muddyboots wrote:
I always wondered what kind of crazy person would charge ten opponents, knowing they had the same or possibly better equipment...
Interesting thought; it's actually a pretty common event in the Great War when comms were visual (no radio calls to join the party). One British ace, IIRC, said he preferred such scenarios as he could shoot at anyone, while they had to check before shooting. He may have been being ironic, of course.
However the history of air combat is full of such events - perhaps we simply know less about those that dived in and weren't lucky enough or good enough to get out at the end for tea and medals.
USAF Biography of Parr:
http://www.af.mil/information/heritage/ ... =123161009Sounds like Parr's greatest achievements may have been as a tactician, like some other aces venerated for victories when winning bigger, less numerically tangible victories, was their great achievement.
As to Clay's question:
"On July 27, 1953, then Capt. Ralph S. Parr Jr. scored the last aerial victory of the Korean War by shooting down an Ilyushin IL-12 on the day of the armistice."
Regards,