a. General
Since German Air Force (GAF) airdromes in the occupied countries of
Western Europe have served more generally for offensive activity, they have been
developed in some instances to a greater extent than those in the Fatherland. The
latter are now being used principally as supply and training bases. During
the past 2 years, airdromes in France and the Lowlands have undergone
extensive improvements in regard to dispersal arrangements, night-landing systems,
the number and length of runways, and the construction of shelters and other
facilities.
Occupied France has been the theater of greatest development, with at
least 500 bases now available to the GAF. Forty-seven of these are fully
equipped bomber airdromes, 28 permanent fighter airdromes, and 9 bomber-reconnaissance
bases. There are approximately 23 GAF airdromes and landing
fields in Holland; and while Belgium has 34 German landing fields and 32 airdromes,
few of these are in operational use at present. Seaplane bases are not
included in these estimates.
b. Shape and Size
GAF airdromes on the Western Front are usually square in shape, and
have an area of about 450 acres. Prior to 1941 few airdromes had more than one
bomber runway, rarely exceeding 1,400 yards in length. Today, almost all
bomber airdromes have three runways from 1,500 to 3,000 yards in length. A
single instance of a bomber runway 6,000 yards long has been reported in the
Morbihan area (in Brittany). The runways of bomber airdromes are flanked by
specially levelled strips, probably prepared with a bituminous dressing, and
providing a serviceable surface some 180 to 200 yards wide. Concrete taxi-tracks
connect the runways with the dispersal areas; and there are apron assembly
areas at the ends of the runways, sufficiently large for about six aircraft to
assemble and take off in quick succession. Early runways on bomber airdromes
were laid near and parallel to one boundary of the landing area. More recently,
they were laid across the countryside, terminating at the edge of the airdrome. It
is now the practice to lay additional runways across the countryside and connect
them with extended dispersal areas.
Both day and night twin-engine fighters are based at airdromes similar
to those used by bombers, although these airdromes are often not quite large
enough, or of the proper construction, for heavily laden aircraft. The Me-110's,
however, sometimes operate from airdromes which have one or two runways
from 800 to 1,100 yards long. There is a specially constructed twin-engine fighter
airdrome at Denain (Northern France) that has two 1,650-yard runways.
In contrast to the square-shaped bomber airdrome, a typical single-engine
fighter airdrome is long and narrow, i.e., 1,400 by 700 yards, with shelters
around the perimeter and near the landing surface. It has one, or sometimes
two, runways averaging 850 yards in length.
Dive-bombers operate from any of the above types of airdromes, but
usually from forward landing fields that have received the minimum of
preparation. The use of advanced bases enables the Germans to decrease the radius
of action of the bomber, thus making it possible for a larger bomb load to be
carried. These fields are about 870 to 1,100 yards square. In Holland the distinction
between fighter and bomber airdromes is less apparent. Here all-purpose
fields, suitable for every type of aircraft, have been developed to a high
degree of efficiency.
c. Dispersal of Aircraft
The normal complement of aircraft at a bomber airdrome in the occupied
countries is a Gruppe of 30 to 40 planes; however, an additional bomber
reconnaissance Staffel of from 9 to 12 aircraft is sometimes found at the
bomber base. An airdrome built specially for bomber reconnaissance usually
accommodates one or two Staffeln, and serves equally well
for a Staffel of twin-engine fighters. The take-off area of such an
airdrome is likely to be small and unsuitable for aircraft carrying heavy
bomb loads.
The standard of dispersal of aircraft and facilities in GAF airdromes in
occupied countries is thought to be superior to that in Germany. Aircraft are
dispersed according to type, bomber airdromes having large areas well removed
from the field, while fighter airdromes have smaller areas near the perimeter. There
is usually one such area for each Staffel of 9 to 12 planes. An airdrome
at which a Gruppe is stationed will normally have three to four
dispersal areas. Each dispersal area has its own aircraft shelters, repair
hangar, and storehouses for bombs, fuel, and ammunition.
Dispersal of aircraft has been known to cover an area of 6 square miles,
and plans are said to be under way at several airdromes to accommodate two or
even three Gruppen. It is believed that as many as 2,000 fighters could be
stationed in the Calais-Boulogne area, distributed among at least 50 or more
airdromes, and dispersed in such a way as to be almost invulnerable to attack. The
existence of stop-off and alternate escape airdromes together with operational
airdromes that remain unoccupied until the day of an offensive are
important factors in facilitating dispersal of air units.
Key fighter airdromes are protected by satellite or auxiliary airfields located
in the same vicinity, which also function as extended dispersal areas but
sometimes serve as decoys. It is believed that most of the permanent GAF fields
along the French coast have satellites, over 20,000 acres of land having been
estimated as lost to cultivation because of this program. This is in marked
contrast to the policy in Germany of confining shelters within small compact areas
to save agricultural acreage.
d. Protection for Aircraft
The system of wide dispersal of aircraft has replaced to a certain extent
the use of hangars. Hangars are now employed chiefly as repair shops, the
old V-shaped and Z types, and the typical French domed structures being the
most common. Medium-sized fields generally have from two to six hangars
which average about 180 by 105 feet. Larger fields, like the one at
Evre, in Brussels, have 40 hangars, 30 feet high in front and 15 feet high
in the rear, with walls about 2 feet thick. Each is large enough to hold a
bomber with three fighters under its wings, and is camouflaged as a store, cafe, etc.
Well-dispersed revetments apparently afford the most satisfactory protection
for aircraft. They are of a more permanent nature than those built in 1939, which
consisted of two parallel sandbag walls and were roofless. The new
shelters are built beyond the periphery of the take-off runway, in woods, villages
or on farms, and are usually of U-shaped concrete construction with camouflage-net
roofs into which foliage has been woven.
The concrete shelters are often built underground and have electric
installations. They slope into the earth on all sides except the south, this side
being left vertical since it casts no shadow. When two or more planes are stored
in a shelter, they are partitioned off by blast walls erected all the way to the
roof. T-shaped tunnels about 9 feet deep, into which planes are placed tail-first, are
among the underground shelters, and are particularly in evidence at single-engine
fighter fields. Underground and semi-underground shelters are used principally
as quarters for personnel, protection for individual aircraft, and supply depots;
however, entire underground airdromes are known to exist at vital points, and
unconfirmed information indicates that the number of airdromes constructed in
this way is rapidly increasing.
In addition to concrete shelters, there are shelters of metal construction. It
has been estimated that 25 tons of iron were used in the construction of each
of 35 shelters at the Vannes airdrome. There are also the "villa" type shelters
with red roofs, dummy chimneys, etc., these often being grouped to give the
impression of a village. Some of them, e.g., those at the Deelen airdrome in
Holland, are large enough for two bomber or several fighter aircraft. Similar
shelters in Belgium are made of stone blocks, with roofs of wire netting thatched
with heather; one at Liege has a dummy church spire erected over it.
e. Camouflage and Deception
GAF airdromes are camouflaged by the usual methods, some of which
have been already mentioned in connection with shelter and hangar
construction. Simulated farms, factories, villages, etc., are common; artificial
trees, shrubbery, nets to break shadows, and disruptive painting are among the usual
methods of disguise and concealment. In some cases, actual villages are taken
over, their principal buildings being used for air shelters, repair shops, hangars,
administrative offices, etc. The framework of these buildings is left intact, i.e., a
church may serve as a hangar, or a school as barracks. Camouflage is also
effected by building airdromes astride important highways, by diverting or
covering streams, and by the frequent use of unmarked landing take-off zones in
open country (see Tactical and Technical Trends, No. 7, p. 16).
Dummy and decoy airdromes continue to be employed extensively. A
dummy airdrome, usually a replica of a real airdrome in its vicinity, is simply
a fraud and is never used for landings, while a decoy airdrome, used solely for
the purpose of diverting air attacks from a more important target, has been used
in the past and will undoubtedly be used again. It has been reported that complete
lighting systems have been set up after the pattern of installation used at a
real airdrome. The use of dummy installations on active fields, or near any
permanent airdrome buildings, has recently been banned since they invite fire
from the enemy. Such installations, when employed, were placed one and one-half
or two miles from the real airdromes.
f. Refuelling
The old "ladder" type servicing apron, which is still employed, has
been the most general refuelling system until recently. Aircraft serviced by
this method stood on the concrete rungs of the ladder while motor transport and
bomb trolleys circulated freely on the apron on either side of the rungs. Three
rungs were normally served by a fuel line, with refuelling points beside each
rung. The present trend is for the aircraft to be refuelled from tanks in
dispersal areas. At the Morlaix airdrome in France there is an underground
concrete reservoir system for gasoline storage. The reservoirs are close to the
perimeter and about 8 feet underground; they measure approximately 1,000 cubic
feet and are made of concrete about 3 feet thick. They are connected to
each other by central tube, and the complete system is connected to the
highway by a hose. Fuel and munitions are also stored in small camouflaged
trenches scattered on, or at varying distances from, the periphery.
g. Night Approach Systems
Most GAF bomber and fighter bases are now approached at night by
means of the visual Lorenz blind-flying systems. Installations are still in the
process of completion, and it is believed that all bases will soon be equipped
with this system. Previously, a GAF bomber homing at night would locate its
airdrome by means of the direction-finder station. The aircraft would then
elect a landing principally by the use of non-visual procedure such
as Lorenz, Z.A., etc.
Visual aids at airdromes used for night operations have been developed
increasingly during the past 2 years. They include flashing and rotation light
beacons, star-shell cannon, searchlights, flare-paths, and obstruction lights. The
visual Lorenz is perhaps the most common of a dozen or more lighting
systems; however, a newer method about which little is known is believed to be
in effect now.
A Lorenz system consists of a straight line of lights, one and one half to
three miles in length, which aligns the axis of each runway of an airdrome, and
is crossed at right angles by short lines of lights 500 to 1,400 yards long. The
short lines indicate the exact distance from the airdrome boundary, and the
height at which the aircraft should be flying. Several systems of four to six
main lines of lights usually approach the airdrome from different directions to
line up each runway and to allow for variation in wind direction. Each set of
lights is so arranged that it can be switched on independently of the others.
Systems have now been completed to provide four to six separate cross lines
instead of the two or three formerly used.
In the current visual Lorenz system there is apparently no fixed length
for either the main or cross lines of lights. Both the length of the main line, and
the distances of the cross lines from the airdrome boundary vary among the
several sets of lights at one airdrome; thus pilots must be familiar with each
set of lights employed at the airdromes which they use.
h. Protection of Airdromes
All airdromes are well protected with antiaircraft guns. The normal
distribution consists of one battery of heavy guns to four or more batteries of
light weapons, emplaced from one to several hundred feet from the landing
ground, and a varying allotment of small-caliber machine guns, usually 20-mm
and 37-mm, emplaced near the immediate approaches of the runways, or even
in the midst of the installations. Antiaircraft protection is increased at the
more vital bases, especially those equipped with visual Lorenz, to two heavy and
eight or nine light batteries.
Heavy 88-mm guns are generally located in a four-pointed star pattern,
the gun positions constituting the points, with the predictor unit in the
center. Protection of guns and men often appears to be subordinated to better visibility
and firing conditions. Wherever obstacles interfere with the field of fire, towers
about 30 feet high and 12 feet wide are erected, on which medium and light guns are
mounted. Flak towers at Diest-Schaffen in Belgium are 50 feet high, and
are mounted with 40-mm guns.
The usual barbed-wire entanglements surround all airdromes; and movable
objects such as metal beams are placed on the fields to prevent enemy
landings. These obstructions are removed 2 hours before the arrival of friendly
aircraft, and are immediately replaced after their departure. Forty cistern trucks
were said to have been employed to remove these obstacles from one particular field.
i. Communications
As has been previously reported, GAF airdromes are sited near a main
railroad, usually on the outskirts of villages or small towns, or about 3 miles
from cities. There is a notable increase in the number of branch lines being
built, and airdromes are frequently encircled by spur tracks with underground
discharging points. Motor units are employed for transporting supplies from
these points, and from specially built sidings on the fields. Ju-52's continue to be
used for air transport throughout the entire GAF.
j. Conclusion
From an analysis of these improvements and changes in GAF policy, we
may conclude that the Germans consider the following as the chief elements of
airdrome security: means of quick dispersal, adequate antiaircraft defense
against low-flying attacks, effective camouflage, and (obviously) the alertness of
combat crews. We have only to recall that the typical French airfield in 1940
consisted of about 250 acres and had no special runways and few other facilities,
to realize the tremendous undertaking of the Germans. Their achievements
represent the solution of serious drainage problems and runway construction
difficulties, as well as the immediate replacement of methods, both offensive and
defensive, that have proved ineffective. It is needless to say that this program
has required a vast airdrome construction and maintenance crew, from one to
two thousand civilian and military personnel generally being employed for one
airdrome area.