The Me 262 was revolutionary to be sure, but its only characteristic that was superior to the P-51 was its speed- but the top speed was deceiving. It took a LONG time to get to that speed, and in fact the preferred tactic for attacking bomber formation was from above- it could not climb to attack because it was too sluggish in a climb and therefore vulnerable.BDKJMU wrote:Well, maybe the daytime bombing. In Aug-Oct 43' the 8th AF suffered such heavy, unsustainable losses that they suspended daytime raids over Germany for 5 months until they had sufficient #s of P-51s available for long range escort. In 44' the # of bombers available greatly increased while the losses went down. From what I read at the time of D-Day there were about 13k allied aircraft available in England. If there were 300 ME-262s available to the Germans in 1944 inside Germany they could have caused the allies exponentially higher losses to daytime allied bombing raids inside Germany. How high a losses could the allies have sustained before being forced to suspend daytime bombings? Several hundred fighters & bombers a week? 500? Certainly not 1,000.CID1990 wrote:
Adolf Galland was wrong in his assessment- there were no 300 aircraft ever assembled that could have stopped the bombing campaign of Germany.
The Me 262 also was VERY vulnerable around its airbases. This was a result of its primitive jet engines which were slow to spool up. It was extremely vulnerable to Allied fighters at every point inside its takeoff and landing profile.
In 1944 if the Germans had had 300 if them with trained pilots they certainly would have inflicted more casualties- but Allied tactics had already changed to neutralize that advantage. As I said before, the Me 262 was a sitting duck in the pattern- it's engines were inefficient and took forever to spool up- so if they came under attack during takeoff or landing (which was a common US tactic) they died.
Secondly, they were unreliable. You had a 40% chance of blowing the engines in a cold start- on a scramble they always left a quarter of their ships in the runway.
If it had been available in 1943 then it would have made a bigger splash, and they could have had the operational kinks worked out by 1944. But as it was, the Allies had total air superiority and as the Me 262 was not a dog fighter it could not have changed that fact. The Germans would have been better served if they had 300 FW-190 Ds with fully trained aircrew.



