redstar72 said:
By 1943, it was realized that long-range flying boats were not needed due to the worsening war situation, and thus the Do 214 project was canceled.
Grey Havoc said:redstar72 said:
By 1943, it was realized that long-range flying boats were not needed due to the worsening war situation, and thus the Do 214 project was canceled.
That move by the RLM might have been a trifle premature, given that long range transports were even then urgently needed to maintain links with Japan.
taildragger said:I don't imagine that maintaining links to Japan, especially air links, was of much importance to German planners by 1943. What of significance was exchanged between the 2 allies during the war?
Grey Havoc said:taildragger said:I don't imagine that maintaining links to Japan, especially air links, was of much importance to German planners by 1943. What of significance was exchanged between the 2 allies during the war?
Technology, in the form of designs, licences and hardware samples, strategic materials, couriers. Also experts in various fields, both military and civilian.
Artie Bob said:Can't remember the exact date, but believe it was 1943 and I do have a copy of it (somewhere). There was a Luftwaffe study , the subject being feasibility of bring strategic materials to Nazi territory from Japanese territory using aircraft. The routes, aircraft, resources, quantities of materials transported, etc. were all considered. Don't try to reject such plans with what we now know or try to be to rational. My theory is you can drive yourself crazy trying to be rational about what was an irrational act. The third reich offers many such opportunities.
Best Regards,
Artie Bob
taildragger said:The Germans had a lot of urgent needs in 1943 - a huge, advanced seaplane to establish an air link to Tokyo wasn't one of them. Yes, it would have been a cool-looking airplane and I too would rather look at photos of hardware than project drawings. The Germans, however, looked at their requirements (presumably including the "urgent need to maintain links with Japan") and decided that the project wasn't worth the cost. Speculation 70 years later that they were short-sighted or unaware of what they really needed, without identifying the war-winning cargo that couldn't come from Japan by U-Boat, seems a little silly.
Silencer1 said:One of the most intriguing versions of miltary Do-214 was U-boot's open-sea supplier.
Here is the picture from luft46.com - note torpedo storages and cranes to unloading them on board of submarines?
Not bad!
Grey Havoc said:If they could have deployed that as late as early 1944 (although mid-'43 might be more realistic, operationally speaking), it might have made some difference to the U-boat campaign. They wouldn't have been as dependent on increasingly scarce 'milch cows' (cargo/resupply U-boats) for one thing. Allied forces went after them with a vengence. If the U-boats had been able to at least stall Allied offensive operations in the West, logistics wise, the Germans would have been able to divert more resources to the Eastern Front, potentially prolonging the war. But that's a big 'what-if'.
Grey Havoc said:You mean using escort carriers to set up CAPs along predicted routes you mean? Although the carriers would likely then require considerable escort and support assets themselves. Also, if IIRC, up to late 1943, escort carriers were in relatively short supply (big demand). And as for the resupply mission, remember that logistics (i.e. weapons, fuel, spare parts and food) was always one of the major weaknesses of U-boat operations.
sealordlawrence said:Grey Havoc said:You mean using escort carriers to set up CAPs along predicted routes you mean? Although the carriers would likely then require considerable escort and support assets themselves. Also, if IIRC, up to late 1943, escort carriers were in relatively short supply (big demand). And as for the resupply mission, remember that logistics (i.e. weapons, fuel, spare parts and food) was always one of the major weaknesses of U-boat operations.
No the major weakness was they kept getting sunk leaving a horrendous kill ratio. Not a problem that could be solved by a giant and very vulnerable flying boat.
Grey Havoc said:Up to late 44, the boot was often on the other foot loss wise.
Grey Havoc said:They were still able to inflict pretty heavy losses even after that.
airman said:http://www.luft46.com/dornier/do214.html
luft46 put also P.192.09 like long range bomber and guided weapon carrier .
Triton said: