Yes that's right - there was a Brit or Aussie carrier on station throughout the War with 2-3 Sea Fury and Firefly fighter-bomber squadrons. There were no RAF combat squadrons in Korea.
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Here's the other Commonwealth fighter-bomber, the Fairey Firefly. There was one squadron of Fireflies and one of Sea Furies based on a Brit or Aussie light carrier at any point in time during the conflict. The Australian carrier, HMAS Sydney, had 2 Sea Fury squadrons and one Firefly, at least one of which had transferred from the Brit carrier preceding it, according to this source:
apparently the first carrier on station, HMS Triumph, had a squadron of Seafires in place of the Sea Furies, but I wouldn't worry about including them as they were similar in role and performance.
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Useable units in this zip:Attached Files
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Useable unit:Attached Files
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Originally posted by fairline
You might as well have the right Meteor as well; the F3 in my WW2 compilation was obsolete by Korea. The F8 used there was plain ally coloured and had shorter wings and bigger engines.'Arguing with anonymous strangers on the internet is a sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be - or to be indistinguishable from - self-righteous sixteen year olds possessing infinite amounts of free time.'
- Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
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Yeah, they were a disaster from what I've read. The losses were considerably higher than those suffered by the Sea Fury and Firefly, although of course they were always tasked in the ground attack role in Korea.
I suppose the 5 years from the end of the War to Korea saw some dramatic changes in aircraft capabilities.
On another note, most comparisons drawn between the Sabre and MiG 15 suggest that on paper the MiG was the better aircraft, although the kill:loss ratios of each show the Sabre to have been far superior. The reason given for this is usually the superior training and tactics of US pilots over their Russian, Korean and Chinese counterparts.
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Pretty much the above-mentioned piston-powered Red aircraft (and, I think a few US piston-powered ones, too), US and Soviet/North Korean subs, a few US and Brit/Aussie carrier, and then mostly infantry (US, Australian, South African, Canadian, a few other significant contributors, a generic UN one, South Korean, North Korean, Chinese, Soviet, and maybe seperate US and Royal Marines and US, UK, and Soviet commandos). Also, there'd need to be some '50's artillery and mech. inf. for those that had it.
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