Red Baaron wrote:
I just finished watching a rerun of a 2005 Battle Field Detectives on NetFlix. I do believe I'm far dumber for having watched it.
Here's a few things I learned.
When the Stuka is making a dive bomb run, it has to be pulled out of the dive by an automatic pilot. The pilot is unconcious due to the G forces.
True if the statement is modified to say the pilot
could black out.
It consisted of an Askania autopilot, which was used together with a Revi gunsight. The bomb release gear, elevator controls, and dive brakes were linked to this system. Before attacking the pilot would set the bomb release height. The deployment of the dive brakes automatically adjusted the elevator trim tab, and put the aircraft into a dive. When the plane was in dive the pilot could make only small corrections with the control surfaces to aim the bomb. When the bomb release height was reached and the bombs were dropped the autopilot adjusted the elevator trim tab again, so that the aircraft became tail heavy and pulled itself out of the dive. The use of the elevator was forbidden, except in case of emergency.
Red Baaron wrote:
According to a flight simulator, the 109 had better performance in two of the three most important manuevers, climb, dive and turn.
The Me109 could climb faster, had considerably greater fire-power, and could dive faster. That made it the best air-to-air fighter of 1940.
See also:
http://www.eaf51.org/newweb/Documenti/S ... st_ENG.pdfRed Baaron wrote:
According to another simulator, the Germans flew better formations than the British did.
Not much question that the early RAF "vic" formation was more vulnerable than the Luftwaffe "finger four". The RAF
eventually adopted the latter which pretty much says it all.
Red Baaron wrote:
If the Germans had just destroyed the radar sights, they would have won the battle.
Radar
sites (CH, CHL) were vital to the defenders, but their effect on the outcome of the battle has been the subject of debate. On the one hand it allowed interception of raids which likely contributed to keeping RAF bases more or less operational throughout, but since without it there would have been far fewer dogfights, the attrition of pilots and planes would be considerably less. Either way the Luftwaffe could not have prevailed in 1940, which was the objective.
Red Baaron wrote:
The telephone was the biggest decideing factor in the Brits winning.
It was an integral part of the defence system put together by Dowding and it's hard to dispute the above claim.
Red Baaron wrote:
And finally, according to the computer model these geniuses worked up, if the Germans hadn't started bombing London and continued on their previous path, they would have been out of business due to attrition in 3 1/2 months anyhow.
This hypothesis is also put forward by others (see Holland, Hough/Richards Terraine
et al) and, given escalating German losses from September onwards, it seems a reasonable supposition. But the RAF was suffering too, so who knows?
Red Baaron wrote:
Oh yes, the Hurricane was not even mentioned as having been a part of the deal.
Hurricanes fought the bombers, Spitfire fought the fighters. Generally. Both were important but I can see why an amateur TV show would concentrate on the Spitfire.
I haven't seen the show so can comment on the presentation (although I can imagine what it was like

), but I don't think the conclusions were necessarily far off the mark.
