Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

WWII Accident Stats

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • WWII Accident Stats

    After the Camarillo accident a few of my acquaintances were wondering how 19 year olds mastered high performance fighters with little training during WWII. I looked into it and found some rather interesting figures. This same question was brought up in the P-51 Torque Roll thread. I thought I'd share my finding in this new thread, rather than hi-jacking the other.

    The short answer is they did what they needed to do and accepted the losses.

    Unfortunately, it looks as if combat and accidents losses are usually combined when overseas. The information below sheds some light on the accident losses. The info is from the Army Air Force Statistical Digest WWII published in Dec 45. According to it, thousands of aircraft were lost due to accidents.

    In the Continental US between 1942 and Aug 1945 (see t214.pdf ) there were 824 P-51 accidents, 131 of those fatal resulting in 137 fatalities and 358 aircraft wrecked. The P-47 was much worse with 3049 accidents, 404 of those fatal with 455 fatalities and a staggering 1125 airplanes wrecked. This is just the beginning according to the table. If you add up all the accident losses on that table you get 47,462 accidents, 5533 of which were fatal resulting in 13,624 fatalities and 12,506 aircraft wrecked. Keep in mind this was just in the Continental US.

    Also in the US looking at all AAF accidents from Dec 41 to Aug 45 (see t213.pdf ) there were 52,651 accidents, 6039 of those fatal resulting in 14,903 deaths and 13,873 aircraft wrecked.

    Branching out overseas gets difficult. As I mentioned previously, I can not find combat losses verses accidents. I also can not find specific type losses. But if you look at Airplane Losses in US and Overseas (t099.pdf ) you will see that page two breaks out the Continental US verses overseas. There were a total of 43,581 losses overseas and 21,583 losses in the US. Keep in mind this includes combat losses but I can almost guarantee nearly all the 21,583 Continental US losses were accidents. The Continental US does not include AK and HI, the only places in North America that had direct combat with the Axis.

    While en route from the US to the theater, 909 planes were lost (t108.pdf ).

    Airplane losses on combat mission by theater (t158.pdf ) states a total of 22,948 aircraft were lost during combat. If we subtract this from the 43,581 total overseas losses figure above, we get 20,633 aircraft lost not during combat.

    I found these figures absolutely overwhelming and much more than I ever would have thought. Total losses due to accidents for WWII may never be know, or at least it is beyond my researching skills, but I do think it was in the thousands. Gives me even more appreciation for that generation.

    On a lighter note, here are some other figures just for fun....

    9,707,109,000 gallons of gas used form Jan 42 to Aug 45
    459,750,000 round of ammo expended overseas from Jan 42 to Aug 45
    107,886,000 hours of flying time from Jan 43 to Aug 45
    7,952,020 bombs dropped overseas from 43 to 45
    2,057,244 tons of bombs dropped overseas from Dec 41 to Aug 45
    2,362,800 combat sorties from Dec 41 to Aug 45
    299,230 aircraft accepted from Jan 1940 to Aug 45
    808,471 aircraft engines delivered from Jan 40 to Aug 45
    799,972 propellers delivered from Jan 40 to Aug 45
    40,259 enemy aircraft destroyed Feb 42 to Aug 45
    Bill Pearce

    Old Machine Press
    Blue Thunder Air Racing (in memoriam)

  • #2
    Re: WWII Accident Stats

    Bill,

    Sadly, in that era, you either learned early what you could or could not do with high peformance aircraft or you were, permenently "washed out" by the laws of evolution...

    Today, when something of this type of event happens, it's evening news and fodder for us wags to discuss here..

    Is it any different or relevant today than it was then?

    Probably not...

    It's just different times...

    Thanks for the research and stats! Very enlightening!

    Wayne
    Wayne Sagar
    "Pusher of Electrons"

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: WWII Accident Stats

      Thanks for the research and stats! Very enlightening!
      Enlightening??? Down right scarry if you ask me. In every way to boot.

      First and formost... The family, friends, heros, young men who fought for us, and the rest of the pilots. Those numbers are heart braking.

      Second, the equipment, Those are some staggering numbers. It really makes you think twice about how easy the pilots at Reno make it look.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: WWII Accident Stats

        I've known that the "operational losses" during WW2 were greater than the combat losses, but never seen hard numbers before. Makes sense tho. My great-uncle was strapping on a B-25 with only slightly more total flight hours than I had when I got my license, to fly a Cessna...
        Leo Smiley - Graphics and Fine Arts
        airplanenutleo@gmail.com
        thetreasuredpeacock.etsy.com

        Comment

        Working...
        X