Facebook X YouTube Instagram Pinterest NetGalley
Google Books previews are unavailable because you have chosen to turn off third party cookies for enhanced content. Visit our cookies page to review your cookie settings.

Dogfight: The Supermarine Spitfire and the Messerschmitt Bf109 (Hardback)

Aviation > Aircraft > Spitfires & Hurricanes Aviation > WWII WWII

By David Owen
Imprint: Pen & Sword Aviation
Pages: 370
ISBN: 9781473828063
Published: 22nd June 2015

in_stock

£17.50 was £25.00

You save £7.50 (30%)


You'll be £17.50 closer to your next £10.00 credit when you purchase Dogfight: The Supermarine Spitfire and the Messerschmitt Bf109. What's this?
+£4.50 UK Delivery or free UK delivery if order is over £40
(click here for international delivery rates)

Need a currency converter? Check XE.com for live rates

Other formats available - Buy the Hardback and get the eBook for free! Price
Dogfight: The Supermarine Spitfire… ePub (69.5 MB) Add to Basket £4.99


Innumerable books have been published on the two most famous fighter aircraft of all time, the Supermarine Spitfire and the Messerschmitt Bf109. But books setting out to tell the story of both aircraft are very much rarer - probably fewer than the fingers of one hand. Yet their joint story is one which bears retelling since both were essential to the air campaigns of World War Two.

Incredibly, the men who designed them lacked any experience of designing a modern fighter. R J Mitchell had begun his career working on industrial steam locomotives, Willy Messerschmitt had cut his aeronautical teeth on light and fragile gliders and sporting planes. Yet both men not only managed to devise aircraft which could hold their own in a world where other designs went from state-of-the-art to obsolete in a staggeringly short time, but their fighters remained competitive over six years of front-line combat.

Despite the different ways their creators approached their daunting tasks and the obstacles each faced in acceptance by the services for which they were designed, they proved to be so closely matched that neither side gained a decisive advantage in a titanic struggle. Had either of them not matched up to its opponent so well, then the air war would have been a one-sided catastrophe ending in a quick defeat for the Allies or the Axis powers, and the course of twentieth century history would have been changed beyond recognition.

As featured in

RID

As featured on Speed Readers

Speed Readers

This book is the most elaborate ‘air war history book’ that I have ever laid my hands on. It starts off in the after days of WO I and ‘flies’ on into the Korean War. Almost all airplane types of the on British and German side ‘along flying.’ nations (striking exception: Fokker) are technically as well as operationally described with great detail. Also the designers of the airplanes and the power play in which they managed to bring their design to series construction, is extensively set out...

... The book, decorated with a lot of fascinating picture material, makes it an attractive one to get your hands on. All in all a book that is hard to put down once you have started in it!

AviationBookReviews.com

Very good.

JP4 Aviation Monthly
More titles by David Owen

Other titles in Pen & Sword Aviation...