Why the Supermarine Spitfire Is Such a Badass Plane Eighty years ago, the Supermarine Spitfire saved Britain and changed the course of history. By: Alex Hollings
After two long months of grueling air combat between invading Luftwaffe fighters and bombers and the notably smaller British Royal Air Force, England's pilots were exhausted.
Some British pilots, many of whom had only nine full hours of flight training before heading up into combat in the hazy English skies, had long since turned to amphetamines to keep them alert. Sometimes, they would fly five or six combat sorties per day before settling in for just a few hours of sleep.
The Battle of Britain during the summer of 1940 had taken its toll, but on September 7, 1940, everything changed. Adolf Hitler had given the order to shift focus from military targets to civilian ones—with London being chief among them. The Blitz had begun.
More than 300 bombers with accompanying fighter escorts were stacked atop one another more than a mile and a half high. The massive swarm of Nazi aircraft was said to cover 800 square miles of airspace.
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Minggu, 06 September 2020
Why the Supermarine Spitfire Is Such a Badass Plane
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