Originally posted by Akaoz
*cocks an eyebrow*
That depends. If the allies needed a piece of rail blown op in northern France around June '44, they had enough planes to blow it away.
But, around that time they had problems getting the bombs to hit within miles of their targets. That was with American daylight bombing. With the British night raids it was even worse. In general something less the 10% of bombs dropped landed within 3 miles of it's target.
In the modern era this has improved somewhat though.
-Alech
*cocks an eyebrow*
That depends. If the allies needed a piece of rail blown op in northern France around June '44, they had enough planes to blow it away.
But, around that time they had problems getting the bombs to hit within miles of their targets. That was with American daylight bombing. With the British night raids it was even worse. In general something less the 10% of bombs dropped landed within 3 miles of it's target.
In the modern era this has improved somewhat though.
-Alech
What about the fighters destroying the trains? Isn't that a way to bust rail roads, or at least cripple them?
vmxa1
I'm right with you. I'm going to try some things to fix this.
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