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Kursk MkII - The Air Battle

Aviation Discuss Kursk MkII - The Air Battle in the World War II - Aviation forums; Hello Nikodemus because CoS of LFl 6 Friedrich Kless mentioned the June 43 SB missions in his article in Newton's ...

  1. #106
    Senior Member Juha's Avatar
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    Hello Nikodemus
    because CoS of LFl 6 Friedrich Kless mentioned the June 43 SB missions in his article in Newton's Kursk The German View, it’s not so much OT. Kless’ point was that while effective the raids distracted bombers from attacks against land communications to Kursk just as the SU was strongly reinforcing its troops there. At least the attack on GAZ factory in Gorky was effective, even Soviet era publications admitted this see:

    Gorky Automobile plant in the years of Great Patriotic war. /
    “…The summer of 1943 brought the difficult trials to the warriors of the Soviet Army and the workers of the plant.
    On the 4 of june, 1943 at 23.40 the air alert was declared. The enemy dropped high-explosive and incendiary bombs on the plant, lighted by the enemy's missiles. A lot of workshops, houses of Sotsgorod, offices, building were burnt. Water-supply was broken, there was nothing to extinguish the fires. In many workshops the wooden walls were set in fire. The substation, which was receiving the electricity from Gorenergo was put out of action by splinter of bomb. The plant was in the flame. More than 100 high-explosive bombs were dropped to the plant on the first day of air-bombing. Blacksmith ‘3, chassis workshop, the main conveyer, partially spring workshop and another workshops were put out of action. Several houses, children's garden, a hospital were destroyed in the plant's settlement.
    But the enemies continued air-bombing. From 4 to 22 of june of 1943 they appeared at the same time over the plant. Many workshops were destroyed or capitally damaged, arterial communication networks were seriously damaged, the production cycle was impaired. At all enterprise 50 buildings and constructions, more than 9 thousand metres of conveyers, 5900 units of process equipment, 8 thousand of engines, 28 cranes, 8 workshops substations, 14 thousands of kits of instruments and many other were destroyed or damaged.
    But despite the destructions, the plant continued to live and to work. The largest Gorky factories: лRed Sormovo“, лThe engine of revolution“, лRed Etna“, the aeronautic factory of Orjonikidze and other enterprises were engaged in reconstructive work. Workers, restoring the plant, at the same time increased the tempoes of manufacturing. And on the 18 of august of 1943 all the workshops of the Gorky Automobile plant were working….”

    “Miss the train” What I meant was that when in June 43 LW anyway used its resources to the attacks on Soviet armament industry, if the electric grid plan had the potential LW thought, June 43 was the time to implement it, 13 months later it was too late.



    Juha
    Last edited by Juha; 08-02-2011 at 01:37 PM.

  2. #107
    Senior Member Nikademus's Avatar
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    But despite the destructions, the plant continued to live and to work. The largest Gorky factories: лRed Sormovo“, лThe engine of revolution“, лRed Etna“, the aeronautic factory of Orjonikidze and other enterprises were engaged in reconstructive work. Workers, restoring the plant, at the same time increased the tempoes of manufacturing. And on the 18 of august of 1943 all the workshops of the Gorky Automobile plant were working….”
    I'd say this proves my point. For any SB campaign to be utimately effective, it must be sustained and dedicated, and even then it takes a long time to make a really serious impact. Doublely so if as with the above example you are talking raids at night. As with BC you cannot gurantee that every or even most raids, even with the numbers BC started employing would cause the required amount of damage via Area Bombing. Even in this one example, the long term results of the raid were negligable in the end. Production increased and the more bombers you devote to this task the less bombers are available for vital mission on the front as described in Bergstrom's three volumes.

    One can argue the LW "missed the boat" back in the 30's when SB was contemplated but its debatable. There were some within the growing Luftwaffe who saw (with far more accuracy than SB's proponents) that a SB campaign's predicted ability to quickly smash civilian morale and/or industry was doubtful.

    And i'd disagree that this isn't OT, so i'm going to cease here. The topic is Kursk and the air war directly over it.
    Last edited by Nikademus; 08-05-2011 at 11:21 AM.
    Ba-88: when you positively, absolutely don't want to take off.

  3. #108
    Banned Altea's Avatar
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    Prior to Kursk

    [QUOTE]
    Quote Originally Posted by Nikademus View Post
    I'd say this proves my point. For any SB campaign to be utimately effective, it was be sustained and dedicated, and even then it takes a long time to make a really serious impact. Doublely so if as with the above example you are talking raids at night. As with BC you cannot gurantee that every or even most raids, even with the numbers BC started employing would cause the required amount of damage via Area Bombing. Even in this one example, the long term results of the raid were negligable in the end. Production increased and the more bombers you devote to this task the less bombers are available for vital mission on the front as described in Bergstrom's three volumes.
    This is rignt, since prior to the Kursk battle there were relentless struggle on EF for air superiority (with field attacks), raids over production centers and communications.

    One can argue the LW "missed the boat" back in the 30's when SB was contemplated but its debatable. There were some within the growing Luftwaffe who saw (with far more accuracy than SB's proponents) that a SB campaign's predicted ability to quickly smash civilian morale and/or industry was doubtful.
    This is true, i have red in a russian magazine that the means, time and coast were 28 times higher for the TB-7 programm (Pe-8 after Tupolev's arrest) than for a light fighter as an I-15 or I-16.

    BTW TB-7 programm was lauched in 1934, it flew in dec 1936 and was not even fully operational in 41.
    The B-17 in 1934, flew in 1935, and was not used oparationnaly before 1940.

    Actually, i would like to know, what programm ReichLuftministerium would have like to sacrify or slow to develop the strategic bomber mid -30ies. The FW-190, the 109, the Stuka or something else?

    And i'd disagree that this isn't OT, so i'm going to cease here. The topic is Kursk and the air war directly over it.
    Well, about Strategic raids. Khazanov noticed from march to july 1943 some happy hits by Luft maid on the soviet industry, the best results were the lack of 800 planned Yak-1 from saratov factory during the Kursk battle , and total fail of Luft raids over Kursk communication centers and railroads. About 3 572 trains and 1 71789 wagons went to reinforce both Kursk fronts despide Luft efforts, on the same time ADD concentrated on german communication performed > 10 000 sorties at rear and 2 600 on close stations, considerably slowing german's armies (particulary Model's one) growth. No mention about 2th end 16 VA that performed more than 2 000 sorties on Heer's communications.

    As someone wrote:. For any SB campaign to be utimately effective, it was be sustained and dedicated...

    In French we say you can't have at the same time, the butter, the money for the butter...and the dairywoman ass!

    TE, one has to make choices, sometimes...


    Rivet I've a question that research on my part cannot resolve. Where would one find accurate information regarding the ground vehicle motor pools of either Luftwaffe or VVS units involved in the frontline effort during the 1943 efforts we are considering here? It is my believe, just a gut reaction, that operational efforts on both sides were hampered by the need to support the Infantry as a first priority in transportation. Any thoughts/new research venues regarding this aspect of the Kursk?
    My thougts, the question is irrelevant, Russia 1943 is not Florida or Clafirornia owerdays. No hiways, no motorways, only spring razputitza (mud) that makes only vehicules with caterpillar tracks could be usefull...and trains.

    Otherway, considering 600 000 moto-vehicules delivered to SU by LL, soviets were hugely beatting the germans at this point, even without local production deliveries!

    Regards
    Last edited by Altea; 08-05-2011 at 08:41 AM.

  4. #109
    Senior Member Juha's Avatar
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    Hello Altea
    on development of heavy bombers: Halifax, specs reached Handley Page in Nov 1936, tended in March 1937, changed from twin to 4 engine concept during 1937, 1st flight of the prototype25 Oct 1939, 1st production a/c flew 11 Oct 1940, first combat mission 30 June 1941.

    But what I meant the “missing the boat” wasn’t a heavy bomber development but that just before LW was to be ready to deliver their massive attack on SU electricity generating plants and transferring systems they lost the Orel bulge and so the targets became too distance to the plane they had thought would carry the main burden of the attacks, the He 111H. So no need to sacrifice anything for a heavy bomber designs only earlier execution.

    Quote:” Well, about Strategic raids. Khazanov noticed from march to july 1943 some happy hits by Luft maid on the soviet industry, the best results were the lack of 800 planned Yak-1 from saratov factory during the Kursk battle..”

    I would say that more than some happy hits, over 1500 bombs hit the GAZ factory area in Gorgiy. Even if the tank production was not totally stopped, only in Aug 43 they succeeded to surpass the production figure of May 43, so maybe a production loss of 300 tanks, bad to Germans that the tanks were not T-34s but T-70ms. Also the automobile and armoured car production at GAZ was totally stopped for a while. BTW do you know if the production of SU-76M was affected by these raids on GAZ

    Quote:” on the same time ADD concentrated on german communication performed > 10 000 sorties at rear and 2 600 on close stations, considerably slowing german's armies (particulary Model's one) growth. No mention about 2th end 16 VA that performed more than 2 000 sorties on Heer's communications.”

    As I wrote earlier, the CoS of the LFl 6, Friedfich Kless in his post-war study to US Army mentioned VVS attacks on the railconnections of LFl 6 areas, which according to him, didn’t produce much problem to logistics On the other hand the increased partisan activity against those lines were more effective in disturbing rail transportation. Of course one must remember that the damage achieved by VVS indicated failures by the LFl 6 and the damages achieved by partisans indicated failures by the Heer.

    Juha
    Last edited by Juha; 08-06-2011 at 01:24 PM.

  5. #110
    Banned Altea's Avatar
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    Hello Juha
    [QUOTE=Juha;810401]

    But what I meant the “missing the boat” wasn’t a heavy bomber development but that just before LW was to be ready to deliver their massive attack on SU electricity generating plants and transferring systems they lost the Orel bulge and so the targets became too distance to the plane they had thought would carry the main burden of the attacks, the He 111H. So no need to sacrifice anything for a heavy bomber designs only earlier execution.
    AFAIK the electricity network was not the Achille's heel of the soviet union but logistics, "communism + elecricity" programm launched by Lenin in 20ies was not just a propaganda slogan. The network was dense and oversecured by old unactivated stations working on peat or wood.


    I would say that more than some happy hits, over 1500 bombs hit the GAZ factory area in Gorgiy. Even if the tank production was not totally stopped, only in Aug 43 they succeeded to surpass the production figure of May 43, so maybe a production loss of 300 tanks, bad to Germans that the tanks were not T-34s but T-70ms. Also the automobile and armoured car production at GAZ was totally stopped for a while. BTW do you know if the production of SU-76M was affected by these raids on GAZ
    Difficult to say, the SU-76M made it's trials in may of 1943. First were delivered during Kursk battle in july. If the Luft bombing did not stopped or affected the process, it certainly did not facilitate it



    As I wrote earlier, the CoS of the LFl 6, Friedfich Kless in his post-war study to US Army mentioned VVS attacks on the railconnections of LFl 6 areas, which according to him, didn’t produce much problem to logistics On the other hand the increased partisan activity against those lines were more effective in disturbing rail transportation. Of course one must remember that the damage achieved by VVS indicated failures by the LFl 6 and the damages achieved by partisans indicated failures by the Heer.
    It seems americans didn't trust him that much, from german collected docs:
    Main rail junctions in Orel and Bryansk almost nightly raided Russian air force, - in the German chronicles. - The resultant loss of supplies and materials was immediately felt, as railroads are now serving not only the 2nd Panzer Army, but the prepared operation "Citadel". In Orel station, loaded with rations for one million soldiers, received a direct hit and burned. Spread a fire destroyed the army food store, which did not have time to disperse and whose contents are not moved to an underground storage facility*
    *Rear Area Security in Russia. The Soviet Second Front Behind the German Lines. Washington: 1951. P. 27.

    Regards
    Last edited by Altea; 08-14-2011 at 04:37 AM.

  6. #111
    Senior Member Juha's Avatar
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    Hello Altea
    thanks a lot for your answer.

    Yes, it is entirely possible that Germans miscalculated, not the first time when an AF thought that it had find an Achilles’ heel of enemy’s war economy only to find out that nix or that it was impossible to produce enough damage to the system to have decisive outcome. Even if SU had lost significant part of its electricity production in 41-42, it had also lost many consumers of its electricity, big cities, mines and some factories.

    LW was aware of the "communism + elecricity" programm, probably all were at that time, especially the big dam construction program was well known and they calculated that just because of that the psychological effect of the raids would have been great. But as you wrote they probably didn’t fully understand the Soviet power grid.

    And thanks a lot for the quote from Rear Area Security in Russia. The Soviet Second Front Behind the German Lines. Washington: 1951.

    Juha
    Last edited by Juha; 08-16-2011 at 08:20 AM.

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    Check with the initial producers of Soviet hydroelectric power generation, Juha. Siemens and Phillips- Germany was in possession of all of the drawings and scematics of the dams- Germany designed it all during the period after the first war when nobody wanted to rub shoulders with the two nations. Germany helped build, Germany got to use Soviet air space to train an air force and test equipment.

    I've found a source of information regarding the clash of 41-45 between the SU and Hitler's Germany. See Alexander Alexandrovich Novikov, Air marshall during the period in question. Novikov was quite the writer, but not in English. Details.
    Regards

    Later edit with information just to prove I'm not hallucinating again. :

    The Treaty of Rapallo between Weimar Germany and the Soviet Union was signed by German Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau and his Soviet colleague Georgy Chicherin on April 16, 1922, during the Genoa Economic Conference, annulling all mutual claims, restoring full diplomatic relations, and establishing the beginnings of close trade relationships, which made Weimar Germany the main trade and diplomatic partner of the Soviet Union.
    Last edited by Rivet; 08-24-2011 at 12:28 AM.

  8. #113
    Senior Member parsifal's Avatar
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    What were the results and the lessons learned from the battle? These are my initial thoughts.

    LW had done quite well, but subsequent events were to show that they had in fact lost the battle. this is surprising....they had shot down more VVS aircraft and I think it fair to say in ground attacks had been more effective.

    VVS operations are marked by the broad front tactics they adopted. Wheras LW ops were concentrated on one or two points, VVS attacks were much more broad. This meant results were slower to emerge, but more deeply felt once the effects started to bite. Each side were playing to their strengths, but the germans needed a quick result to win....when this failed to materialize LW wer staring at defeat....they had to disperse to counter the Soviet counterattacks, and once this occurred the great numerical advatages enjoyed by the VVS became decisive.

    VVS realized the big drawback was the low level of proficiency for their pilots. With only 30-50hours on first line types for their pilots on average, they were no match for the LW...yet. Exchange ratios in combat were about 4:1 against them. but between July and the end of the year, VVS trainng was transformed, such that by the end of the year exchange rates were about 3:2 against the VVS. Their quality was now 'good enough", and they had a massive superiority of numbers.

    in terms of types, I dont think there was a big quality differential. Each side had strengths and weaknesses for their aircraft and it seems to me after studying the tactics employed that each played to those strengths as much as possible. Il-2s, for example seemed to opt for low altitude attacks to maximize their bombing effect and minimze risk to their achilles heel....the radiator or oil cooler.

    Soviet tactics semed to evolve to not trying to achive outright air superiority....they were a force deicated to the ground support mission, so all they were looking to do was provide cover to get the job done at tolerable losses, and to dny LW the ability undertake counterstrike operations. to the end, however, LW continued to extract a steady toll on VVS formations. It was never enough, and never of serious consequence to the VVS
    Fr President Clemenceau’s speech to the AIF 7th July 1918: “ we expected a great deal of (Australians)… We knew that you would fight a real fight, but we did not know that from the beginning you would astonish the whole continent. I shall go back and say to my countrymen “I have seen the Australians, I have looked in their faces …I know that they will fight alongside of us again until the cause for which we are all fighting is safe for us and for our children”.




  9. #114
    Senior Member Juha's Avatar
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    Hello Rivet
    I'm well aware of the Treaty of Rapallo. On Novikov's memoirs, there is at least some problems in them, for ex his memoirs gives totally wrong impression on the VVS air attacks on Finland on 25 June 41 .

    Juha

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    Altea- "Actually, i would like to know, what programm ReichLuftministerium would have like to sacrify or slow to develop the strategic bomber mid -30ies. The FW-190, the 109, the Stuka or something else?"

    Well, Altea, my money would have been some of Ernst Heinkel's Strategic Bomber designs which probably would have swayed the lines on the map for a while. Heinkel's He-274/277 were as good as one could have worked for given the time
    The Junkers 290 was the design with the greatest number of mission specific builds, though little usage of the A-4 variant as a bomber. The primary mission of the 290 was maritime reconaissance. The bomber was decendent of the Junkers-89.
    As far as what might have screwed strategic bombers at the point in question might have been the acceptance of the Luftwaffe's using Zeppelins as a heavy bomber. They did re-commission the Hindenburg for detection of British radar establishments for a while, then packed her back in her box. Yeah, Kursk....

    The period prior to Kursk saw a lot of upper-level commanders arrested for one anti-revolutionary whim or another. Photographs of the time that Soviet-German military ties existed show Soviet and German troops really buddy-buddy. No way would the Germans let SU get and hold Petsamo. The minerals in the area were essential to German economic planning. Regards

  11. #116
    the old Sage Erich's Avatar
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    ah where is this thread going may I ask ................ seems to have gone OT. parsifal start throwing some WS LW stats for fighters/bombers/ground attack . . . . effective or not, etc....... ??

  12. #117
    Senior Member parsifal's Avatar
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    I have a couple of new books just arrived, and hope these will contain some clue as to the impact of airpower on the ground battle. Need a few days to do this.....
    Fr President Clemenceau’s speech to the AIF 7th July 1918: “ we expected a great deal of (Australians)… We knew that you would fight a real fight, but we did not know that from the beginning you would astonish the whole continent. I shall go back and say to my countrymen “I have seen the Australians, I have looked in their faces …I know that they will fight alongside of us again until the cause for which we are all fighting is safe for us and for our children”.




  13. #118
    Senior Member parsifal's Avatar
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    MJy starting thoughts on this issue is that the numbers of tanks destroyed by airpower for both sides is overstated for bth sides. I believe that airpowers main impact even in the direct support role was more subtle than by simple measure of the number of vehicles destroyed. Traditionally, airpower is responsible for about 5% of battle caualties. In Normandy, very few tanks were actually destryed by airpower, yet allied airpower was still decisive to the outcome.

    With a more dedicated ground support role, the percentage of losses in Kursk might be as high as 10-12%, which puts the Soviet losses at about 150-200 tanks, and German losses at about 60-90 tanks. Yet these figures dont line up with the claims made by either side. Soviets in one engagement claim the destruction of 34 tanks in one engagement to just 26 Il-2s. German claims are around 500 Soviet tanks destroyed. I dont buy those numbers. Maybe 500 vehicles, but not 500 tanks.

    Favoured weapoons are interesting....the germans rtended to favour guns whilst the Russians used an AT bomb, the PTB (Russian acronym for Anti-Tank Bomb)
    Fr President Clemenceau’s speech to the AIF 7th July 1918: “ we expected a great deal of (Australians)… We knew that you would fight a real fight, but we did not know that from the beginning you would astonish the whole continent. I shall go back and say to my countrymen “I have seen the Australians, I have looked in their faces …I know that they will fight alongside of us again until the cause for which we are all fighting is safe for us and for our children”.




  14. #119
    the old Sage Erich's Avatar
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    agreed on vehicles destroyed for both sides they are not going to take much from cannon fire from either side. thinking we may have possibly 100 Soviet tanks destroyed by air power from a number of arms. from present research it looks like the 70 Soviet T-34's destroyed in one engagement by Hs 129's was probably a huge over-claim. the fact that when after the first pass the subsequent attacks came from all direction to confuse the truck-mounted Soviet triple AA proves that an accurate count is not justifiable.

  15. #120
    Senior Member Juha's Avatar
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    Hello
    according to Soviet staff studies of the 2nd Tank Army irreparable tank losses 6,5% were put out of action by aviation, and of the 1st TA only 2,0%. Source document in The Journal of Slavic Military Studies Vol 7 No 1 March 1994 p.114 Table 3.

    Juha

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