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Why German Pilots Were Stunned & Baffled by the American P-47 in WW2

Why German Pilots Were Stunned & Baffled by the American P-47 in WW2

February 20, 1944. The skies above Brunswick, Germany. A Luftwaffe pilot pushes his Focke-Wulf 190 into a steep dive, certain the heavy American P-47 Thunderbolts behind him cannot follow.

The math seems obvious. His Fw 190 is lighter. The Thunderbolt is heavier. Therefore, he should escape.

But as his airspeed climbs past 450 miles per hour, the P-47s are not falling behind. They are closing. His fighter begins to shake. The controls stiffen. Behind him, the American aircraft remains steady. Then eight .50-caliber machine guns open fire.

To German pilots, the P-47 was supposed to be too heavy, too slow, and too clumsy to dominate the skies over Europe. They expected a flying truck. What they encountered was a falling anvil with guns.

They were wrong.

This is not a story about a beautiful dogfighter or a lucky American aircraft. This is a forensic audit of how the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt turned weight into a weapon — using dive speed, energy fighting, brutal firepower, and disciplined tactics to break the Luftwaffe’s assumptions during Big Week.

📊 Inside this documentary:
Why German pilots believed the P-47 Thunderbolt was too heavy to be dangerous
How the “Jug” turned weight, gravity, and dive speed into lethal advantages
Why Hubert Zemke’s Wolfpack refused to dogfight the Luftwaffe on German terms
How boom-and-zoom tactics made traditional turning combat almost irrelevant
Why the Fw 190 and Bf 109 could not safely dive away from a well-flown P-47
How eight .50-caliber machine guns created a devastating wall of fire
Why the P-47 became one of the steadiest gun platforms of World War II
How Big Week forced the Luftwaffe into an air battle it could not afford
Why German aces later admitted the Thunderbolt changed the rules of aerial combat
What the P-47 reveals about physics, doctrine, survival, and asymmetric advantage in war

📚 Sources: U.S. Army Air Forces records, Eighth Air Force mission reports, P-47 Thunderbolt technical data, fighter group combat reports from the 56th, 78th, and 353rd Fighter Groups, Luftwaffe pilot accounts, Big Week operational studies, and historical research on Hubert Zemke, Robert S. Johnson, Francis Gabreski, Walker Mahurin, and the air war over Germany.

🔔 Subscribe for more true WW2 investigations — the hidden machines, brutal tactics, and battlefield systems that changed the war.

#WW2 #WorldWarII #P47Thunderbolt #GermanPilots #Luftwaffe #BigWeek #USAAF #AerialCombat #MilitaryHistory #WarDocumentary

Видео Why German Pilots Were Stunned & Baffled by the American P-47 in WW2 канала Britain Mechanic Diary
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