used it in his division (of 4 a/c) at Midway (with success confirmed in J accounts), but it wasn't std in this period. And specific anti-Zero tactics also were influenced by tests of the Zero recovered in the Aleutians in July, but restoring it, testing it and issuing reports also wasn't done until the end of the period (stats for F4F's were to Nov 15 '42).

So that's my point, if we look at tactics development substantively and historically, not as a fudge factor where we just assume stuff, a combined-Allied tactics learning curve explanation over a few months in 1942 becomes a less than compelling explanation. Less so still considering the Spit debacle in 1943.

I don't know about F4F's at Malta, I wonder if you're considering actual Hurricane/Spit results there or claimed ones, the Hurricane in particular was no stranger to being on the short end of exchange ratio's in fighter combat, but that's too much of a tangent. For the Pacific we have actual comparisons against the same opponents in the same general time period suggesting at least a reasonable possiblity that intangible performance factors rendered the Hurricane (and perhaps Spitfire V) considerably less formidable than it looked on paper, as compared to the F4F, against those kind of opponents.

Joe
 
A quick flip through Ospreys "Hurricane Aces 1941-45" would seem to indicate that the Hurri did far better than the stats posted above. Jack Storey and Frank Carey shot down 7 nates just by themselves in that time period.

The initial deployment of Hurricanes in January 1942 to Burma amounted to 30 hurricanes MK IIa s and some Mk Is, split between 3 squadrons. Not much of a force really. In almost all of these combats the Hurricanes being on the defensive ,without radar were consistantly outnumbered and still climbing when combat occurred. They never stood a chance in Ceylon. In Burma though they did much better giving as good as they got, though still heavily outnumbered.

If you take look at one of their few offensive actions such as the raid on the Japanese airbase at Magwe on March 23 1942, a force of 9 Blenheims and 10 Hurricanes destroyed 16 Sallys on the ground and 11 Oscars in the air, 9 by Hurricanes. This for the loss of 2 hurris and 2 blens.

In many of the accounts I have read , the RAF pilots consider the Hurricane an even match for the oscar or the zero. Terence Kellys books , Hurricanes over the Jungle, Hurricane and Spitfire Pilots at War and The 9 Lives of a Fighter Pilot are all good reads on this subject.

Slaterat
 
Hi Slaterat,

>In many of the accounts I have read , the RAF pilots consider the Hurricane an even match for the oscar or the zero. Terence Kellys books , Hurricanes over the Jungle, Hurricane and Spitfire Pilots at War and The 9 Lives of a Fighter Pilot are all good reads on this subject.

I liked Kelly's books quite well, too :)

With regard to the Hurricane, a performance comparison below ... no reason for the Hurricane pilot not to be confident!

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 

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I didn't read through the entire thread, but I gotta wonder about this one.
In a slow speed turning battle, I wonder if the Hurricane wouldn't have an advantage, if for no other reason than its very thick wing.

I remember receiving an issue of Popular Mechaincs as a kid and there was an article in there about a guy who built his own Hurricane (1/2 or 3/8 scale, I believe).
When asked why a Hurricane over the more popular Spitfire, he stated that the thick wing was easier to build in the scaled down mode he was working in.

I'm thinking that, although the wing does taper down quite a bit as you go out from root to tip, there may be enough of the "thick area" to improve low speed handling, over a more common wing that would've been fitted to any a/c of the day.

Also, is it just me or does the top speed listed for the Hurricane seem a little high?
342mph?
Seems I see speeds in the 325-335 mph range more common for the Hurricane.
Maybe it's just that particular version.

...so which one would I pick?

1/2 metal - 1/2 wood cloth :2gunfire: ... or ... :werecomingforyou: A Flying Tank?

I'll take the tank, in "dash 3" varient, please.
If I can't outmanuver him, I will at least be in a more robust machine.




Elvis
 
Hi Elvis,

>In a slow speed turning battle, I wonder if the Hurricane wouldn't have an advantage, if for no other reason than its very thick wing.

I had a short look at the numbers, and while I don't have exact data on either type's wing, my guess is that the Hurricane was too heavy to compete with the much lighter A6M2 when it came to turning (despite the Hurricane II's greater power).

>When asked why a Hurricane over the more popular Spitfire, he stated that the thick wing was easier to build in the scaled down mode he was working in.

It probably flies better, too - aerodynamics don't scale well :)

>Also, is it just me or does the top speed listed for the Hurricane seem a little high?
>342mph?
>Seems I see speeds in the 325-335 mph range more common for the Hurricane.

Quite possible - note that the Hurricane II in my diagram uses fairly high boost pressures that weren't cleared yet when the type first came out.

Additionally, the RAF first selected one set of figures as representative for the Hurricane, then revised these figures to read somewhat higher later. If you rely on the earlier version of the test documents, you'll end up with slightly lower figures.

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 
I didn't read through the entire thread, but I gotta wonder about this one.
In a slow speed turning battle, I wonder if the Hurricane wouldn't have an advantage, if for no other reason than its very thick wing.

I remember receiving an issue of Popular Mechaincs as a kid and there was an article in there about a guy who built his own Hurricane (1/2 or 3/8 scale, I believe).
When asked why a Hurricane over the more popular Spitfire, he stated that the thick wing was easier to build in the scaled down mode he was working in.

I'm thinking that, although the wing does taper down quite a bit as you go out from root to tip, there may be enough of the "thick area" to improve low speed handling, over a more common wing that would've been fitted to any a/c of the day.

Also, is it just me or does the top speed listed for the Hurricane seem a little high?
342mph?
Seems I see speeds in the 325-335 mph range more common for the Hurricane.
Maybe it's just that particular version.

...so which one would I pick?

1/2 metal - 1/2 wood cloth :2gunfire: ... or ... :werecomingforyou: A Flying Tank?

I'll take the tank, in "dash 3" varient, please.
If I can't outmanuver him, I will at least be in a more robust machine.




Elvis

I'm at work and away from my books, but I'm pretty sure the max speeds I've seen listed for the Hurricane II are:
Hurricane II prototype - 348 mph
IIa - 342 mph (armament 8 x .303-cal.)
IIb - 339 mph (armament 12 x .303-cal.)
IIc - 336 mph (armament 4 x 20-mm.)
IId - 286 mph (of course the big drop is because of the 40-mm armament)

P.S. The very fastest speed I've ever seen listed for a Hurricane is an estimated 350 mph for photo-recon Hurricanes in North Africa that were stripped of armament.
 
JoeB, I am a fan of Lundstrom also. Don't believe I have ever seen any books as well researched and authoritative as his are. In the discussion youall are having about the records of the F4F and Hurricane against the Japanese I believe one edge the Wildcat would have would be the ruggedness of the AC versus the Hurricane, especially the radial engine. You also might recall the Lundstrom mention of the "pin cushion' tactics of the Wildcat pilots. The other factor I would not discount is that of the skill and training of the USN and USMC pilots. In a word, on average, I think they were better trained, particularly in aerial gunnery than the Commonwealth pilots and for that matter the AAF pilots in the early days of the Pacific campaign. One last comment, to get in a slow turning fight with a Zero, in any Allied plane was a poor idea.
 
, I think they were better trained, particularly in aerial gunnery than the Commonwealth pilots and for that matter the AAF pilots in the early days of the Pacific campaign. .
I don't know what your basing this on . Are they smarter , did the US have a better training syllabus . I have a tough time swallowing this
 
Hi Jerry,

>I'm at work and away from my books, but I'm pretty sure the max speeds I've seen listed for the Hurricane II are:
>Hurricane II prototype - 348 mph

Are the boost pressures listed in your books? I don't think the prototype would be using the +14 lbs/sqin boost setting that was only cleared later in the war. The boost pressure uncertainty makes it difficult to learn something from the figures you posted ...

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 
Hi Renrich,

>You also might recall the Lundstrom mention of the "pin cushion' tactics of the Wildcat pilots.

Hm, what are the "pin cushion" tactics? I believe I haven't heard of that move before ...

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 
Jerry Loper HoHun,

I stand corrected on the speed of the Hurricane.
Thanks for the info.

--------------------------------------

HoHun,

Why did you bring up the Zero fighter plane in response to my post?

My post concerned the Hurri vs. Wildcat, as per the originating post in this thread.
I would think any airplane would be at a disadvantage dogfighting a Zero.

...hmmm, maybe I should've quoted the author.

Sorry for any confusion. I wasn't referring to Hurricane vs. Zero, I was referring to Hurricane Vs. Wildcat.




Elvis
 
PB, I was not casting aspersions on Commonwealth pilots. Obviously intelligence on all sides was probably equal on average although American pilots at that time were more likely to have mechanical experience such as driving a car or tractor because of cultural differences. However, by definition, a Navy or Marine pilot qualified for carrier operations has to have more training than a land based pilot. Also the USN was the only service on either side at that time that concentrated on teaching deflection shooting. The amount of time spent on gunnery instruction for USN pilots was probably well in excess of that type of training in other services. The "pin cushion" tactic is referred to on page 536 of Lundstrom's "The First Team and the Guadalcanal Campaign."
 
Hi Elvis,

>Why did you bring up the Zero fighter plane in response to my post?

Sorry, misunderstanding on my part!

>My post concerned the Hurri vs. Wildcat, as per the originating post in this thread.

With regard to that comparison, I think you are absolutely right - the Hurricane would easily outturn the F4F.

The Hurricane is characterized by a a better power loading and a better wing loading, lower parasitic drag and - not to forget! - features a propeller of much larger diameter, which is more effective at producing thrust at low speeds.

I think the story quoted in post #76 in this thread (link below - hope it works this time) about Hurricanes out-turning Wildcats on a consistent basis is entirely credible:

http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/av...s-grumman-f4f-4-wildcat-1550-2.html#post88018

(Just in case you haven't read it yet :)

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 
A quick flip through Ospreys "Hurricane Aces 1941-45" would seem to indicate that the Hurri did far better than the stats posted above. Jack Storey and Frank Carey shot down 7 nates just by themselves in that time period.

If you take look at one of their few offensive actions such as the raid on the Japanese airbase at Magwe on March 23 1942, a force of 9 Blenheims and 10 Hurricanes destroyed 16 Sallys on the ground and 11 Oscars in the air, 9 by Hurricanes. This for the loss of 2 hurris and 2 blens.
The stats I gave are based on the losses recorded by both sides. Your examples give Hurricane claims. Likewise if we gave stats based on Japanese claims, the Hurricanes would look alot worse than the stats I posted. The accuracy of claiming was low in that theater and period. Using either side's claims gives a quite inaccurate picture.

The stats I gave include Burma up to the end of the Japanese conquest there in spring '42. Magwe was still an Allied base March 23 1942, was actually struck by the Japanese that day. Maybe you mean the Blenheim/Hurricane strike on Mingaladon March 21? but it didn't feature Hurricane aerial claims that big, most were strafing claims, of fighters, which were Type 97's (Nates). They apparently suffered no aerial losses to Hurricanes, but one was downed by a Blehheim. Besides that the Japanese recorded 2 a/c destroyed and 11 damaged all on the ground. Anyway, again, that period in Burma is included in the aerial combat exchange stats I gave.

The Japanese OOB fighter strength commited Dec 8 '41 to SEA theater was no bigger than Allied overall. Later on in many sub-theaters the Allies were outnumbered, but in part because the Japanese had destroyed more Allied fighters than vice versa. The claims and strength issues were related, again a familiar pattern in WWII. The enemy 'seemed to have an inexhaustible supply of fighters' in part because most kill credits didn't represent real enemy losses.

A couple of comparative OOB's in Burma:
Feb 3: 20 AVG P-40's, 11 Hurricanes, 4 Buffaloes; v 43 Type 97's
March 20: 8 P-40's, 25 Hurricanes; v 86 Type 97, 15 Type 1 (Oscar), 4 Type 2 (Tojo), though the other two AVG sdns in China were mainly facing the same Japanese units, for example sparring frequently with the Type 1's, of the 64th Sentai at Chiangmei in northern Thailand, counted as Burma front in that OOB.

In general, recorded losses were not provably 100% correct and complete either, on either side, but in general here we're comparing relative results. There's no reason to think Japanese records and accounts of their losses in combats with Hurricanes are consistently less accurate than accounts of combats with P-40's, F4F's, etc. All the stats I quoted are on an equivalent basis in that respect. The Hurricane's poor record in fighter combat v the Japanese in 1942, much poorer than the F4F's, is a fact; the reasons why are open to some interpretation.

Joe
 
Joe

Thats right I got Magwe and Mingaladon mixed up. The raid stemmed from Magwe. The RAF Hurricane claims were for fighters in the air , not straffed on the ground.

In Francis K Masons book "The Hawker Hurricane", he gives the total number of Hurricanes deployed to Burma in that time period as 46. 10 survived leaving 36 lost to combat and other causes. As many as 20 were destroyed on the ground leaving only about 16 lost in air combat. Its a revision of an older book so it would probably be less accurate concerning RAF claims, but quite accurate on RAF losses and deployments.

Argueing about stats is pointless I suppose and reconciling claims is a very difficult task. The kills mentioned in Hurricane Aces 1941-45 are often quite detailed mentioning locations, wreckage, witnesses and verification of the downed pilots name and unit.

In any case the sampling in Burma early 1942 is very small. By March the JAAF still outnumbered the allies 3 to1 in fighters. In Jack Storey's first combat it was 25 Nates vs 6 Hurricanes [actually 4 as 2 got lost on the climb], he still downed 2 nates , confirmed by wreckage, using the superior power loading of the Hurricane to outmanouevre his opponents with climbing turns.

Joe could you give me the titles and publishers of your references as I am interested in this little known theatre of the war.

IMHO the 3 most underrated fighters of the war are the P 40 ,The Wildcat and the Hurricane. Overall I'd have to say the Hurricane is my favorite it made a larger contribution to the war. It fought from the beginning to the end, downing more ea than any other allied fighter, won the BoB and fought in every major theatre. Its advantages lay in its enormously strong airframe, the ability to absorb heavy punishment, ease of repair, reliability and manueovrabilty.

Vs the wildcat I'd say the Hurri I and the Wildcat are about equal
a Hurri mk II though, has has a clear performance advantage, is tougher, better armed and more manueovrable. The only adv to the Wildcat would be dive and roll rate perhaps.

Slaterat
 

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