MontyB
All-Blacks Supporter
Not sure why you think that Monty but it certainly was superior to the Me-109, Spitfire Mk V and P-51a. The only reason why it did not wholly replace the Me-109 was due to the fact that Germany was embroiled in a titanic struggle with the the USSR. If there was no war against Russia then I'm certain the Fw 190 would have fully replaced the Me-109 in Luftwaffe squadrons.
I can not understand why you would think that either as even Kurt Tank only saw the FW-190 as a stop gap measure until the TA-152 came into service, one of its biggest selling points to Luftwaffe High Command was that it used a radial engine so it wouldnt affect ME-109 production.
The FW-190 while being a great fighter early on (A series) and ground attack aircraft was hopeless above 20000 feet which made it no good in an anti-bomber role and due to the requirements for more armour and firepower it became less an less manouverable in its fighter role meaning that replacing the Me-109 would have left Germany without a competitive fighter and lacking the ability to take on bombers.
Hello everyone, this my first post but have been following this thread. I think many of the reasons stated are valid points which certainly contributed to their defeat. My opinion is logistics & lack of mobility for most of the German army is what prevented a German victory. While they were masters of Blitzkrieg tactics their army was mostly unmechanized or dependent on horses for transport.
There are many notable examples of panzer units having to stop and wait for infantry support and supply to catch up. This negated some of the tactical advantages of Blitzkrieg. Had the German army been fully mechanized army with equally mobile supply then outcome could have been much different. The added mobility would have yielded even greater encirclements and gotten them closer to Moscow much sooner.
I am of this opinion as well, I think Germany became over extended and lost the focus it had in 1939-1941, couple this with a woefully inadequate logistical system and a state that wasn't full committed to war production until it was far too late and any engagement that lasted more than a few months was always going to cause them issues.
I think when you look at the 1941 Russian winter where German major supply depots reported having all the materials they needed to supply the front but had to make decisions whether to ship reinforcements, ammunition, medical supplies or winter uniforms as they could provide one but not all it becomes apparent that it just wasn't going to work without a consolidation period and some massive investment in western Russian infrastructure which is time they simply did not have.
I cant recall where I saw it but there has been a theory going around that the modern military seem to always run into logistics problems around 250 miles from their start points no matter how meticulously things are planned I wonder if there is anything in this.
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