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As a friendly suggestion, the Ministry of Air should begin consider a heavy bomber propelled with something akin to the "power system" used by the He 119, which should have started flying around this time. I bet that this would be the source of endless amusement for the RAF, No 10, the Parliament and the tax payers and the reason for a deluge of jokes and books on the matter, as well as Bond's first 007 mission: to get my bones.
 
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So I've just read through the Abyssinia, Hertzog, Abdication and Rhineland crisis. As before, excellent stuff.

Since I read a larger volume of chapters this time around, I was better able to appreciate not only the butterflies themselves but also how the consequences of these butterflies build upon one another and interact to create a comulative amount of divergences that, little by little, drag world history in a substantially different direction. To give an example, the Abyssinian crisis exacerbates the rift between South Africa and the metropolis, which leads to Hertzog weighing in on the Abdication crisis, which is one of the factors leading to the downfall of Churchill, which will certainly have further effects down the road.

Beyond the impressive work that takes remembering all the points of divergence in this web of alternate history during the years, I also find this all very interesting because it shows in a way we often overlook when reading about real world history, that history is indeed a very complex and (somewhat) logical sequence and not only a disjointed succession of big events driven by Great Men.

As for my next readings I'm excited to find out what has become of the US. It has had some passing mentions so far that suggest a serious mess significantly worst than OTL, with the States Rights Democratic Party's ascent and the assassination of a certain president; South Africa, wether it manages to evade the pitfalls of Apartheid entirely, goes for a not as bad but still quite bad middle of the road, or has Hertzog or a follower regain power (I admit I was very interested in seeing how nightmarish a South Africa with Edward as King and Hertzog as PM could become.); and of course europe, will fascism, kicked in the teeth in Libya and the Rhineland abandon it's expansionist dreams and turn inwards, cementing it's iron grip on the territories already conquered while the democracies enjoy their peace, will these defeats embolden domestic opposition (and if yes what kind?) or will these setbacks just enrage Hitler and Mussolini and lead to an earlier second great war?

As always, great stuff!
 
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As a friendly suggestion, the Ministry of Air should begin consider a heavy bomber propelled with something akin to the "power system" used by the He 119, which should have started flying around this time. I bet that this would be the source of endless amusement for the RAF, No 10, the Parliament and the tax payers and the reason for a deluge of jokes and books on the matter, as well as Bond's first 007 mission: to get my bones.
Thank you Kurtie for such a valuable and as you say friendly suggestion. I will, as always, consider this possibility most closely.

So I've just read through the Abyssinia, Hertzog, Abdication and Rhineland crisis. As before, excellent stuff.

Since I read a larger volume of chapters this time around, I was better able to appreciate not only the butterflies themselves but also how the consequences of these butterflies build upon one another and interact to create a comulative amount of divergences that, little by little, drag world history in a substantially different direction. To give an example, the Abyssinian crisis exacerbates the rift between South Africa and the metropolis, which leads to Hertzog weighing in on the Abdication crisis, which is one of the factors leading to the downfall of Churchill, which will certainly have further effects down the road.

Beyond the impressive work that takes remembering all the points of divergence in this web of alternate history during the years, I also find this all very interesting because it shows in a way we often overlook when reading about real world history, that history is indeed a very complex and (somewhat) logical sequence and not only a disjointed succession of big events driven by Great Men.
I am pleased you are enjoying it and that you appreciate one of the main themes of the work. I do enjoy following back the chain from big 'inevitable' events to find out which earlier decisions and choices led to them, the people involved generally weren't idiots so there normally was a good reason why certain wrong (with hindsight) choices were made.

On the Great Men idea I am somewhat torn, certain individuals absolutely had a huge influence for better or worse - had any of the dozens of pre-war assassinations attempts against Hitler succeeded then I think a very different WW2 would have resulted, likely very different from the conflict we know. But it regularly has been overused and some things cannot be overcome, no 'Great Man' could let Italy have a successful war, unless you define success as 'not taking part at all'.

Entirely coincidentally this subject will be slightly touched upon in the next chapter, what is a 'Great Man' in the context of design and engineering.
As for my next readings I'm excited to find out what has become of the US. It has had some passing mentions so far that suggest a serious mess significantly worst than OTL, with the States Rights Democratic Party's ascent and the assassination of a certain president;
It's not gone well but equally could have gone much worse. The US has been somewhat neglected in updates in recent years I admit, US foreign policy vs Spain pops up as it's hard to ignore (and is substantially different from OTL) but domestically I've been looking at other things. There are a couple of more US focused chapters in the plan for the Autumn of 1937 but I'm not so foolish as to put a real time date to when they will be written. ;)
South Africa, wether it manages to evade the pitfalls of Apartheid entirely, goes for a not as bad but still quite bad middle of the road, or has Hertzog or a follower regain power (I admit I was very interested in seeing how nightmarish a South Africa with Edward as King and Hertzog as PM could become.);
That one is answered so I will leave you to enjoy it. Young Pip did consider Eddie as King of South Africa but his commitment to being plausible over-ruled that temptation.

However I'm sure it is an option in HOI4, because every other nation has a reactionary monarch focus tree so South Africa is bound to.
and of course europe, will fascism, kicked in the teeth in Libya and the Rhineland abandon it's expansionist dreams and turn inwards, cementing it's iron grip on the territories already conquered while the democracies enjoy their peace, will these defeats embolden domestic opposition (and if yes what kind?) or will these setbacks just enrage Hitler and Mussolini and lead to an earlier second great war?
November 1937 will also feature an update looking at how the two dictators are responding to their failures. However one idea I am enjoying playing with is a Europe where they have lost the initative, no longer able to drive the pace and make other nations scramble to react how would they cope when they are the ones forced to react to events elsewhere?
As always, great stuff!
A suitably cheery note to end on, so even though we are not at top of page let us try and sneak in one last chapter in 2023.
 
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Chapter CLX: A Season for Decisions Part 2.
Chapter CLX: A Season for Decisions Part 2.

It is a useful approximation that the process of producing a new aircraft for the RAF ran as follows; operational requirement (what the aircraft had to do); specification (the 'hard numbers' the aircraft had to achieve in terms of size, speed, altitude and so on); competitive tender (the various manufacturers producing designs and mockups); prototype (construction of prototypes of the chosen design or designs); trials (the prototypes being tested to see if they met the specification and what properties they had) and production (order being issued to actually build the selected aircraft). If there were problems with the prototype(s) this could be lengthened by a Development stage where an improved prototype was produced and tested, while if things were urgent the entire prototype stage could be cut and the design 'ordered off the drawing board' on the basis of the tender design, the first production aircraft effectively serving as the prototype and trials aircraft. For our current purposes the two most relevant phases are the production of the requirement and specification documents and the selection for prototyping decision. The importance of the former should be obvious, the operational requirement and the specification were the documents from which everything else flowed, even a 'perfect' design could be an in service failure if it was trying to do the wrong thing. The end of tender stage decision point was also important as it was the point at which the Air Ministry had to pick the best design(s) to order prototypes of or in extreme cases issue a production order. The accusation is sometimes made that if the if the final aircraft was not a success then the Air Ministry had picked the wrong design at this stage, though this does raise the less frequently engaged with question of what best design actually means. Was a design that stuck closely to the specification requirements better or worse than one which excelled in one thing by sacrificing it's performance in other areas? The unsatisfactory answer was generally 'it depends', not just on the specific trade-offs made but on wider strategic thinking, the politician climate and the Air Staff's views on what they though should be possible. It must also be emphasised that even if all the tender submissions had broadly similar projected performance it was not a matter of just picking the one with the biggest numbers. The tender design would have to be turned from paper into metal and it was not unknown for some loss of performance to occur in this process, sometimes due to over-optimistic projections in an effort to win the tender but more often due to design team inexperience or unexpected problems with a new or unfamiliar technology; the Air Ministry often required designers to push the limits of what was possible and sometimes the limits pushed back. The final area of consideration was workloads and the Air Ministry's wider plans, if a company was already committed to other projects that were of greater importance then that could rule out their bid even if it was technically the best. It should be no surprise this was an especially contentious area, requiring as it did agreement on both the 'best' designs in the various specifications and on the relative importance of the various requirements. For completeness is should be acknowledged there were any number of unofficial and indeed officially discouraged factors at work, most notably individual views on the relative merits or demerits of the companies bidding. Given the large number of factors to consider, and to try and dilute the previously mentioned individual prejudices, the decision on which tender to proceed with was made at a formal design review conference. A mix of civilian and military technical specialists would be gathered from the Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE), Air Staff and Air Ministry to consider the tenders from several perspectives, as was often the case with such gatherings the informal chats during the light refreshments were at least as important as the official agenda items. With an understanding of why and how the tenders were being assessed, let us turn to the actual designs.

We begin in a manner the Air Staff would approve of by looking at the bombers. After the shocks of the summer air defence exercises and the Lindemann Committee's first findings on offensive technology and tactics a reasonable first question could have been if any of the designs should be proceeded with as they had been specified to out-dated thinking. In reality this was never even discussed, on practical level scrapping the designs and starting with a new operational requirement would mean 18 months to 2 years worth of delay, the bulk of that time in the manufacturers producing brand new tender designs. With the comparative rarity of a defence friendly Chancellor in the Treasury the senior ranks in the Air Staff and indeed Air Ministry wished to take full advantage and get squadrons ordered; despite the war emergency orders and a great deal of effort to rush aircraft into service much of Bomber Command was still in biplanes. From the technical perspective it should also be said that many of the recommendations training, navigation, bomb sights etc had very little to do with the actual aircraft or could be easily incorporated by allowing some provision for extra equipment. The exception was bomb size, when area effect had been king the expected bomb load had been large numbers of 500lbs whereas the new approach was looking at fewer but larger bombs to maximise impact and blast. While this emphasis on size not quantity was arguably a change to the specifications, certainly a number of designers would complain they would have done things differently had they known, military aircraft were essentially a monopsony (the government was the only customer) so there was not a great deal the complainers could do. It is sometimes suggested that speed was another change, the importance of a fast cruise to minimise the reaction time available to the enemy air defences was certainly one lesson coming out of the Chain Home exercises. This misses the point that the Air Staff had long wanted faster bombers, indeed they had declared speed to be the most vital defence on a bomber since the early 1930s. The issue was they didn't think it was sufficient as they assumed that bombers would get attacked by enemy fighters, if not on the way to the target then certainly on the way back, at which point they would need defensive guns. In their typical false precision fashion the Air Staff decided on the 80/20 policy, deciding that 80% of the defence of a bomber was it's speed and 20% defensive guns, but that the 20% was vital. That there was almost no basis for these figures beyond assertion, not indeed any way to use them to quantitatively assess design trade-offs and choices, was irrelevant as it was mostly used as a justification to try and kill of the internal debate about unarmed bombers, a subject we shall return to later. For our present purposes the key issue was that the speed and defensive armament were in tension, more specifically speed and turrets were in tension because turrets were almost uniformly terrible for an aircraft's aerodynamics. It was well known that the single easiest way to improve the speed of almost any bomber was to remove it's turrets and smooth over the resulting hole, the resulting reduction in parasitic drag would substantially improve both maximum speed and best economic cruising speed. The Air Staff were well aware of this but as mentioned had no quantitative way of assessing the trade off, the impact on speed (and to an extent fuel consumption and range) of a turret could be worked out to a reasonable accuracy, but the benefits of a turret were entirely situational, depending on how an enemy chose to attack, if the friendly bomber was in formation and so on. It should also be noted that, fittingly for an organisation so concerned with destroying the enemy will to win, much effort was expended on thinking about the impact of turrets on bomber crew morale and if being able to 'fight back' against attacking fighters from all angles would improve their morale and so performance. The net result of all this was a certain amount of indecision, while it was agreed that a nose and tail turret were the absolute minimum necessary for any bomber beyond that there was a tendency for turrets to be added, deleted, moved and generally tinkered with during testing and indeed operational service. The full details can doubtless be found in those books which exhaustively focus on the history of a single type, the relevant point is that the trade off existed and was significant factor in both design and assessment.

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A Bristol Blenheim Mk.I in flight during a training exercise, the large glass cage like object on the top just aft of the wings is the dorsal gun turret. While not the subject of any the deliberations the Blenheim was a good example of the performance cost of a turret; the original civilian Type 142 had achieved 307mph but by the time the military version had entered service as the Blenheim Mk.I the top speed was barely 280mph. While there were many adjustments necessary to militarise a plane, the turret alone cost around 15mph and that was in it's 'aerodynamic' retracted position. When fully deployed and actually able to fire the speed impact was even more significant. In exchange for this loss of speed the early Blenheim crews gained the dubious benefit of a single Vickers 'K' .303" machine gun, which perhaps explain why an unarmed bomber was not seen as a particularly radical option.

There were two bomber specifications about which a decision had to be made and a third which was playing the role of the spectre at the feast. Of the two main specifications B.12/36 was officially for a heavy bomber while P.13/36 was a general purpose medium bomber for worldwide use. The latter description was seen as something of an incantation, a ritual phrase the Air Staff used to show the Ministry and other interested groups that they were ticking boxes other than just strategic bombing. This was somewhat undermined by the Air Staff regularly referring to P.13/36 as a 'heavy medium' or 'medium heavy' bomber, indicating that they still viewed the strategic role as the key capability of the design, though in fairness they had included a requirement for the design to be able to carry and launch two torpedoes giving it some multi-role ability. The P.13/36 was specified as twin engined both as a nod to it's 'worldwide use' requirement (fewer engines meant less maintenance and so a small ground crew) and on cost grounds as engines were generally the most expensive single item on an aircraft. Cost was important because the design was intended to equip the majority of the bomber squadrons and so form the bulk of the future main bombing force. The specification had been written when the speed faction were in ascendance so only the minimum nose and tail turrets were specified, though the more experienced designers had wisely made provision for additional turrets to be added. The review process was relatively straightforward, while eight firms had responded to the tender most could rapidly be dismissed. As outlined above this was not always on technical grounds, as an example the Bristol submission was rated highly both on design and practicality, but the company was heavily committed elsewhere and so was deemed unlikely to be able to deliver without sacrifice elsewhere. As a telling example of the position of the Air Ministry and the wider government at the time one of those projects was the civilian Bristol Blackpool airliner; beating back the commercial challenge of US airline manufacturers was rated a comparable priority with rearmament and Bomber Command modernisation. At the other extreme there was the Hawker submission, as it was expected that a company would respond to an Air Ministry request for tender they had put a design in, however as their main focus was the fighter specification it had very much been a bare minimum token effort. In between there was the Fairey submission, a streamlined and well laid out bomber but which was submitted as using the Fairey P.24 Monarch engine, after all the engine rows of the summer the only choice that would have more annoyed the Air Ministry would have been an imported foreign engine, unsurprisingly this was rapidly ruled out. The preferred option was the Avro 679 and this was duly selected for prototyping, this is sometimes seen as a surprising choice given the firm's previous effort the Avro Anson which had been marked for replacement shortly after entering service due to being slow and too short ranged. In fact the Anson was a mark in Avro's favour, because while it's performance was poor it was what Avro had promised in their tender, that said performance was inadequate for the role was the fault of the Air Staff and the specification not the designer who had provided what was asked for. The only point of debate was the 'second string', the backup design that should be pursued in case of issues with the first choice. This was the point where the third specification made it's presence felt and began to influence the decision making process.

The project looming over the discussion was B.1/35, an older specification which most manufacturers had pulled out of as they (and much of the Air Staff) felt it had been superseded by later specification. Only Vickers had persevered and were working on a design that was essentially a larger brother to the Wellington, sharing the same geodesic construction and twin engined layout while being bigger and heavier. The common heritage with the Wellington had been enough to ensure considerable Dominion interest in a 'large Wellington' and this, along, with a reluctance to abandon the work that had been put in so far had been enough to keep the project going. The significant chance had been the switch from Bristol Hercules engines to Rolls Royce Vultures, the increase in engine power being necessary to keep the projected speed acceptable in the face of the ever growing weight of the design. While this switch further increased it's attractiveness to the RCAF and RAAF contingents (swapping 'exotic' Bristol sleeve valves for an line Rolls Royce unit made domestic production, or at least local engineering support, far more feasible) it also further increased the similarities with the favoured P.13/36 designs which also used Vultures. There was therefore a strong argument that B.1/35, which had become politically uncancellable due to the Dominion interest, could serve as the 'second string' design, freeing up money and design capacity for other projects. If nothing else the Air Ministry would need a good argument as to why it needed three very similar sized prototypes, all with the same engines and all intended for the same mission. The argument that emerged was a risk based one, in line with the usual portfolio approach, the need for a non-Vulture engined option to cover the possibility of problems or delays with that engine. At this point there were no major concerns about Vulture, some teething issues had been identified but after the re-organisation of the summer more resources were being deployed and the Air Ministry's Resident Technical Officers in Rolls Royce were confident in the basic design layout, however it was not unknown for issues to occur on seemingly solid engines as the Cooling Crisis had demonstrated. As this was the future mainstay of Bomber Command some insurance was considered wise just in case, so attention turned to the available options. The second place design had been the Handley Page HP.56 and that submission included an alternate engine, sadly it was the Alvis-Napier Sabre which was at an even earlier development stage than Vulture not to mention the ongoing disruption caused by the Alvis-Napier merger, making it an even less certain option. The logical solution was that if two engines were insufficient, then four could be provided, a change which 'only' required new longer and thicker wings and a great deal of internal re-arrangement around controls, fuel lines and similar. The initial preference was for four Rolls Royce Merlins, on the basis of an Air Staff study on expected bomber performance and the fact the Merlin was a proven established engine at this point. Handley Page however managed to get that switched to Bristol Hercules, on the basis of their much stronger experience with fitting and cowling air cooled radials and because the extra power would be needed to offset the increased drag from the larger aircraft. An interesting point would be that the torpedo and catapult requirements were removed at the same time so Handley Page could concentrate on the design of what was in many respects a new aircraft. That a specification that called for a twin engined medium bomber with torpedo capability would result in a design for a four engined effectively heavy bomber getting approved for prototyping did attract a degree of comment, however the reasoning was sound and at least at this stage the Air Staff did have a large amount of latitude to exercise their professional judgement. Once there were actually flying prototypes to look at there would be more pointed questions from the politicians to answer.

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The Supermarine drawing office in their newly refurbished Woolston works in Southampton. The 1930s were a transition time for aircraft design, twenty years earlier the teams were often less than ten people and much of the design process was not codified but relied upon the experience and engineering judgement of the chief designer while twenty years later and teams were hundreds or even thousands strong, the first commercially useful computers were available and the firmer theoretical understanding of aerodynamics and stress meant design was far less of a black art. The late 30s had design teams in the dozen, had some analytical methods to assess stress and from wind tunnel testing a solid but far from complete understanding of aerodynamics. As a result much of the chief designers contribution in this period was marshalling and combining the work of the team rather than detailing every part; a vital job but not an irreplaceable one, or so the Air Ministry hoped.

A naive observer might expect that as the P.13/36 specification had resulted in a four engined bomber being ordered for prototype this might impact the assessment of the B.12/36 specification, which was also for a four engined heavy bomber. This sort of thinking cut no ice with the Air Staff who had the reasonable defence that the two specifications were for substantially different aircraft, not least the fact that B.12/36 required double the bomb load. The resulting aircraft were intended to serve in a small number of squadrons who's wartime role would be to hit targets either at long range or that required a very large bomb load be dropped; the specified overloaded launch capacity was 14,000lb of bombs, a shade over 6 tons. A more meaningful comparison is perhaps the fact that a fully fuelled and loaded Bristol Blenheim light bomber only weighed 14,500lb, however measured the required bomb carrying capacity was truly immense. The designs also all had a ventral or dorsal turret in addition to two at the nose and tail, being intended for distant targets the Air Staff expected the bombers to be engaged more often and so need more turrets for defence. All of this came at a cost of course, the target cruising speed was almost 50mph slower than it's twin engined counterparts due to the extra weight and the increased drag from the larger size and the extra turrets. The discussions on this specification were more involved and it took several rounds of conference before a preferred design was agreed upon. At the technical level the Supermarine design was favoured, it was exceptionally "clean" aerodynamically and had much of the bomb load stored in the wings, allowing for a smaller fuselage and so less drag, all of which combined to make it exceptionally fast for such a large aircraft. The issue therefore was not the design but the company, not only were Supermarine were heavily committed to the Spitfire and another project but just as seriously their chief designer R J Mitchell had recently died, casting doubt on their ability to convert the paper design into a working aircraft with the stated performance. However the promise of the design, along with an understanding that Vickers would support Supermarine during the project and that all of Supermarine's non-Spitfire work be cancelled, was enough to see the design taken forward to prototyping. The Merlin engined Type 318 variant was tentatively selected as the Air Staff wanted to spread their bets on engine choice, though Supermarine were warned they would likely be held to their claim that engine type could be 'easily' changed. The other project was the Stingray, the latest upgrade to the venerable Seal/Sea Gull/Walrus line of amphibious biplanes that served as everything from gunnery spotters for cruisers to search and rescue aircraft. Naturally the Royal Navy objected and the Committee for Imperial Defence also made their views clear as the type had been slated for use by Australian and New Zealand on their cruisers, so the project was not cancelled but transferred to a different firm. A positive spin would see this as evidence of more joined up thinking between the services, though the Air Staff instead viewed it as confirming their worst fears about non-RAF types interfering with 'their industry' instead of just being grateful for the aircraft they were provided with.

With a degree of uncertainty looming over the preferred design the choice of second string backup attracted considerable attention. As with the medium bomber many of the tendered designs were quickly dismissed and need not detain us, however one failed contender is worth briefly mentioning as the reasoning is enlightening about the views of the Air Staff and Ministry at the time. The Armstrong Whitworth "Super Whitely" was rejected very early on and the company told to focus their efforts on the getting the Sabretooth Tiger engines into the standard Whitley, with the added instruction to finally sort out the wing incidence issue with the design while they were re-stressing the design for the 'new' engine loads. Interestingly as with Bristol their civil aviation projects were also cited as a reason not to give them the work, as we shall see when we look at the state of civil aviation in a later chapter they were heavily involved in another high profile airliner. The actual choice for second string came down to Shorts vs Boulton Paul and technically there was no clear winner, both designs needed some more refinement and both firms had made unfortunate engine choices; since the specification had been written less than a year earlier the Napier Dagger and Rolls Royce Kestrel had changed from acceptable options for a frontline aircraft to being preferred for export, trainer use or various non-aircraft purposes. As both would need re-designing for new engines the choice came down to industrial and workload factors, how busy the firms were and their capacity to produce the prototype and then the final design. Shorts were initially favoured, they had experience in large four engined aircraft and through their Short & Harland joint venture had a pool of available design staff they could share the workload with. Yet it was Boulton Paul who were selected, machinations elsewhere meant that Shorts were required to focus on other projects while Boulton Paul would find themselves short on work and in need of a project to keep their workforce busy. That said the Boulton Paul design was not a bad design picked solely due to workshare concerns, despite their lack of large monoplane experience the design was assessed as far easier to manufacture than the Shorts effort and the rear turret was particularly admired for it's low drag layout. The point is that had decisions in other specifications gone the other way Boulton Paul who have been focused on other projects while the Shorts design would be selected because it was the lower risk option from a company experienced in four engine monoplane design and construction; the stated reasoning of the tender design conferences should always be read with some caution, while wider industry and strategic concerns often drove their decisions they were reluctant to ever admit to this, if nothing else telling a company they had only got the job for workshare reasons was seen as a bad for morale at the firm in question and an invitation for yet more unwelcome questioning from those in government who disliked the entire Ring approach.
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A Bristol Bombay bomber transport prototype on a trials flight, the under fuselage ordnance racks for the bomber part of it's role clearly visible. The need for a replacement for the biplane Vickers Vincents and Valentinas had risen up the priority list after the high profile role of No.216 squadron during the early stages of the Abyssinian War and the dramatic trans-continental 'Smuts Flight'. While in very heavy used by the RAF commands in the Middle East and India the bomber transport type had not been highly valued by the Air Staff who would have preferred more bomber. But with the Air Ministry, Committee of Imperial Defence and various 'air minded' MPs keen on the type and a higher priority given to the Aerial Policing mission, the Bombay was pushed forward for production. With Bristol heavily committed elsewhere the job was given to the Shorts & Harland factory in Belfast, they were also tasked with a number of modifications to the aircraft using the design resources Shorts had intended to use for the heavy bomber prototype production.

Before we leave the heavy and medium bombers behind us there is the matter of the B.17/37 specification which while never issued still managed to cause a great deal of heated debate inside the Air Staff. With the Lindemann Committee still working away on it's first recommendations report and the 'Ideal Bomber' project to convert those into operational requirements not even started, in theory the Air Staff should have been waiting before issuing any new specifications. In practice there was a great deal of jostling to get various pet projects started to create some 'facts in the air' or even just designs to bolster the relevant arguments. At one extreme came the faction that was basically happy with the current approach save for the lack of defensive firepower, recognising more turrets probably wasn't an option they wanted more lethal turrets, specifically 20mm cannon armed turrets instead of 0.303" machine guns. Given the large weight of said cannons and their ammunition supply they could not just be 'dropped in' to replace standard turrets, instead new aircraft would have to be designed around them. That a practical 20mm turret did not exist at this point, so there was nothing to design around, was deemed a minor issue and something for the manufacturers to sort out in their tender designs. At the other extreme the unarmed bomber faction were pushing for a high speed, high altitude bomber that could not be intercepted and so would not need weapons. In between was to be found those parts of the Air Staff that had to interact and deal with politicians, their main concern was a bomber that had a Far Eastern scale operational range, or at least something close, to show the RAF was responding to political concerns and so deserved a lot more funding. The compromise was the B.17/37 specification which attempted to do all of those things and yet was surprisingly coherent, at least on paper. On the defensive side the starting point was the RAE's belief that a remote controlled turret was probably technically feasible or very close to it, this was relevant because if gun turrets didn't have to fit a gunner in they could be a lot more aerodynamic, especially if the guns were concentrated in a tail turret. On the range issue the specification took it's cue from the trend towards accuracy and traded away a great deal of bomb load for fuel as well as specifying 'overload' launch to maximise the launch weight. Finally the cruising altitude was set at over 35,000ft, which required the aircraft to be pressurised, the cruising speed was to be at least 300mph while the range was set at being able to haul a mere 4,000lb of bombs 4,500 miles, which would put Taiwan in plausible range of a Malay based bomber. While none of the factions were pleased it ticked enough boxes for them to at least accept it, there was just one issue; the design was hideously impractical. While the technologies required existed they had only been used individually on highly specialised experimental aircraft or in the laboratory, certainly they had never been used all together while in the -50ºC air temperature of the expected altitude. While the exercise had comprehensively proven that some compromise would be required in the next generation of bombers, and prompted a number of research programmes to be urgently started, the Air Council was forced to step in and put a stop to the arguments. They instructing all sides to wait until the 'Ideal Bomber' report on what was both desirable and possible was issued later the following year, this was done in the full and certain knowledge that the instruction would just delay the argument as there was little hope of the report being universally accepted without a fight. Having dealt with the larger bombers we must move onto their lighter brethren, an area which in addition to all the technical and industrial considerations of the heavies also had politics, strategy and diplomacy to deal with.

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Notes:
Slightly longer than I had hoped, a different author would probably have cut off the entire first section but I left it in so everyone could understand how RAF aircraft procurement works because that is the sort of story this is.

The first three specifications are all entirely historic, however the selected aircraft are not for I hope solid enough reasons. If you know your British WW2 bombers then I hope you are nodding appreciatively and can enjoy speculating on the changes, if you have neglected your studies in that area I hope it was still an enjoyable read as I tried to steer clear of a confusing and distracting dump of numbers and figures. R J Mitchell's death is OTL, the Supermarine B.12/36 bomber was his last major design and the Air Ministry's concern about his absence is also historic. I would say this period is around the end of the 'Great Man' of design/engineering, before this point you could say one person designed that aircraft or engine, but around this point it becomes one person designed a key element and post-WW2 it was all mostly huge design teams. That said there is still space for my 'Great Idiot of History' theory as while one person cannot single handedly produce a war changing design, one idiot can still make really stupid decisions - see the He-119 Kurtie was discussing at the top of the page.

The 17/37 specification existed and was nothing like what was described, but it got abandoned for a similar reason - the RAF was unsure what a good bomber looked liked. The 'Ideal Bomber' study was an actual project of the Air Staff but the OTL version was aimed on producing a Standard Bomber, merging the Heavy and Medium categories and incorporating all the newest technologies, etc. In Butterfly it will be more concerned about producing a bomber that can survive in a world of RDF/radar and then be capable of finding and hitting precision targets, so all the listed often contradictory ideas about speed, altitude, armament will have to be balanced. Oh and it has to have a much longer range so the RAF can be taken seriously in chats about offensive war in the Far East.

I love the Bomber Transport idea not least because it seemed to actually work, it's another thing I think Past Pip should have covered in a bit more detail when talking about 216 Squadron and the early days of the Abyssinian War. But then if he'd done that we'd never have made any progress at all so perhaps it is for the best it was glossed over.

I'm hopeful the next one will be shorter as so much has been explained here and the Air Ministry used the same procurement process for everything, but I've thought that before so we shall have to see.
 
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Once more I am in awe of the level of detail here. A real throwback to how AARs used to be. The all empire planes will mean very nice economies of scale in war production (and hopefully post war as well).
 
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Great Britain is in clear need of a war, which is when its brightest minds begin to properly work... after a bit of a trashing for the British Armed Forces, though.

It's not a perfect plan, but, well, that's life!
 
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However I'm sure it is an option in HOI4, because every other nation has a reactionary monarch focus tree so South Africa is bound to.

It's a double score in this case. Edward can become king of South Africa, and then become the crusading holy monarch of Jerusalem.

design team inexperience

Never really thought about it but yeah...basically everyone is either totally inexperienced or experienced with biplane designs...

defence friendly Chancellor

Ah yes...who is that again?

In their typical false precision fashion the Air Staff decided on the 80/20 policy, deciding that 80% of the defence of a bomber was it's speed and 20% defensive guns, but that the 20% was vital.

Uh huh. Pardon my French but qu'est-ce que ça veut dire, bordel?

beating back the commercial challenge of US airline manufacturers was rated a comparable priority with rearmament and Bomber Command modernisation.

Sensible with hindsight. Hopefully it pays off here. Given what UK has already invested into long haul flights, makes sense they want to keep going.

That said there is still space for my 'Great Idiot of History' theory as while one person cannot single handedly produce a war changing design, one idiot can still make really stupid decisions - see the He-119 Kurtie was discussing at the top of the page.

I do enjoy this theory, and bascially used it in TBTM, albiet unconciously. Several different idiots doing very foolish things for somewhat understandable reasons throughout the period covered thus far, with the most succesful being those who could get people to work together no matter how much they disliked one another.

Once more I am in awe of the level of detail here. A real throwback to how AARs used to be. The all empire planes will mean very nice economies of scale in war production (and hopefully post war as well).

Mm. The all empire postal service and transportation company should be a good start that could well stick around for a long time. The race to get to South America by air seems to have boosted british airline efforts too, so...

Great Britain is in clear need of a war, which is when its brightest minds begin to properly work... after a bit of a trashing for the British Armed Forces, though.

It's not a perfect plan, but, well, that's life!

I believe that was the initial premise, have the Ethiopian war spill out into trashing Italy, forcing the UK and Co to confront the 20th century head on.
 
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Once more I am in awe of the level of detail here. A real throwback to how AARs used to be. The all empire planes will mean very nice economies of scale in war production (and hopefully post war as well).
Well thank you for that, it is always nice to know the level of excessively baroque detail is appreciated.

All empire planes was a funny one, Australia and Canada ended up picking different British planes while everyone else realised it was beyond their reach so didn't bother. The tricky part will be all empire engines, realistically only Britain can produce them inside the Empire so the challenge will be making sure there is enough supply that the Dominons don't have to turn to US suppliers.
Great Britain is in clear need of a war, which is when its brightest minds begin to properly work... after a bit of a trashing for the British Armed Forces, though.

It's not a perfect plan, but, well, that's life!
Certainly that has been the historic approach, though a better plan would be to have a system that works in peace as well. Though that will be something of a challenge.
It's a double score in this case. Edward can become king of South Africa, and then become the crusading holy monarch of Jerusalem.
Of course.
Never really thought about it but yeah...basically everyone is either totally inexperienced or experienced with biplane designs...
Non-obvious but still tricky technology is also advancing - stressed skin bodies are relatively new and a big change from fabric or even metal skins, monocoques are also pretty new. Then there is the physics, below 300mph you can treat air as incompressible, above that speed it starts being a problem and only get worse as you approach the sound barrier. Lots of fighters had problems in dives caused by that change in air behaviour.
Ah yes...who is that again?
Self proclaimed economic heretic Leo Amery
Uh huh. Pardon my French but qu'est-ce que ça veut dire, bordel?
There is never any excuse for French. :(

It is a strange idea isn't it? The general idea I can follow, a faster aircraft is harder to intercept and has more chance of escape, but at some point the bomber will get intercepted so will need the guns to defend itself. How on earth you put percentages to that is a mystery known only to the Air Staff.
Sensible with hindsight. Hopefully it pays off here. Given what UK has already invested into long haul flights, makes sense they want to keep going.
At the time it was recognised as a problem, one of the non-financial costs of re-armament. And another reason why it was sold as 'just' re-armament, a relatively short burst of intense defence spending and then back to normal levels of effort so all the firms could get back to civilian projects.
I do enjoy this theory, and bascially used it in TBTM, albiet unconciously. Several different idiots doing very foolish things for somewhat understandable reasons throughout the period covered thus far, with the most succesful being those who could get people to work together no matter how much they disliked one another.
Once you are aware of the theory you will see it in many places.
Mm. The all empire postal service and transportation company should be a good start that could well stick around for a long time. The race to get to South America by air seems to have boosted british airline efforts too, so...
EAMS is a funny one, but we shall certainly be looking at it in the (probably fairly distant) future. Civilian airliners however will crop up as part of this run of air related chapters.
I believe that was the initial premise, have the Ethiopian war spill out into trashing Italy, forcing the UK and Co to confront the 20th century head on.
I am actually coming round to the opposite view. That the country (not necessarily the politicians but everyone else) was doing a fairly good job of confronting the 20th Century, until everyone got distracted by the Nazis and then the nation was led down a dead end by the measures necessary to fight the war. Pre-war not even the mainstream Labour party was proposing the levels of centralisation and command/control economy that were in place by 1941 and which, along with the austerity, were the basis of post-war.

I've got some more reading to do on it, "1938: Modern Britain" is next on the list, but I'm feeling fairly sure on this thesis. The UK didn't need a shock to face modernity, it needed to avoid WW2 to avoid being pushed off the 'modern' path it was already on.
 
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A TBE update, and not even at the top of the page. El Pip apologising for it's length. What's going on? Why the rush? Is everything ok?
That said, I'm not complaining. If this is the new tempo going forward.

I'm not particularly educated on British bomber prototypes, so this is quite educational. Even if I'm not sure what to do with this newfound knowledge, it continues to fascinate me nonetheless. Thanks for the explanations indicating the differences and similarities with OTL. Have a great year.
 
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Of course.

Just occurred to me that this is a perfect sequel to Imperial Cheese, both for the premise and because I'm not altogether sure South Africa is powerful enough to take the rest of Africa and the Middle East.

Presumably it involves Nazis.

Then there is the physics, below 300mph you can treat air as incompressible, above that speed it starts being a problem and only get worse as you approach the sound barrier. Lots of fighters had problems in dives caused by that change in air behaviour.

Turning generally is a problem for airplanes going above 200mph. Esepcially 30s and 40s planes without modern materials and using the flaps they did. Diving shouldn't be a problem yet but apparently later war fighters were hitting the sound barrier in a full dive. I would say the bigger issue is making sure the plane doesn't destroy itself when it suddenly switches directions (esepcially the wings), with the sound barrier increasingly becoming a problem as jet engines mean you can go through it in a normal motion rather than the harshest dive.

Of course, the 200 to 300 range is when you start having problems with humans in the plane too.

Self proclaimed economic heretic Leo Amery

That should be fun.

It is a strange idea isn't it?

Smacks of accountancy mixed with politics. No one else makes up figures like that.

Once you are aware of the theory you will see it in many places

The US DemRepublicans for pushing for 1812 (OTL decision was stupid too really but TTL even worse), Napolean for coming back, the Russian navy in 1905, the Kaiser in 1914 (invading the Netherlands for no reason), arguably Atherleigh for imaging Egypt in 1880s and having to be bailed out by Sailsbury and Bismark...

Yes, lots of idiotic decisions and people.

I am actually coming round to the opposite view. That the country (not necessarily the politicians but everyone else) was doing a fairly good job of confronting the 20th Century, until everyone got distracted by the Nazis and then the nation was led down a dead end by the measures necessary to fight the war. Pre-war not even the mainstream Labour party was proposing the levels of centralisation and command/control economy that were in place by 1941 and which, along with the austerity, were the basis of post-war.

I've got some more reading to do on it, "1938: Modern Britain" is next on the list, but I'm feeling fairly sure on this thesis. The UK didn't need a shock to face modernity, it needed to avoid WW2 to avoid being pushed off the 'modern' path it was already on.

I must have agreed subconsciously, because I said 'intial premise', but it's hard to read any of the industry chapters and not think british industry actually did know what it was doing and then had to effectively halt for a decade, utterly ruining everything.
 
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All told, I felt like I was reading a bit about the modern US Defense Department from the aughts to the mid-teens of this millennium talking "concurrency" and how everything is fine, we'll buy a bunch of things now and of course they'll be fully backwards compatible with the new developments (yes, I'm looking right the hell at you, F35 and Ford-class)...
 
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All told, I felt like I was reading a bit about the modern US Defense Department from the aughts to the mid-teens of this millennium talking "concurrency" and how everything is fine, we'll buy a bunch of things now and of course they'll be fully backwards compatible with the new developments (yes, I'm looking right the hell at you, F35 and Ford-class)...

To be fair to the british, they don't know what aircraft carriers really mean for aviation yet, have only just cottoned on to the idea that the jet engine they're working on is going to make almost everything they're doing obsolete, or that within a decade they'll have hundreds and hundreds of fighters to cover bombing missions.

The US had no excuse.
 
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To be fair to the british, they don't know what aircraft carriers really mean for aviation yet, have only just cottoned on to the idea that the jet engine they're working on is going to make almost everything they're doing obsolete, or that within a decade they'll have hundreds and hundreds of fighters to cover bombing missions.

The US had no excuse.
I agree, but some might say the same thing a few decades from now about hypersonics or whatever else is just slithering out of Skunk Works or DARPA, et al.
 
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A TBE update, and not even at the top of the page. El Pip apologising for it's length. What's going on? Why the rush? Is everything ok?
These are dark and fallen times, had I waited for the top of the page to be free it could have taken days or perhaps weeks given the current activity levels. As I did want to get it out this year sacrifices had to be made.

As for the length, well I had intended this to be just a single chapter and it's already onto Part 3 and that may not be the end of it.
That said, I'm not complaining. If this is the new tempo going forward.
It was 6 chapters in 2021, 7 chapters in 2022 and with that last one 6 in 2023. Things appear to have stabilised in terms of tempo, if perhaps not at the level I hoped.
I'm not particularly educated on British bomber prototypes, so this is quite educational. Even if I'm not sure what to do with this newfound knowledge, it continues to fascinate me nonetheless.
I did ponder explaining what those bombers would become and indeed what historic models will not appear, but there are still a few twists to come so I decided to save that for when the final decision is made and things enter service. Glad it was still interesting.
Thanks for the explanations indicating the differences and similarities with OTL. Have a great year.
To you as well!
Just occurred to me that this is a perfect sequel to Imperial Cheese, both for the premise and because I'm not altogether sure South Africa is powerful enough to take the rest of Africa and the Middle East.

Presumably it involves Nazis.
If you are going down that path I imagine you will end up allied with Nazis at some point, equally you are bound to get some stupidly OP focuses as Paradox treats game balance with nothing but contempt.
That should be fun.
He's already made quite an impact, though I suppose thus far he has only triggered fun. The consequences are not yet apparent, but they soon will be.
Smacks of accountancy mixed with politics. No one else makes up figures like that.
The Air Staff loved doing stuff like that, for most of the 20s and 30s they stated as unarguable fact that the morale effect of bombing was 20x greater than the material damage. A claim that makes less sense the more you think about it, how do you even compare the two let alone calculate such a precise multiple?
I must have agreed subconsciously, because I said 'intial premise', but it's hard to read any of the industry chapters and not think british industry actually did know what it was doing and then had to effectively halt for a decade, utterly ruining everything.
It is so sad.
All told, I felt like I was reading a bit about the modern US Defense Department from the aughts to the mid-teens of this millennium talking "concurrency" and how everything is fine, we'll buy a bunch of things now and of course they'll be fully backwards compatible with the new developments (yes, I'm looking right the hell at you, F35 and Ford-class)...
Surely the killer example of that is the LCS-class, on the basis that at least the Ford and F-35 worked in the end where as the USN is desperately trying to decommission the LCS as fast as Congress will let them.
The US had no excuse.
Particularly as there is a 1990 GAO report saying the DoD should stop doing concurrency in acquisition as it isn't working. Though in fairness they also say that post-cold war the urgency is no longer there.
I agree, but some might say the same thing a few decades from now about hypersonics or whatever else is just slithering out of Skunk Works or DARPA, et al.
I have a degree of sympathy with the last effort at concurrency when you look at the other extreme. The US Army had endless development programmes to try and get some new armoured vehicles, FCS, MGV, GCV, loads of testing, development and prototypes. After all those years and billions spent a replacement for the M113 is picked - and it's a Bradley with the turret taken off.

Obviously you'd prefer neither of those extremes and would go for a sensible middle route. But if I was forced to pick I'd go 'Concurrency' as at least you have a chance at getting something good out of it and do so within a reasonable timescale.
 
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If you are going down that path I imagine you will end up allied with Nazis at some point, equally you are bound to get some stupidly OP focuses as Paradox treats game balance with nothing but contempt.

It seems you have to defy Westminster, go down the path of independence, decide whether or not to allow the nazis to coup south Africa for you, burn every bridge possible with the UK and then at the bottom of that particular tree, finally chose Edward as a King for our people.

There isn't actually anything helping you go from there to conquering Africa, the only suggestion you could do so is a steam achievement saying take over the Holy Land as Edward of Africa.

Unless I suppose you do agree to become a nazi puppet state, at which point they probably will hand over Africa and the middle east to Edward rather than Italy...but it'd be a bit crap.

If you are going down that path I imagine you will end up allied with Nazis at some point, equally you are bound to get some stupidly OP focuses as Paradox treats game balance with nothing but contempt.

On the other hand, sticking with the UK like glue (the other option for this tree), allows you to ask the UK to give you all of Africa that it owns, which in base game HOI4 includes Egypt and Suez.

And they presumably will.

That's a much better plan for South Africa Continental ambitions. Especially good for the UK if they then use Imperial Federation, which annexes south Africa and fronts cores on all the land they posses.

Meaning in giving over troublesome colonies and Egypt to south Africa for in exchanging for them agreeing to imperial federation, you get all that African stuff back but now as cores.

Had Churchill done that as part of his Imperial Federation plan, South Africa probably wouldn't have been murdered so easily by Angolia and Mozambique in Imperial Cheese.

thus far he has only triggered fun.

Promising.
 
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A Christmas miracle, already an update! And a damn fine one.

I was aware of the process for selecting planes (though I most probably also read it somewhere in this AAR), but it's a good primer for beginners.

I read the update without wiki, and I'm checking it with wiki now.

If I understood it correctly, we got:

- for B.12/36: Supermarine B.12/36 and Boulton Paul ???
- for P.13/36: Avro Manchester and Handley Page Halifax
- for B.1/35: Vickers Warwick

So Short Stirling gets axed? And is Boulton Paul design OTL, wiki does not mention it under that specification?

Aims for new bomber sound reasonable, seems that they just need the technology to mature.
 
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A Christmas miracle, already an update! And a damn fine one.
Kind of you to say.
I was aware of the process for selecting planes (though I most probably also read it somewhere in this AAR), but it's a good primer for beginners.

I read the update without wiki, and I'm checking it with wiki now.
This is the kind of reader I truly appreciate, one that puts the effort in.
Z3wSg01.gif

If I understood it correctly, we got:

- for B.12/36: Supermarine B.12/36 and Boulton Paul ???
- for P.13/36: Avro Manchester and Handley Page Halifax
- for B.1/35: Vickers Warwick

So Short Stirling gets axed? And is Boulton Paul design OTL, wiki does not mention it under that specification?
Yes and Yes. The Short Stirling is gone. It only just got selected in OTL and the decision could easily have gone differently, particularly Short didn't even make the initial tender list and were a late addition. A lot of arguments about experience were made as Short had made large four engined aircraft and that was seen as valuable but it was all in seaplanes so the question was if that experience was relevant. I think it pretty much wasn't as seaplanes were notoriously 'robust' (i.e. heavy) to cope with rough seas take-off/landings, as the biggest single problem the Stirling had was weight gain reducing performance/altitude, so I think their experience as more negative than positive. In any event in Butterfly they were busy on other things so don't get the contract.

The Boulton Paul spec was OTL and was favoured early on, even after the Supermarine offer it was the preferred choice of the technical department as second string. However problems on other B-P aircraft and some interventions from on-high saw Short get the gig. B-P called it the P.90 and there is some information on it in various places if you search for that name.
Aims for new bomber sound reasonable, seems that they just need the technology to mature.
Very true, but the problem is you can always say that. There is always a technology just on the horizon that needs some time to mature and then one a bit beyond it. If the RAF wait for high altitude and refuelling to be mature, they will soon find that jets are almost plausible and just need some time to mature, so do they wait for them? Either way they will have gone a few years relying on A-W Whitworths as the only heavy bomber, moreover if they wait a few years there may be a new chancellor (or new government) who aren't so defence friendly and they wont be able to buy anything. Without hindsight none of this is easy.

On the specifcs the new bomber will have to juggle being ambitious enough the aircraft isn't instantly obsolete but not too ambitious and ending up with an unreliable mess, while also satisfying several contradictory requirements.
 
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Oh wow. Still not finished huh?
Well after being absent for arround four years, I just remembered something I forgot. Which might have been this excellent AAR. Might.

While just reading the new chapters since then propably only will take three to four pages, I think I'll start from the beginning again. Been so long, it might be worth it.

So Ill see you fine people again in a year or two when I catched up to the surely then released glorious finale! See you on the other side. :)
 
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Oh wow. Still not finished huh?
Not even close, but at least things have stopped going backwards. That was a worrying trend for a while.
Well after being absent for arround four years, I just remembered something I forgot. Which might have been this excellent AAR. Might.

While just reading the new chapters since then propably only will take three to four pages,
That's a bit harsh. In four years I've managed 22 whole chapters, easily covering a couple of months of game time.
I think I'll start from the beginning again. Been so long, it might be worth it.
It absolutely is, a work that bears regular re-reading to fully appreciate the many threads and subtle depths.
Z3wSg01.gif

So Ill see you fine people again in a year or two when I catched up to the surely then released glorious finale! See you on the other side. :)
Such ill-advised optimism! Good luck on the re-read, look forward to seeing you when caught up.


In other news, welcome and appreciation to @Chomp87 currently liking their way through the work according to my notifications. It is deeply heartening to see that people are still finding and reading their way through this, please feel free to comment or question on even deeply ancient chapters as it will be much appreciated and answered in excessive detail if required.
 
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Not even close, but at least things have stopped going backwards. That was a worrying trend for a while.
One might say one requires going backwards to go forwards, yes? What say you, @TheButterflyComposer?

Not that it matters, but this is last post for Top of Page!!!! Perhaps and end-of-month miracle is in store?
 
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