Everything about Flying Ace totally explained
A
flying ace or
fighter ace is a
military aviator credited with shooting down several enemy
aircraft during aerial combat. The actual number of air victories required to officially qualify as an "ace" has varied, but is usually considered to be five or more.
History
World War I
Use of the term ace in military aviation circles began in
World War I (1914–18), when
French newspapers described
Adolphe Pegoud, as
l'as (French for "ace") after he became the first
pilot to down five
German aircraft. The term had been popularized in prewar French newspapers when referring to sports stars such as
football (soccer) players and
bicyclists. This is the reason why "ace" is also used to refer to non-aviators who have distinguished themselves by sinking
ships and destroying
tanks.
The
German Empire instituted the practice of awarding the
Pour le Mérite ("Der blaue Max"/"The blue Max"), its highest award for
gallantry, initially to aviators who had destroyed eight
Allied aircraft. The Germans didn't use the term 'ace' but referred to German pilots who had achieved 10 kills as
Überkanone and publicised their names and scores, for the benefit of civilian morale. Qualification for the
Pour le Mérite was progressively raised as the war went on.
In 1914–16, the
British Empire didn't have a centralised system of recording aerial victories, in fact this was done at squadron level throughout the war. Nor did they publish official statistics on the successes of individuals, although some pilots did become famous through press coverage. However, after 1916, a (more or less) automatic award of a
Military Cross was made to a pilot with five air combats endorsed as "decisive" by the commanding officer of his squadron, although the term "ace" was never used officially by the British.
In 1914–18, different air services also had different methods of assigning credit for kills. The German
Luftstreitkräfte credited "confirmed" victories only for enemy planes assessed as destroyed or captured after either examining the enemy aircraft (or what was left of it) on the ground, or the capture or confirmed death of enemy aircrew. For instance the shooting down of
Albert Ball was credited to
Lothar von Richthofen after his death was confirmed by the British, although the wreckage of Ball's
SE.5a was in fact never identified, and Richthofen's claim was actually for a
Sopwith Triplane!. Most aerial fighting was on the German side of the lines so this quite rigorous system worked reasonably well for the Germans themselves, but would have been totally impractical for the Allied air forces. British pilots, in particular, on offensive patrol many miles over the German lines, were often not in a position to confirm that an apparently destroyed enemy aircraft had in fact crashed, so that victories were claimed as "driven down", "forced to land", or "out of control". The
United States Army Air Service followed a similar practice. For example,
Eddie Rickenbacker's 26 official victories included ten planes "out of control" and several "dived east", which would (at best) have been credited as "probables" in later wars.
Another feature of the German system was that where several pilots attacked and destroyed a single enemy, only one pilot (often the formation leader) was credited with the kill. Most other nations adopted the French
Armee de l'Air system of granting full credit to every pilot or aerial gunner participating in a victory, which could sometimes be six or seven individuals. The British did not, crediting fractions of a kill to airmen if multiple aeroplanes shot down an enemy, resulting in the "fractional" scores (say "7½") of some British aces.
By contrast, a two-member British
bomber crew who performed remarkable feats of flying and aerial gunnery when they attacked 30 German
Fokker D.VIIs on
23 August,
1918, are not regarded as aces. The
Bermudian pilot, Lt
Arthur Spurling destroyed three D.VIIs with his
DH-9's fixed, forward-firing machine guns, and gunner Sgt
Frank Bell downed two with his rear gun. Spurling was awarded the
Distinguished Flying Cross as a result of his actions.
World War II
In
World War II, many air forces credited fractional shares of aerial victories, resulting in fractions or decimal scores, such as 11½ or 26.83. Some U.S. commands also credited aircraft destroyed on the ground as equal to aerial victories. The Soviets distinguished between solo and group kills, as did the Japanese, though the
IJN stopped crediting individual victories in 1943. The
Luftwaffe continued the tradition of "one pilot, one kill", and now referred to top scorers as
experten.
The
Soviet Air Force had the world's only female aces. During World War II,
Lydia Litvyak scored 12 victories and
Katya Budanova achieved 11.
The huge tallies accrued by German World War II aces are partly explained by the Luftwaffe's technical and tactical superiority over the Allies during the first half of the war. Many kills were over obsolescent aircraft and against either poorly-trained or inexperienced pilots fielded by the Allies, especially the Soviets. In addition,
Luftwaffe pilots generally flew many more
sorties (sometimes up to 1000 operations) than their Allied counterparts. Additionally, national policies differed; Axis pilots tended to return to the cockpit over and over again until killed, captured or incapacitated, while very successful Allied pilots were either progressively promoted to ranks and positions that involved less combat flying, or routinely rotated back to training bases to educate cadet flyers, to equip younger pilots with valuable combat knowledge from the experienced aces to survive battle and improve the overall fighting ability of the aerial fighter force.
Accuracy
Realistic assessment of enemy casualties is important for
intelligence purposes - so most air forces expend considerable effort to ensure accuracy in victory claims. Despite this, very few recognized aces actually shot down as many aircraft as credited to them. The primary reason for inaccurate victory claims is the inherent confusion of three-dimensional, high speed combat between large numbers of aircraft, but competitiveness and the desire for recognition (not to mention sheer optimistic enthusiasm) also figure in certain inflated claims, especially when the attainment of a specific total is required for a particular decoration or promotion. Consequently, errors of 50 to 100% and more are common in air victory claims. In World War II, the aircraft
gun camera came into general usage, partly in hope of alleviating inaccurate victory claims. In the
Korean War, both the U.S. and Communist air arms claimed a 10 to 1 victory-loss ratio.
The most accurate figures usually belong to the air arm fighting over its own territory, where many wrecks can be located, and even identified, and where shot down enemy are either killed or captured. It is for this reason that at least 76 of the 80 planes credited to
Manfred von Richthofen can be tied to known British losses — the German
Jagdstaffeln flew defensively, on their own side of the lines, in part due to General
Hugh Trenchard's policy of offensive patrol. During the 1939-45 conflict night fighter claims (where one fighter would usually detect and attempt to shoot down one bomber aircraft at a time) avoided the confusion of the classic day dogfight to a great extent, and proved among the most reliable and verifiable.
On the other hand,
losses (especially in terms of aircraft as opposed to personnel) are sometimes reported inaccurately, for various reasons. Nearly 50% of RAF victories in the
Battle of Britain, for instance, don't tally statistically with recorded German losses - but some at least of this apparent over-claiming can be tallied with known wrecks, and aircrew known to have been in British
POW camps. There are in fact a number of legitimate reasons why reported losses may be understated - including poor reporting procedures and loss of records due to enemy action or wartime confusion.
Ace in a day
The term "ace in a day" is used to designate a fighter pilot who has shot down five or more airplanes in a single day. The most notable is
Hans-Joachim Marseille of Germany, who was credited with downing 17 Allied fighters in just three sorties over
North Africa on
September 1,
1942, during World War II. The highest number aerial victories for a single day was claimed by
Emil Lang, who claimed 18 Soviet fighters on
November 3,
1943.
Erich Rudorffer is credited with the destruction of 13 aircraft in a single mission on
October 11,
1943. Numerous other
Luftwaffe pilots also claimed the title during World War II.
On
December 5,
1941, the leading
Australian ace of World War II,
Clive Caldwell, destroyed five German aircraft in the space of a few minutes, also in
North Africa. He received a
Distinguished Flying Cross for the feat.
During World War II, 68 U.S. pilots—43
Army Air Forces, 18
Navy, and seven
Marine Corps—were credited the feat, including
David McCampbell, who claimed seven Japanese planes shot down on
June 19,
1944 (during the "
Marianas Turkey Shoot"), and nine in a single mission on
October 24,
1944. Others included
Joe Foss,
Chuck Yeager and
Oscar Francis Perdomo, the last US "ace in a day".
Other pilots to have claimed "ace in a day" status during World War II include
Antoni Glowacki of
Poland, during the
Battle of Britain, and
Jorma Sarvanto of
Finland, during the
Winter War. Captain
Hans Wind of HLeLv 24,
Finnish Air Force, scored five kills in a day a remarkable five times during the Soviet Summer Offensive 1944, a total of 30 kills in 12 days, of his final tally of 75.
The last pilot credited with this feat was
Pakistani
F-86 pilot Squadron Leader
Muhammad Mahmood Alam, during the 1965 war with India. During the war, he downed nine
Hawker Hunters of the Indian Air Force in a single day, four of them reportedly within less than a minute.
Further Information
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