ChatterBank2 mins ago
The Word "group"...
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is used, according to the dictionary, in the RAF to denote a number of planes subordinate to a wing. Yet the rank of Group Captain is higher than the rank of Wing Commander. Anybody know why?
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I don't think you're right, vulcan.
In the RAF a Flight is part of a Squadron, a Squadron part of a Wing, a Wing part of a Group and a Group is part of a Command.
In WW2 Fighter Command comprised six Groups (numbers 9 to 14). These were large geographical areas covering the entire country. Air Chief Marshal Sir Keith Park's No. 11 Group, for example, covered London and the South-East. These Groups were composed of a number of Wings and Squadrons (with a small number of Squadrons reporting directly to Group). It was not always a Squadron Leader in charge of a Squadron (sometimes a Wingco, very occasionally a Flight Lieutenant). Similarly some Wings had a Group Captain OIC. But essentially the structure was as I described.
In the RAF a Flight is part of a Squadron, a Squadron part of a Wing, a Wing part of a Group and a Group is part of a Command.
In WW2 Fighter Command comprised six Groups (numbers 9 to 14). These were large geographical areas covering the entire country. Air Chief Marshal Sir Keith Park's No. 11 Group, for example, covered London and the South-East. These Groups were composed of a number of Wings and Squadrons (with a small number of Squadrons reporting directly to Group). It was not always a Squadron Leader in charge of a Squadron (sometimes a Wingco, very occasionally a Flight Lieutenant). Similarly some Wings had a Group Captain OIC. But essentially the structure was as I described.