Hi Saber964,
You left out acoustic homing airborne torpedoes.
Guys, while the first jets in Italy and Germany flew in 1939, the first British plane, the E39 flew in April of 1941.
The main problem with the Me 262 was it was put in production too soon; because its engines were lousy.
They only lasted ~20-30 hours, and it took a dozen hours or so to synchronize the pair, so the number of actual combat sorties possible might be just a couple, and why you can find video of them being towed around the airfields by horses etc, because they couldn't afford the taxi time on the engines!
The result was that despite the ~1400 built, there were only 2-4 times where even 50 or 60 could be concentrated, which were obviously far too few, and thus couldn't affect the war's direction or extend or delay the end by even a day.
By comparison, the last wartime Spitfires had double the weight and horsepower of the first ones while being over a hundred miles an hour faster, etc.
The incredible development of radar and electronics during the war, which some hold to being the key to victory, was so focused on the war that the civilian implications weren't fully appreciated for decades.
Another example would be the powerful one man antitank weapons, like the Bazooka and Panzerfaust, which were considered impossible or inconceivable in 1939, but in fact were quite common in 1944.
L
[quote="saber964"][quote="Jonathan_S"]quote="ldwechsler"
The important thing to note is that there was not an enormous jump in technology DURING the war. Planes were improved, improved a great deal. But jets only came in at the end. Ships
were not that different. Yes, the tech was far better but not a whole generation.
As I noted, look at Korea and you'll see what happened with technology. And we've had an enormous burst of tech in recent years without a major war.[/quote]Wait, so because jets became combat operational just over a year before the end of the war they don't count as "DURING the war"
. The Allies had several hundred jets fighters (Meteors and P-80 Shooting Stars) in commissions at the end of the war and Germany had around 2000 jets (mostly fighters, Me 262 and He 162 with a couple hundred Ar 234 bombers.
Okay nobody got a decisive number operational before the end of the war, but it largely wasn't for lack of trying -- and the Germans, with over 1,400 Me 262s, would have been a force to be reckoned with if the Allies hadn't been able to largely smother the landing fields with conventional fighters.
Plus even withing piston aircraft I think you're underplaying the performance improvements between the pre-war 1938 designs and those becoming operation in '44 and '45. Just because they got eclipsed a few years later by the ongoing jet revolution shouldn't cause us to overlook the significant jumps in tech within piston engined planes.
And a older post touched on all the tech improvements, during the war, to guided or homing weapons - a category that basically didn't exist pre-war but by the end there were intertially guided cruise and ballistic missiles, radio controlled armor piercing bombs, radar guided anti-ship missiles, homing torpedoes for both anti-ship and anti-submarine use.quote
Jets were around before the war. IIRC Whittle had his prototype jet engine in 1937 but couldn't interest anyone in the British Air Ministry to properly fund it. They also considered him a crackpot, just like Goddard. Also the first Jet powered aircraft flew in both England and Germany in 1939.[/quote]