Thirteen P-38 FGs were deployed in Europe and Med Theaters: 1, 14, 20, 55, 78, 81, 82, 350, 364, 367, 370, 474, 479. Photo recon versions of the P-38 (F-4 and F-5) served in Europe and the Med in five PRGs: 3, 5, 10, 67, 68. The 1FG and 14FG were first to receive P-38 in spring, 1941. P-38s equipped a total of 27 FG and 10 PRG. In Europe, the P-38 flew some 130,000 sorties. That compares with about 214,000 for the P-51 and 423,000 for the P-47. Aside from about 20 F-4/5s given to the Free French air force, only the USAAF used P-38s during the war (a handful of non-turbo, non-handed versions went to and were rejected by the RAF). One of these proved the coffin of Antoine de Saint Exupery, author of "Wind, Sand and Stars" and other aviation literature standards, who disappeared on a flight over southern France, 31 July, 1944. The first German plane shot down by the USAAF in WWII is generally credited to a P-38 on 14 Aug., 1942, an FW-200C downed by Elza Shaham of 342 Composite FG. The first allied fighters over Berlin were P-38s of the 55FG on 3 March, 1944. The 1FG was the only USAAF fighter group during the war to win two Presidential Unit Citations in less than a week, for actions in the MTO. On two occasions, once in the Pacific and once in the Med, a lone P-38 escorting a group of bombers succeeded in driving off numbers of enemy fighters attempting to attack the bombers, in each case shooting down one e/a that got too close. The Pacific incident involved a P-38 from the 475FG, which shot down a Ki-61 from a gaggle going after B-25s, and the Med incident invoved a P-38 from the 1FG that shot down an Me-109 from a gaggle going after B-25s. In each case, the lone P-38 had been late off the runway, missed the rendevous and proceeded on alone hoping to catch up to the rest of the squadron, which was, in each case, turned back by bad weather that the late starter missed. The leading P-38 aces in the Med were Micheal Brezas who shot down 12 German planes (2 Me-210, 4 Me-109, 6 FW-190) while serving with the 14FG, and William Sloan, who shot down 12 German and Italian a/c (6 Me-109, 2 Mc-200, 1 Mc-202, 1 Re-2001, 1 Ju-88, 1 Do-217) while serving with the 82FG. The 55FG began operations out of England on 15 Oct., 1943, one day after Black Thursday when some 60 B-17s were lost on the second Schweinfurt raid. First encounter with Luftwaffe on 3 Nov., shot down 3 Me-109 with no loss to selves. On 5 Nov., down five Me-109s with no loss. On 13 Nov., in a sprawling, large-scale battle, shot down 3 FW-190, 2 Ju-88, 1 Me-109, 1 Me-210 but lost 5 P-38s shot down. Two more were lost due to engine problems. On 29 Nov. 7 P-38s were shot down for the loss of no German planes. Problems that surfaced with the P-38 in northern European theatre included its poor performance above 30,000 ft compared to the Me-109, caused by its lack of high activity propellers able to make use of the power the engines were delivering at that altitude. The F models used also had insufficient intercooler capacity. Some indication that TEL anti-knock compound was not being properly mixed into avgas as well (at this time TEL was still blended by hand into fuel shortly before use rather than being blended when produced. This was because in those days the compound tended to precipitate out if left standing too long. This problem later corrected. Others believed either too much (leading to plug fouling) or not enough (detonation) TEL was being added, causing engine problems. Another problem that was revealed by the Nov. actions was that 55FG pilots were attempting to dogfight e/a. Their airplane may have been up to the job, but the pilots weren't (many had as little of 20 hours total time on the P-38, and little or no air to air gunnery training, and were especially lacking in deflection shooting skills. Many after-action contact reports tell of repeated bursts of fire at deflection angles with no results. Most kills were the result of dead-astern shots). An 8th AF report examining the failures of the 55FG noted one main problem was that the P-38 as an airplane was simply too complicated and too demanding for a low-time service pilot to fly skillfully, let alone dogfight in. It noted that many pilots were afraid of the P-38. 55FG lost 17 P-38s in combat in Nov., while being credited with 23 e/a destroyed in the air. Morale in 55FG plummeted, and numerous pilots aborted missions claiming mechanical problems--giving the a/c type a bad rep for mechanical unreliability, although u/s reports reveal that in most cases the ground crew could find nothing wrong with the aircraft. In many instances the ground crews hinted that the pilots were merely cowards. In one u/s report, the pilot had aborted the mission because he claimed the piss tube was too short and he could not use it. The ground crew chief wrote in his report: "Piss tube to spec. Problem is pilot's dick is too short." 20FG entered N. Euro. combat at the end of Dec, '43. Did not appear to suffer from the morale and leadership problems of the 55FG. First contacted Luftwaffe on 29 Jan. '44. Downed 3 FW-190, 3 Me-110, 3 Me-210, 1 Me-109. No P-38s lost. 3 FWs downed by Lindol Graham, who used only his single 20mm cannon, 12 shots per plane. (Lindol later crashed and was killed while attempting to kill the fleeing crew of an Me-110 he had just forced down in a low-level fight. The two men were floundering across a snow-covered field and it appeared that Lindol attempted to hit them with his props. His plane seemed to hit the ground, then bounce back up, soaring into a chandelle, then falling off on its nose and diving straight into the ground.) On 8 Feb. James Morris of 20FG downed 3 FW-190s in a single combat, involving tight turns (in which the P-38's maneuvering flap setting [8 degrees extension] was used) and an Me-109 as returning home, the first quadruple kill for an 8AF fighter. All kills were made with dead astern shots. Morris missed all his deflection shots. Interestingly, two of the FWs were first encountered head-on and Morris was able to reverse and maneuver onto their tails while they tried with all their might to get on his--and failed. Three days later he downed an Me-109, making him the first P-38 ace flying out of England. (He would score a total of 8 victories before being shot down on 7 July, the highest score of any UK-based P-38 pilot.) 364FG arrived in UK in Feb., '44. Led by Col John Lowell, who had helped develop the P-38 at Wright-Pat, on its first mission over Berlin on 6 March, he downed 2 Me-109s, and two more on 8 March. On 9 March he downed an FW-190. He was eventually to tally 11 kills in the P-38, but several were downgraded to probables after the war. Col Mark Hubbel took over the 20th on 17 March. He believed P-38 excellent fighter against Luftwaffe and proved it by promptly shooting down 2 Me-109 and sharing a third with his wingman. He may have downed a fourth Me-109 which he was seen pursuing as it streamed smoke in a dive. He was last seen chasing yet another Me-109, this time through the door of a church. Neither planes nor church survived the encounter. During the late winter of 1944 ocurred the famous dual between a Griffon-engined Spitfire XV and a P-38H of the 364FG. Col. Lowell few the P-38, engaging the Spitfire at 5,000 ft. in a head-on pass. Lowell was able to get on the Spitfire's tail and stay there no matter what the Spitfire pilot did. Although the Spitfire could execute a tighter turning circle than the P-38, Lowell was able to use the P-38's excellent stall characteristics to repeatedly pull inside the Spit's turn radius and ride the stall, then back off outside the Spit's turn, pick up speed and cut back in again in what he called a "cloverleaf" maneuver. After 20 minutes of this, at 1,000 ft. altitude, the Spit tried a Spit-S (at a 30-degree angle, not vertically down). Lowell stayed with the Spit through the maneuver, although his P-38 almost hit the ground. After that the Spitfire pilot broke off the engagement and flew home. This contest was witnessed by 75 pilots on the ground. Ultimately 7 P-38 FG were operational in northern Europe. The 474th was the only one to retain the P-38 till the end of the war. As pilots grew used to the plane and developed confidence in it, it successes against the Luftwaffe grew. On 7 July, '44, P-38s of the 20FG downed 25 out of 77 e/a destroyed that day, the highest of any group. The last UK-based P-38 ace was Robin Olds of the 479FG. On 14 Aug., '44, while flying alone, he encountered two FW-190s and engaged them in a dogfight, shooting both down. On 25 Aug, P-38s from 367 encountered FW-190s of JG-6, a top Luftwaffe unit. Wild, low-level battle ensued in which 8 P-38s and 20 FW-190s were down. Five of the FWs were shot down by Capt. Lawrence Blumer. 367 received a Presidential Unit Citation as a result of this battle. On the same day, P-38s from 474 shot down 21 FW-190s for the loss of 11 P-38s. The same day Olds' of 479 downed three Me-109s in a running battle that saw his canopy shot off. On 26 Sept., P-38s of the 479 downed 19 e/a near Munster. Shortly after that most P-38s were gradually replaced by P-51s. The last long-range bomber escort in northern Europe by P-38s was on 19 Nov. '44 when 367FG escorted bombers to Merzig, Germany. FW-190s attempted to intercept. P-38s downed six with no losses. No bombers were lost either. It was a good way to end the P-38s air-superiority role in northern Europe
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Wednesday, February 1, 2017
article on P-38 in the ETO
This is great information on the P38 ops in europe. Great read. Link to more about the P-38
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