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  #1  
Old 06-07-2012, 11:51 PM
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Crumpp Crumpp is offline
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Or are this only the stocks?
Yes it is only the stocks. The fuel distributed to the supply system for use was only 10,000 tons for Jun-Aug 1940.

Considering that the RAF planned for 2770 tons for 4 squadrons of Hurricanes per week. Now that includes all the feeder/emergency fields to be stocked with a supply, 3 weeks of operational stores in case the trains gets bombed, and all the flying required.

Using their math, 10,000 tons is enough for 15 squadrons or adding 5 squadrons per month.
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Old 06-08-2012, 12:10 AM
Seadog Seadog is offline
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Originally Posted by Crumpp View Post
Yes it is only the stocks. The fuel distributed to the supply system for use was only 10,000 tons for Jun-Aug 1940.

Considering that the RAF planned for 2770 tons for 4 squadrons of Hurricanes per week. Now that includes all the feeder/emergency fields to be stocked with a supply, 3 weeks of operational stores in case the trains gets bombed, and all the flying required.

Using their math, 10,000 tons is enough for 15 squadrons or adding 5 squadrons per month.
2770 tons = 6204800lb or 861778 gals. If we allow 75 gallons per sortie, this is sufficient fuel for 11490 sorties...

if we assume 3 sorties a day (an impossibly high number per day!), for 80 aircraft, this gives us enough fuel for 48 days at 240 sorties/day...

Crumpp, you seem to have no problems producing pages of complex formulas regarding flight data but then fall flat on your face with these simple calculations...
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Old 06-08-2012, 12:16 AM
Al Schlageter Al Schlageter is offline
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Originally Posted by Crumpp View Post
Considering that the RAF planned for 2770 tons for 4 squadrons of Hurricanes per week.

Using their math, 10,000 tons is enough for 15 squadrons or adding 5 squadrons per month.
Source?

Which 15 Hurricane squadrons?
  #4  
Old 06-08-2012, 01:05 AM
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http://www.wwiiaircraftperformance.o.../AASF-Fuel.pdf
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Old 06-08-2012, 01:13 AM
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if we assume 3 sorties a day (an impossibly high number per day!), for 80 aircraft, this gives us enough fuel for 48 days at 240 sorties/day...
It is a little more complicated than that seadog. The RAF correctly plans for their logistical train to be interupted by the enemy.

Therefore, they correctly plan to emplace several weeks supply at the aerodrome, supply the emergency fields the aircraft might have to land at, and keep several more weeks of fuel dispursed around the log train earmarked for that unit.

If you just plan to have enough fuel on hand for what you are going to fly, then you will be in real trouble when the enemy bombs your airfield storage tanks, shoots your trucks up on the road, or hits the railyard. You will be out of the game in one enemy attack.

Read the logistical plan if they had to supply the 4 squadrons in France. That is the amount of fuel in the system earmarked for those squadrons to fly for just ONE WEEK.

If they want to continue to fly operationally and resupply their unit after an enemy attack, the RAF is planning to have some 8 weeks worth of fuel on the ground and available at short notice.

Don't you think that makes sense given the fact the Luftwaffe was targeting the airfields during the BoB?

So when you do your simplistic calculation for one week of flying, keep in mind, there is 8 weeks of fuel required to be available for that one week in the air.
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Old 06-08-2012, 03:28 AM
Seadog Seadog is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crumpp View Post
It is a little more complicated than that seadog. The RAF correctly plans for their logistical train to be interupted by the enemy.

Therefore, they correctly plan to emplace several weeks supply at the aerodrome, supply the emergency fields the aircraft might have to land at, and keep several more weeks of fuel dispursed around the log train earmarked for that unit.

If you just plan to have enough fuel on hand for what you are going to fly, then you will be in real trouble when the enemy bombs your airfield storage tanks, shoots your trucks up on the road, or hits the railyard. You will be out of the game in one enemy attack.

Read the logistical plan if they had to supply the 4 squadrons in France. That is the amount of fuel in the system earmarked for those squadrons to fly for just ONE WEEK.

If they want to continue to fly operationally and resupply their unit after an enemy attack, the RAF is planning to have some 8 weeks worth of fuel on the ground and available at short notice.

Don't you think that makes sense given the fact the Luftwaffe was targeting the airfields during the BoB?

So when you do your simplistic calculation for one week of flying, keep in mind, there is 8 weeks of fuel required to be available for that one week in the air.
Fuel available is not fuel consumed.

The document also assumed 154 gals per Hurricane sortie, which is exactly twice the actual figure, since tank capacity was 97 gals, and aircraft will not land with empty tanks. Actual consumption will be 1/2 what the document states, for the 3840 sorties which it estimates will be flown and that works out to 950 tons

The document correctly assumes that a squadron of Hurricanes would fly about 1 sortie/day per aircraft

In the UK every airbase is providing a reserve for every other base, unlike France where a number of bases had to be stocked in expectation of rapid movement between bases, and the expectation that a base might be used briefly, but intensely.

However, the document certainly confirms 100% 100 octane use by Hurricane squadrons in France.

This document states the daily consumption per squadron as 1870gals for 24 sorties or 77.9 gals/sortie:

http://www.wwiiaircraftperformance.o...nt-15may40.pdf

so this works out to 180 tons/month/squadron based upon 24 sorties/day.

Last edited by Seadog; 06-08-2012 at 04:18 AM.
  #7  
Old 06-08-2012, 05:26 AM
NZtyphoon NZtyphoon is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crumpp View Post
It is a little more complicated than that seadog. The RAF correctly plans for their logistical train to be interupted by the enemy.

Therefore, they correctly plan to emplace several weeks supply at the aerodrome, supply the emergency fields the aircraft might have to land at, and keep several more weeks of fuel dispursed around the log train earmarked for that unit.

If you just plan to have enough fuel on hand for what you are going to fly, then you will be in real trouble when the enemy bombs your airfield storage tanks, shoots your trucks up on the road, or hits the railyard. You will be out of the game in one enemy attack.

Read the logistical plan if they had to supply the 4 squadrons in France. That is the amount of fuel in the system earmarked for those squadrons to fly for just ONE WEEK.

If they want to continue to fly operationally and resupply their unit after an enemy attack, the RAF is planning to have some 8 weeks worth of fuel on the ground and available at short notice.

Don't you think that makes sense given the fact the Luftwaffe was targeting the airfields during the BoB?

So when you do your simplistic calculation for one week of flying, keep in mind, there is 8 weeks of fuel required to be available for that one week in the air.
Not forgetting that Crumpp has previously stated that "Making the conclusion Hurricanes were using 100 Octane in the Battle of France based off some logistical projections for future war is amatuerish and clumsey. It is a paper tiger. That document is a calculation of projected needs written on 7 May 1940. The British Expeditionary Force was on the Beaches of Dunkirk 18 days later.

How much of those calculation and projections for future war do you really think became ground reality in 18 days?
"
http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showthr...213#post416213

A lot of nonsense, of course but just a reflection of how much Crumpp tries to twist things to suit his own POV.

So, there was enough 100 Octane stored in France to supply all Hurricanes and Blenheims with 8 weeks worth of fuel. As can be seen in just one WOPR (33rd 23 April 1940) there was 7,600 tons of 100 Octane fuel in the only logical location West of Suez ie; France


It also means that the RAF provided all of its frontline Merlin engine FC squadrons in France with 100 Octane in May 1940, which make's Crumpp's continued assertions that only 16 squadrons of its frontline fighter squadrons in Britain were supplied look very suspect. 192,151,000 gallons or 61,000 tons was used between June-end October
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Originally Posted by robtek View Post
When i read 192151000 gallons for 150 days for about 700 fighters at about 75 gallons/h i calculate 24,2h flight time a day. Confusing!
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Originally Posted by Al Schlageter View Post
150 days?

10 July – 31 October 1940 = 114 days
More than enough to supply all frontline FC fighters with plenty to spare.

So tell us again Crumpp, how did the RAF ensure that just a few squadrons used 100 Octane, while the rest went without? How was this allocated?

What were the logistical arrangements used toe ensure only 16 squadrons used 100 octane.

How were the pilots briefed "Sorry chaps X Y and Z squadrons get the 100 Octane today, the rest of you stick with 87"?

How about Crumpp provide some documentary evidence showing that frontline fighter squadrons were using 87 octane fuel on a consistent basis throughout the battle. He has been asked time and time again but has provided nothing.
  #8  
Old 06-08-2012, 06:13 AM
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If "west of suez" means the bef in france, why are then 3 quarters of the aviation fuel not 100 octane?

Somehow that doesn't make sense when there were only fighters using 100 octane.
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Old 06-08-2012, 06:20 AM
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Hi guys. I've just got back from my trip to the 1940's where I had a nice cup of tea with Hugh Dowding. Nice guy. Later on, the two of us met up with Churchill and went to the strip club.

He says that this is a generally irreconcilable issue since more detailed records were not being kept (it was a war, after all. Poor bloke seemed quite stressed).

He says that we should have all the different fuels (100 octane, 87 octane, c3, b4, etc) modeled in our game, and that if a particular mission builder wants to pit 87-octane spitfires against Fw 190-D9s, then that's their choice.

He also says that wasting so much energy arguing over what exact percentage of his units were using which fuel is very silly.

That ought to settle things, I think.
  #10  
Old 06-08-2012, 06:58 AM
Seadog Seadog is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by robtek View Post
If "west of suez" means the bef in france, why are then 3 quarters of the aviation fuel not 100 octane?

Somehow that doesn't make sense when there were only fighters using 100 octane.
Read page 3:

http://www.wwiiaircraftperformance.o...nt-15may40.pdf
note that only 100 octane is specified for the Hurricanes.
and then read:
http://www.wwiiaircraftperformance.o.../AASF-Fuel.pdf

and note that only 100 octane is specified for the Hurricanes.
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