MWadwell wrote:HamsterDesTodes wrote:quote="Weird Harold"]
AFAIK, no US highways (including Interstates) were used or planned as emergency runways. The Autobahn was designed and constructed with emergency airfields in mind, and reinforced sections of highways designated (and used in exercises) as wartime runways can be found all over Europe. But they are just sections; it isn't economically feasible to build highways entirely to the standards required of runways for jet fighters or bombers.
The Autobahn of Hitler wasnt designed to include wartime airports, airplanes had too low a range and of course nobody would ever need to fight in Germany itself, so why go to the effort? Thre were some build as an emergency measure during the later part, but that wasnt part of the original design so Eisenhower hopefully wasnt inspired by it.
A bit of trivia: Ramstein airbase is build on such an emergency airport. Today the rebuilt Autobahn leads in a large halfcircle around it.
(SNIP)
True - Also one thing to consider, is that due to the narrow width of the undercarriage, a lot of WW2 fighter aircraft (i.e. Me-109 and Spitfires) could not land or takeoff with any kind of cross wind.
For these airfraft, the best airfield was actually a large paddock.....[/quote]
Why do you think that most of the RAF fighter bases were grass fields during BoB. They had several advantages like mass take off in scrambling aircraft, tough to knock out (no concrete runways), soft landing for battle damaged aircraft
A little trivia.
What was unusual about Wing Commander Douglas Bader?