43,000 planes lost overseas, including 23,000 in
combat.
14,000 lost in the continental
U.S.
The
U.S. civilian population maintained a dedicated effort for four years, many
working long hours seven days per week and often also volunteering for other
work. WWII was the largest human effort in history.
Statistics
are from Flight Journal magazine.
THE PRICE OF VICTORY (cost of an
aircraft in WWII dollars)
B-17 $204,370. P-40 $44,892.
B-24 $215,516. P-47 $85,578.
B-25 $142,194. P-51 $51,572.
B-26 $192,426. C-47 $88,574.
B-29 $605,360. PT-17 $15,052.
P-38 $97,147. AT-6 $22,952.
PLANES A DAY WORLDWIDE
From
Germany's invasion of Poland 1 Sept, 1939 and ending with Japan's surrender 2
Sept, 1945 --- 2,433 days
From 1942 onward, America averaged 170 planes lost
a day.
How many is a 1,000 planes? B-17 production (12,731)
wingtip to wingtip would extend 250 miles. 1,000 B-17s carried 2.5 million
gallons of high octane fuel and required 10,000 airmen to fly and
fight them.
THE NUMBERS GAME
-
9.7 billion
gallons of gasoline consumed, 1942-1945.
- 107.8 million hours
flown, 1943-1945.
- 459.7 billion rounds of aircraft ammo fired overseas,1942-1945.
- 7.9 million bombs dropped overseas, 1943-1945.
- 2.3 million combat sorties, 1941-1945 (one sortie = one takeoff).
- 299,230 aircraft accepted, 1940-1945.
- 808,471 aircraft engines accepted, 1940-1945.
- 799,972 propellers
accepted, 1940-1945.
WWII MOST-PRODUCED COMBAT AIRCRAFT
Ilyushin IL-2 Sturmovik 36,183
Yakolev Yak-1,-3,-7,-9
31,000+
Messerschmitt
Bf-109 30,480
Focke-Wulf Fw-190 29,001
Supermarine
Spitfire/Seafire 20,351
Convair B-24/PB4Y Liberator/Privateer 18,482
Republic P-47 Thunderbolt 15,686
North American P-51 Mustang 15,875
Junkers
Ju-88 15,000
Hawker
Hurricane 14,533
Curtiss P-40 Warhawk 13,738
Boeing
B-17 Flying Fortress 12,731
Vought F4U Corsair 12,571
Grumman F6F Hellcat 12,275
Petlykov Pe-2 11,400
Lockheed P-38 Lightning 10,037
Mitsubishi
A6M Zero 10,449
North American B-25
Mitchell 9,984
Lavochkin LaGG-5 9,920 (water cooled engine)
Note: The LaGG-5 (air cooled engine)
Grumman
TBM Avenger 9,837
Bell P-39 Airacobra 9,584
Nakajima Ki-43 Oscar 5,919
DeHavilland Mosquito 7,780
Avro Lancaster 7,377
Heinkel He-111 6,508
Handley-Page Halifax 6,176
Messerschmitt Bf-110 6,150
Lavochkin LaGG-7 5,753
Boeing B-29 Superfortress 3,970
Short Stirling 2,383
Sources: Rene Francillon, Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific
war; Cajus Bekker, The Luftwaffe Diaries; Ray Wagner, American Combat Planes; Wikipedia.
According
to the AAF Statistical Digest, in less than four years (December 1941- August
1945), the US Army Air Forces lost 14,903 pilots, aircrew and assorted
personnel plus 13,873 airplanes --- inside the continental
United States. They were the result of 52,651
aircraft accidents (6,039 involving fatalities) in 45 months.
Think about those numbers. They average 1,170 aircraft
accidents per month --- nearly 40 a day. (Less than one accident in four
resulted in totaled aircraft, however.)
It
gets worse
Almost
1,000 Army planes disappeared enroute from the US to foreign climes. But an
eye-watering 43,581 aircraft were lost overseas including 22,948 on combat
missions (18,418 against the Western Axis) and 20,633 attributed to non-combat
causes overseas.
In a
single 376 plane raid in August 1943, 60 B-17s were
shot down. That was a 16 percent loss rate and meant 600 empty bunks in
England. In 1942-43 it was statistically impossible for bomber crews to
complete a 25-mission tour in Europe.
Pacific
theatre losses were far less (4,530 in combat)
owing to smaller forces committed. The worst B-29 mission, against Tokyo on May
25, 1945, cost 26 Superfortresses, 5.6 percent of the 464 dispatched from the
Marianas.
On an average,
6,600 American servicemen died per month during WWII, about 220 a day. By the end of the war, over 40,000 airmen were killed in
combat theatres and another 18,000 wounded. Some 12,000 missing men were
declared dead, including a number "liberated" by the Soviets but
never returned. More than 41,000 were captured, half of the 5,400 held by the
Japanese died in captivity, compared with one-tenth in German hands. Total
combat casualties were pegged at 121,867.
U.S. manpower made
up the deficit. The AAF's peak strength
was reached in 1944 with 2,372,000 personnel, nearly twice the previous year's
figure.
The losses were huge---but
so were production totals. From
1941
through 1945, American industry delivered more than 276,000 military aircraft.
That number was enough not only for U.S. Army, Navy and Marine Corps, but for
allies as diverse as Britain, Australia, China and Russia. In fact, from 1943
onward, America produced more planes than Britain and Russia combined. And more
than Germany and Japan together 1941-45.
However,
our enemies took massive losses. Through much of
1944, the Luftwaffe sustained uncontrolled hemorrhaging, reaching 25 percent of
aircrews and 40 planes a month. In late 1944 into 1945, nearly half the pilots
in Japanese squadrons had flown fewer than 200 hours. The disparity of two
years before had been completely reversed.
Experience Level:
Uncle Sam sent many of his sons to
war with absolute minimums of training. Some fighter pilots entered combat in
1942 with less than one hour in their assigned aircraft.
The
357th Fighter Group (often known as The Yoxford Boys) went to England in late
1943 having trained on P-39s. The group never saw a Mustang until shortly
before its first combat mission.
A high-time P-51 pilot
had 30 hours in type. Many had
fewer than five hours.Some had one hour.
With arrival of new
aircraft, many combat units
transitioned in combat. The attitude was,"They
all have a stick and a throttle. Go fly `em." When the famed 4th
Fighter Group converted from P-47s to P-51s in February 1944, there was no time
to stand down for an orderly transition. The Group commander, Col. Donald
Blakeslee, said, "You can learn to fly `51s on
the way to the target.
A future
P-47 ace said,
"I was sent to England to die." He was not alone. Some fighter
pilots tucked their wheels in the well on their first combat mission with one
previous flight in the aircraft. Meanwhile, many bomber crews were still
learning their trade: of Jimmy Doolittle's 15 pilots on the April 1942 Tokyo
raid, only five had won their wings before 1941. All but one of the 16 copilots
were less than a year out of flight school.
In WWII flying safety
took a back seat to combat. The
AAF's worst accident rate was recorded by the A-36 Invader version of the P-51:
a staggering 274 accidents per 100,000 flying hours. Next worst were the P-39
at 245, the P-40 at 188, and the P-38 at 139. All were Allison powered.
Bomber
wrecks were fewer but more expensive. The B-17 and B-24 averaged 30 and 35
accidents per 100,000 flight hours, respectively-- a horrific figure
considering that from 1980 to 2000 the Air Force's major mishap rate was less
than 2.
The B-29 was even
worse at 40; the world's most
sophisticated, most capable and most expensive bomber was too urgently needed
to stand down for mere safety reasons. The AAF set a reasonably high standard
for B-29 pilots, but the desired figures were seldom attained. The original
cadre of the 58th Bomb Wing was to have 400 hours of multi-engine time, but
there were not enough experienced pilots to meet the criterion. Only ten percent had overseas experience.
Conversely, when a $2.1 billion B-2 crashed in 2008, the Air Force initiated a
two-month "safety pause" rather than declare a "stand
down," let alone grounding.
The B-29
was no better for maintenance. Though the R3350
was known as a complicated, troublesome power-plant, no more than half the
mechanics had previous experience with the Duplex Cyclone. But they made it
work.
Navigators:
Perhaps
the greatest unsung success story of AAF training
was Navigators. The Army graduated some 50,000 during the War. Many had never
flown out of sight of land before leaving "Uncle Sugar" for a war
zone. Yet the huge majority found their way across oceans and continents
without getting lost or running out of fuel --- a stirring tribute to the AAF's
educational establishments.
Cadet To Colonel:
It was
possible for a flying cadet at the time of Pearl
Harbor to finish the war with eagles on his shoulders. That was the record of
John D. Landers, a 21-year-old Texan, who was commissioned a second lieutenant
on December 12, 1941. He joined his combat squadron with 209 hours total flight
time, including 20 in P-40s. He finished the war as a full colonel, commanding
an 8th Air Force Group --- at age 24.
As the training pipeline
filled up, however those low
figures became exceptions. By early 1944, the average AAF fighter pilot
entering combat had logged at least 450 hours, usually including 250 hours in
training. At the same time, many captains and first lieutenants claimed over 600 hours.
FACT:
At
its height in mid-1944, the Army Air Forces had 2.6
million people and nearly 80,000 aircraft of all types. Today the US Air Force
employs 327,000 active personnel (plus 170,000 civilians) with 5,500+ manned
and perhaps 200 unmanned aircraft. The 2009 figures represent about 12 percent
of the manpower and 7 percent of the airplanes of the WWII peak.
IN SUMMATION:
Whether there will ever be another war
like that
experienced in 1940-45 is doubtful, as fighters and bombers have given way to
helicopters and remotely-controlled drones over Afghanistan and Iraq. But
within living memory, men left the earth in 1,000-plane formations
and fought major battles five miles high, leaving a
legacy that remains timeless.
This is
an excellent summary of the effort required in
WWII. It focuses on the American side of things, but the British, Germans and
Japanese expended comparable energy and experienced similar costs. Just one
example for the Luftwaffe; about 1/3 of the Bf109s built were lost in
non-combat crashes. After Midway, the Japanese experience level declined
markedly, with the loss of so many higher-time naval pilots. This piece is
worth saving in hard copy.