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Lancaster Vs. B-24

Polls Discuss Lancaster Vs. B-24 in the World War II - Aviation forums; CC should be able to telly uo more about the P-38's pacific escort duties............


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View Poll Results: Which was the better WWII bomber?
Avro 683 Lancaster 39 67.24%
Consolidated Vultee B-24 Liberator 19 32.76%
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Old 01-28-2006, 04:15 AM   #331
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CC should be able to telly uo more about the P-38's pacific escort duties.........
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Old 01-28-2006, 09:20 AM   #332
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Thanks for the site FBJ.

One also has to remember until the Island Hopping Campaign really got going, there were no places to really launch bombers from.
Not true.

The few heavy bombers groups available in all of 1942 were based in Australia, New Guinie, New Caledonia, CBI, and Aleutions.

Fortunatley for the allies, the US had developed enough airfields along several islands between Hawaii and Australia to allow the heavy and medium bombers to fly from one island to the next.

What held up operations in the first half of 1942 was the lack of bombers and crews to be everywhere. Priorities dictated that the bombers be held in Hawaii, or sent to the SW Pacific. Plus, even though many of the islands had airfields to allow an orderly transit of aircraft, they didnt have the facilities at the time to support bombing activities.
Um no when the US first entered the war and Japan controled most of the Islands the US was not able to reach Japan until they had taken over Islands in the Island Hopping Campaign. They could not reach Japan from Australia, They could not reach Japan from Pearl Harbour. As a matter of fact that is why they used Carriers to do the Doolittle Raid because they could not reach the Main Islands of Japan.

Maybe from the tip of the Alleutions thay may have been able to reach, but what air strips did the US have there.
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Old 01-28-2006, 11:30 AM   #333
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Im refering to using the islands in the PTO to allow a plane to fly from Hawaii to Australia. There were lots of islands that had airfields developed on them in 1941 and 1942
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Old 01-28-2006, 11:30 AM   #334
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Im refering to using the islands in the PTO to allow a plane to fly from Hawaii to Australia. There were lots of islands that had airfields developed on them in 1941 and 1942
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Old 01-28-2006, 11:38 AM   #335
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Im refering to using the islands in the PTO to allow a plane to fly from Hawaii to Australia. There were lots of islands that had airfields developed on them in 1941 and 1942
I don't thnk you're going to find many. Here's a map, most Islands were in Japanese hands...
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Old 01-28-2006, 11:52 AM   #336
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Fiji, Christmas, and New Caledonia were where the USAAF had units based protecting the bases them selves as they were part of the supply route to Australia. As you can seen on the map, the action at the time was in New Guinea, Solomon and Coral Sea, outside the range of any bomber.

here's a good link...

http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/AAF/I/AAF-I-12.html
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Old 01-28-2006, 11:55 AM   #337
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And what were they going to bomb Australia for?

No seriously. Even from Australia they could not reach the mainland of Japan.
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Old 01-28-2006, 12:04 PM   #338
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And what were they going to bomb Australia for?

No seriously. Even from Australia they could not reach the mainland of Japan.
Yep! based on the numbers I posted earlier that showed medium and light bombers showing more bombs dropped early in the war proves that there were not alot of heavy bombers on hand and one reason for that is there was no place to base them where they could be used effectively...

http://www.usaaf.net/digest/t146.htm
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Old 01-28-2006, 12:08 PM   #339
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Exactly and good maps up there also.
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Old 01-28-2006, 12:51 PM   #340
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B17's and B24's were based on New Caledonia, Townsville, Port Moresby, Guadalcanal, and Canton island and Howland/Baker islands.

They had plenty of bases to operate from. It was just a matter of deploying the bomb groups. Only one beat up and under strength B17 group was operational through the start of the Guadalcanal operation, and two more bomb groups arrived in the SW Pacific by the end of the year. The heavy bomber groups in Hawaii didnt have the range to hit any targets so they were used only for scouting patrols.
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Old 01-28-2006, 01:12 PM   #341
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B17's and B24's were based on New Caledonia, Townsville, Port Moresby, Guadalcanal, and Canton island and Howland/Baker islands.

They had plenty of bases to operate from. It was just a matter of deploying the bomb groups. Only one beat up and under strength B17 group was operational through the start of the Guadalcanal operation, and two more bomb groups arrived in the SW Pacific by the end of the year. The heavy bomber groups in Hawaii didnt have the range to hit any targets so they were used only for scouting patrols.
5 Islands? Guadalcanal was secured and used by B-24s way later. Port Moresby was the only base close enough in the slot where targets like Rabual and New Britain could be hit.

From new Caledonia to the Solomons was just under 2000 miles, a one way trip?!?

Howland/ Baker? Look at where they on on a map!

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Old 01-28-2006, 08:33 PM   #342
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A survey of the islands that had the 30th bomb group showed they were operating out of the Ellice islands (now the nation of Tuvulu), Tarawa and Kwajelein.

I was incorrect about New Caledonia. The correct forward operating base was on Espiritu Santo island (New Hebrides, now Vanuatu).

Other islands where the B24's were based include the Admiralties, Biak and Middleburg (all in 1944)
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Old 01-28-2006, 08:53 PM   #343
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A survey of the islands that had the 30th bomb group showed they were operating out of the Ellice islands (now the nation of Tuvulu), Tarawa and Kwajelein.

I was incorrect about New Caledonia. The correct forward operating base was on Espiritu Santo island (New Hebrides, now Vanuatu).

Other islands where the B24's were based include the Admiralties, Biak and Middleburg.
All later in the war. We're still talking mid 1942, there wasn't many bases initally available until Guadalcanal was secured. B-24s weren't in numbers at Espiritu Santo until late 42, early 43, here's a nice little site:

http://www.pacificwrecks.com/provinc..._espiritu.html

And I could tell you that B-24s didn't reach Kwajelein untill mid 1944. My wife's grandfather bombed it and then when it was taken back by the US he flew from there to other islands. Look at the history of the 819th Bomb Squadron....

http://www.sonofisaac.8m.com/page27....emorial%20Site

"The 30th Bombardment Group (Heavy) was activated at March Field in California on January 15, 1941. During its first six months of operation, the group was primarily concerned with recruiting and organizing air and ground crews. Gradually, it built up to a strength of 33 officers and 419 enlisted men. On June 7th the group was transferred to New Orleans where future pilots learned to fly B-18s, A-29s, and PT-17s. Returning to California on December 24, the group was stationed at Muroc Army Air Base (later Edwards AFB), for six weeks of operational and maintenance training on new B-24 "Liberators." On February 7, 1942, it proceeded to March Field for combat training.

Following the Japanese attack at Dutch Harbor in the Aleutian Islands on June 7, six aircraft of the 30th Bombardment Group were dispatched to Alaska for combat sorties. The remaining aircraft were dispersed along the West Coast from San Diego, California, to McChord Field in Washington, patrolling against possible surprise attacks by the Japanese.

In September 1943, 134 officers and 1,270 enlisted men of the 30th Bombardment Group's ground echelon left March Field for duty overseas via Camp Stoneman, California. The first of the flight echelon arrived at Hickham Field, Oahu, Hawaii, on October 1, 1943. The remaining personnel and planes arrived in Hawaii by October 20. The group's 27th and 38th Squadrons were based at Kahuku, Oahu, while the 392d and 819th Squadrons were at Barking Sands on the Island of Kauai. The 819th Squadron was the newest addition to the Group. Previously designated the 3d Anti-Submarine Squadron, it was redesignated and assigned to the group as a replacement unit for the 21st Squadron that had been sent to Alaska. The 21st was subsequently dropped from the records of the group. While in Hawaii, the group was assigned to the 7th Army Air Force.

Movement to the Forward Line

Movement to the forward area began in early November 1943 when the 27th and 38th Bombardment Squadrons moved to Nanomea in the Ellice Islands, and the 392nd to Canton in the Phoenix Islands. The 819th Squadron remained at Wheeler Field, Oahu, where it processed new crews and airplanes that were later dispatched to the front line. When the Central Pacific drive began in the Gilbert Islands in November 1943, the 30th Bombardment Group mounted bombing raids against enemy installations on those islands. It also raided airfields in the Marshall Islands to help prevent the launching of Japanese planes against the amphibious assault on Tarawa.

Following the hard-fought victory in the Gilberts, American amphibious forces under a blanket air cover from bombers and fighters advanced into the Marshall Islands in January 1944. Staging through the recently captured Tarawa and Mankin Islands, bombers of the 30th Group attacked several atolls in the Marshalls, including Kwajalein.

Between November 14, 1943 and April 1, 1944, the group carried out 42 bombing missions over the Marshall Islands and participated in the actual invasion of Kwajalein in February 1944.

After capturing Kwajalein Atoll and nearby Majuro Atoll early in February, American forces seized Eniwetok Atoll at the western end of the Marshall chain. As the war moved closer to Japan, the 30th Bombardment Group joined with the 11th Bombardment Group of the Thirteenth Air Force in neutralizing Truk. The 30th also bombed Wake Island, Guam, Saipan, and harassed other islands in the Carolines and Marianas, bypassed by American amphibious forces. In August 1944, the 30th Bombardment Group moved to Saipan where it was joined by the 819th Squadron, bringing together all four squadrons for the first time since Hawaii. During the next six months, the group conducted intensive bombing strikes against airfields and shipping at Bonin and Volcano Islands, Iwo Jima, ChiChi Jima, and Yap. Its final bombing mission was at Iwo Jima on February 19, 1945, the same day three Marine divisions invaded the island"

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Old 01-28-2006, 09:16 PM   #344
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I know all that.

I was just pointing out that the B17's and B24's operated from a variety of island bases throughout the war. As the AAF sent most BG's to Europe in 1942, the PTO (which includes the SW Pacific and CBI) had to wait untill the JCS made available a few BG's.

The lack of any heavy bombers in this part of the world was due to their non-availability, not because a lack of suitable airstrips.

I have heard though, some pilots based on these islands would swear that when they would come in to land, the sharks would gather on the approach end waiting for an undershoot. After the plane crossed over the beach, they would swim to the other end and wait for an overshoot.
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Old 01-28-2006, 09:18 PM   #345
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No one has mentioned the heavy Bomber units stationed in and around Darwin. As early as May 1942 B-17's of the 64th BS 43rdBG had conducted a few missions from Batchelor airstrip against shipping off Koepang and targets such as Penfoie airfield. However there was a high unserviceability rate of the B-17's due to a lack of maintenance facilities and spares.
Also in November 1942 B-26's of the 22nd BG were detached to Darwin from Queensland where they reinforced RAAF Hudsons. The B-26's were only deployed to the Darwin area for five days, but flew missions over Timor, particularly Dili, and managed to shoot down 6 Jap fighters.
1943 was however, the year the USAAF heavies really established themselves in the Darwin area. The 319thBS of the 90thBG arrived at Fenton on the 3rd Feb, to fulfill a requirement of reconnaisance on MacArthurs Southern Flank. The squadron flew 75 missions, 48 of them being recon, before they were joined by the 380th BG.
the 380th arrived at Fenton and Manbulloo on the 1st of June. The 528th and 530th sqaudrons went to Fenton while the 529th and 531st went to Manbulloo. Missions were flown immediately against enemy shipping and land targets on Timor, Celebes, BAli ,Java, Ceram, PNG and Borneo.
In January 1945 the 380th moved North to Mindoro ending 21 months of combat operations from Australia.
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