Combat box

Combat box of a 12-plane B-17 squadron developed in October 1943. Three such boxes completed a 36-plane group box.
  1. Lead element
  2. High element
  3. Low element
  4. Low low element

The combat box was a tactical formation used by heavy (strategic) bombers of the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II. The combat box was also referred to as a "staggered formation". Its defensive purpose was in massing the firepower of the bombers' guns, while offensively it concentrated the release of bombs on a target.[1]

Initially formations were created in keeping with the pre-war Air Corps doctrine that massed bombers could attack and destroy targets in daylight without fighter escort, relying on interlocking fire from their defensive machine guns, almost exclusively the "light barrel" Browning AN/M2 .50 calibre (12.7 mm) gun. However the use of high altitudes by USAAF bombers resulted in factors that demanded a tighter bomb pattern and the combat box continued in use even after the advent of fighter escort – and especially starting in the spring of 1944 over Europe, with USAAF fighters flying far ahead of the combat boxes in air supremacy mode instead against the Luftwaffe's fighters – largely mitigated the threat of fighter interception.[1]

Creation of the concept is credited to Colonel Curtis E. LeMay, commander of the 305th Bombardment Group in England.[2][3][4] However the Eighth Air Force had been experimenting with different tactical formations since its first bombing mission on 17 August 1942, several of which were also known as "boxes". LeMay's group did create the "javelin down" combat box in December 1942, and that formation became the basis for the numerous variations of combat boxes that followed.[5]

The practice of referring to a concentrated formation as a "box" was the result of diagramming formations in plan, profile and front elevation views, positioning each individual bomber in an invisible boxlike area.[1]

  1. ^ a b c Freeman 1991, p. 37
  2. ^ Bowman 1997, p. 48
  3. ^ Capps 1997, p. 108
  4. ^ Morrison 1962, pp. 22–23
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference f42 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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