September 22, 2010 at 1:06 am
During the second world war i have read various accounts of bombers clearing the coast at 500ft out bound due to fuel,load etc, is this correct ?.Did the brit bomber force set course directly or would they form up before onward to target ?.
Mid-Upper
By: Moggy C - 22nd September 2010 at 01:38
Very unlikely. Height meant survival for the heavies, they needed to get out of range of small arms fire and light flack. Assuming we are not talking a coastal airfield anybody who could only make 500ft by the coast would be full justified in turning back. To continue with that lack of performance would be suicide.
Of course some raids, particularly Mosquito, crossed the North Sea a lot lower than 500ft to avoid the radar for as long as possible.
There was no ‘forming up in the sense that the 8th Airforce would, but the bombers would funnel through one of the coastal beacons (Splashers?) to concentrate the bomber stream.
Moggy
By: whalebone - 22nd September 2010 at 01:35
My understanding, after talking to some of the individuals involved, is that you were given target, a load, a height to bomb from, a time for take off and the rest was left up to your skipper.
It (every night) was a very big and co ordinated thing in it’s entirety, but the individual crews felt a tad isolated I think.