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Lufbery circle
Lufbery circle
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The Lufbery circle or Lufbery wheel, also spelled Lufberry or Luffberry, is a defensive air combat tactic first used during World War I.

While its name derives from the name of Raoul Lufbery,[1] the leading fighter ace of the Lafayette Escadrille, he did not invent the tactic; how it acquired this name is not known, although it may be from his popularization of it among the incoming U.S. pilots he trained. In non-American sources it is in fact usually referred to simply as a "defensive circle".

Description

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This air tactic can only be mounted by formations of aircraft working together: it involves forming a horizontal circle in the air when attacked, in such a way that the armament of each aircraft offers a measure of protection to the others in the circle. It complicates the task of an attacking fighter – the formation as a whole has far fewer "blind spots" than its members, so that it is more difficult to attack an individual aircraft without being exposed to return fire from the others.

The tactic, evolved in the context of trench warfare, was not used purely defensively:

[The] Lufbery Circle, or follow the leader formation, a great help to each man’s tail. In other words you dive down on a trench, spray it with your guns, and zoom up without worrying much whether a load of nickel jacketed steel is going to crease the seat of your pants. And you don’t worry much because the pilot behind you is taking his turn at spraying the troops in the trench, with the result that they are too occupied with getting out of his way to turn around and blaze away at you as you zoom up. And in the case of the Lufbery Circle, it wouldn’t be healthy for a Hun to try and drop down on the tail of the ship in front of you because you would simply pull up your nose a bit and chew off the soles of his field boots with your bursts.[2]

As the state of the art advanced the technique was increasingly used to enable slower, less capable fighters to cope with attacks by an enemy flying superior types, although it has also sometimes been used by light bomber formations.

History

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Perhaps the earliest use of the Lufbery was by formations of F.E.2b aircraft in 1916/17 when in combat with superior German fighters but by the end of World War I it was already considered flawed and obsolete. While generally effective against horizontal attacks by faster aircraft, it was very vulnerable to attacks from fighters diving from above, providing targets on a slow, predictable course. As the performance and armament of fighter aircraft improved during the First World War, they became capable of high-speed hit-and-run attacks in the vertical. A Lufbery put the defenders at a gross disadvantage.

In World War II the Lufbery was still used by many countries, generally as a last resort measure for poorly trained pilots of less advanced air forces – for instance, Japanese kamikaze pilots. Faster allied aircraft resulted in the more maneuverable Zero also resorting to the tactic to lure opponents into a turning contest in which the Zero could prevail. This tactic was also used by German Messerschmitt Bf 110 fighters, which had a rearwards-firing dorsal gun position, and British Boulton Paul Defiant fighters, with dorsal turrets, during the Battle of Britain.

To counter German fighter attacks, the Allied pilots flew "Lufbery circles" (in which each aircraft's tail was covered by the friendly aircraft behind). The tactic was effective and dangerous as a pilot attacking this formation could find himself constantly in the sights of the opposing pilots. As a counter measure to such circles, Hans-Joachim Marseille often dived at high speed into the middle of these defensive formations from either above or below, executing a tight turn and firing a two-second deflection shot to destroy an enemy aircraft. The successes Marseille had become readily apparent in early 1942. He claimed his 37–40th victories on 8 February 1942 and 41–44th victories four days later which earned him the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross that same month for 46 victories.

Soviet Il-2 ground-attack aircraft used the Lufbery circle on the Eastern Front. [3]

Lundstrom, in chronicling the operational history of US carrier-based activities in the Pacific from Pearl Harbor through the Battle of Midway, provides an extensive discussion of fighter tactics of the time. In the Battle of the Coral Sea, US Grumman F4F Wildcats defending the USS Lexington against Japanese dive bombers adopted a Lufbery Circle when attacked by A6M Zeros.[4]

Although the Lufbery would seem to expose modern aircraft to missiles and unchecked gunnery passes, US pilots in the Vietnam War found North Vietnamese MiG-17 fighters using it as bait for faster F-4 Phantom fighters that did not have guns and could not use their missiles because of tight turns made by the MiGs.

Other uses of the term

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Mostly in World War II literature, a Lufbery Circle can be used to refer to any turning engagement between aircraft, i.e. what is more properly known as the Turn Fight in air combat tactics.

In modern discussions of air-to-air combat tactics, a "Lufbery" generally refers to any prolonged horizontal engagement between two fighters with neither gaining the advantage. This frequently occurs when both fighters have descended to low altitude and have insufficient energy for further vertical maneuvering, thus restricting the fight to the horizontal plane. Such a fight assumes that one fighter does not have a significant turn rate advantage and is thus locked in a seemingly endless tail chase.

Such a fight is said to wind up in a Lufbery or has said to have "Luffed out"; this being a generally undesirable circumstance as neither fighter is able to conclude the fight nor leave without potentially exposing himself to attack by the remaining fighter.

Footnotes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Lufbery circle, also known as the Lufbery wheel, is a defensive aerial formation in which multiple fly in a tight horizontal circle or ascending spiral, with each plane positioned to protect the tail and lower sector of the immediately ahead, thereby providing mutual covering fire against pursuing enemies. This maneuver, typically employed when outnumbered or facing superior foes, allows gunners or pilots to engage attackers while minimizing exposure to dives from above or below. The tactic derives its name from (1885–1918), a pioneering French-American aviator and the leading ace of the , an American volunteer squadron in the French air service during . , who achieved 17 confirmed aerial victories and became America's first fighter ace, popularized the formation—which bears his name—as a means to counter aggressive German "Flying Circus" tactics led by aces like . First utilized in 1916–1917 over the Western Front, the Lufbery circle enabled Allied pilots in slower or less maneuverable aircraft to survive intense dogfights by emphasizing tight coordination and defensive positioning. Although originating in fighter operations, the Lufbery circle evolved into a standard defensive strategy for bomber formations during , where heavy aircraft like B-17 Flying Fortresses would tighten into a circling pattern to repel interceptor attacks, though it proved vulnerable to high-altitude dives by enemy fighters. The maneuver's legacy endures in modern aerial tactics and aviation training, underscoring early innovations in doctrine that prioritized and interlocking fields of fire.

Concept and Mechanics

Definition

The Lufbery circle is a defensive aerial formation in which multiple maintain typically a tight, horizontal at the same altitude, though variations may include spirals, with each plane positioned slightly behind and to the side of the one ahead, enabling pilots to cover the tail and vulnerable rear quadrants of the adjacent through overlapping fields of fire. This arrangement minimizes blind spots inherent in single- maneuvers and fosters mutual protection, transforming a group of vulnerable planes into a cohesive defensive unit. The primary purpose of the Lufbery circle is to deter attacks from faster or more numerous enemy fighters by forcing pursuers into predictable, exposed positions during dives or tail chases, where they become susceptible to concentrated defensive gunfire or counterattacks. It is particularly suited for outnumbered formations or aircraft with inferior speed and maneuverability, as the slow, steady orbital speed—often reduced to maintain cohesion—prioritizes accurate gunnery over evasive turning, compelling attackers to risk overshooting into the line of fire. Key characteristics include its typically horizontal orientation to facilitate rearward observation and firing, involvement of typically four to eight spaced evenly around the circle for optimal coverage, and an emphasis on coordinated discipline to sustain the formation without gaps. This tactic emerged as a practical response to the limitations of early aerial , such as limited rear visibility from open cockpits and armament restricted to forward- or rear-facing machine guns on biplanes.

Execution and Variations

The execution of the Lufbery circle begins with the formation leader signaling a turn into a circular , typically initiating from a or to ensure rapid organization under . then align nose-to-, maintaining a consistent altitude and speed—often around corner for optimal turn —while banking at 45 to 60 degrees to sustain the circle without excessive energy bleed, managing energy states through adjustments and altitude trades as needed. Each pilot positions to cover the of the ahead, with gunners or pilots scanning and engaging threats from the rear or above, prioritizing fire on attackers attempting to penetrate the formation from below or the flanks. To maintain the circle, pilots coordinate continuous turns, adjusting and control inputs to preserve separation of approximately one to two turn radii between , preventing collisions while maximizing mutual . Firing protocols emphasize disciplined engagement: rear-facing armament targets incoming threats, with pilots avoiding breakouts that could expose the formation, instead relying on the circle's to force attackers into predictable diving passes. This step-by-step process—initiate turn, align positions, sustain and speed, engage selectively—relies on visual mutual support to deny easy shots to superior forces. Variations of the Lufbery circle adapt to mission needs and capabilities, including tight versus loose configurations: tight circles enhance by minimizing gaps but demand precise coordination and higher sustained G-forces, while loose circles allow faster to maintain higher speeds at the cost of reduced coverage. Modifications such as climbing or descending spirals introduce vertical elements; a descending spiral preserves by converting altitude to speed, whereas a climbing variant bleeds to tighten the radius against pursuers. Bomber-specific adaptations involve formations tightening into a defensive under attack, with lead peeling off to join the rear upon threat. Equipment dependencies significantly influence execution, particularly the reliance on observer-gunner teams in two-seater for effective rearward scanning and firing, which compensates for forward-facing pilot limitations. Single-seater fighters face challenges without dedicated rear armament, requiring pilots to divide attention between flying the circle and monitoring threats, often reducing overall effectiveness in prolonged engagements. Inherent risk factors include substantial energy loss from sustained turning, which diminishes speed and altitude over time, potentially leading to fuel exhaustion or stalled maneuvers. The formation's predictability also creates vulnerabilities to coordinated dives from multiple angles, where attackers can exploit gaps during firing passes or force breakouts that fragment the circle. Collision risks escalate in tight variants due to the high workload on pilots maintaining position amid threats.

Historical Development

World War I Origins

The defensive circle tactic, later known as the Lufbery circle, emerged during the of 1915–1916 as British units flying F.E.2b pusher aircraft adapted to the threat posed by German Fokker Eindecker single-seater fighters equipped with synchronized machine guns. These reconnaissance and bomber formations, vulnerable to hit-and-run attacks from the more maneuverable Eindeckers, began employing tight circular flights where each aircraft's observer could cover the tail of the one ahead, protecting blind spots and maximizing defensive firepower from rear-facing Lewis guns. This innovation proved vital over the Western Front, allowing slower Allied multi-role aircraft to complete patrols despite the German advantage in single-plane agility. French escadrilles similarly adopted the tactic around 1916–1917 with pusher designs like the bombers and early fighters, integrating it into standard procedures for protecting missions against the same Eindecker threat. The approach emphasized coordinated gunnery, with observers using flexible mounts to engage attackers from multiple angles while the formation maintained altitude for mutual support. By early 1917, during the lead-up to the Battle of —infamously called "" due to devastating British air losses—the tactic saw widespread use in escadrille operations, helping to mitigate casualties from superior German numbers and tactics, though overall losses remained high at over 200 aircraft in the month. The tactic gained prominence through the (Escadrille N.124), a French squadron of American volunteers formed in April 1916, where Major refined and popularized its execution during patrols over the Western Front. Flying scouts and later SPADs, the escadrille's pilots used the circle to shield slower elements in mixed formations against German interceptors, achieving notable success in defensive engagements that preserved squadron cohesion amid the escalating air war. This adoption not only boosted morale among the volunteers but also influenced broader Allied training, emphasizing the circle's role in countering the crisis by enabling sustained reconnaissance despite aggressive enemy pursuits. Initial effectiveness diminished by 1918 as German tactics evolved, with improved fighters like the exploiting the circle's horizontal plane by diving from superior altitudes beyond the reach of defensive gunners, forcing Allied units to shift toward more dynamic, offensive formations. Despite these limitations, the Lufbery circle established a foundational for protective flying that influenced subsequent air .

World War II Applications

During World War II, the Lufbery circle saw renewed application across various theaters as a defensive maneuver for outnumbered or slower aircraft formations facing superior enemy fighters, adapted to the era's faster speeds and larger-scale engagements. Axis forces employed it notably in defensive scenarios during retreats and carrier protections. Japanese A6M Zero pilots formed defensive Lufbery circles during later Pacific campaigns, such as the 1944 Battle of Leyte Gulf, particularly when protecting aircraft or withdrawing from superior Allied numbers, allowing mutual tail coverage despite the Zeros' maneuverability advantage. Similarly, German Bf 110 twin-engine destroyers utilized the tactic in North Africa to counter RAF sweeps, circling to leverage their forward and rear armament against diving attacks, though it proved vulnerable to high-altitude intercepts. Allied air forces integrated the Lufbery circle into carrier defense and patrol operations, often as a last-resort measure when numerical inferiority or aircraft limitations arose. In the (May 1942), U.S. Navy F4F Wildcats from and Yorktown formed a defensive Lufbery circle against escorting A6M Zeros, tying up the Japanese fighters and preventing immediate interference with dive bomber attacks, though it delayed the Wildcats' ability to engage the incoming Vals effectively. British Boulton Paul Defiant squadrons, during Channel patrols in 1940-1941, descended into ever-tightening Lufbery circles to exploit their dorsal turrets for rear protection against Bf 109s, sacrificing altitude but minimizing low-level vulnerabilities in early phases. On the Eastern Front, Soviet Il-2 Sturmovik ground-attack wings employed a variant known as the "circle of death," a descending Lufbery-style loop of up to eight aircraft at 300 meters altitude, enabling prolonged strikes on German positions while rear gunners covered tails, as seen in the (1943) where it reduced losses from intercepts. The tactic's effectiveness varied by battle and counters employed. In the Midway and Solomon Islands campaigns, Allied use of the Lufbery circle aided carrier task force defenses against massed Japanese strikes, contributing to the repulsion of air raids and the overall Allied pivot in the Pacific, though it exposed formations to coordinated dives. High losses occurred when opponents exploited weaknesses, such as German ace Hans-Joachim Marseille's 1942 Afrika Korps sweeps, where he dove into the centers of RAF Hurricane and P-40 Lufbery circles from above or below, using precise gunnery to disrupt the formation and claim multiple kills in single engagements. Adaptations reflected resource constraints and technological integration. Under fighter escort shortages, bomber boxes evolved into circular patterns, with B-17 and B-24 formations tightening into Lufberys over and the Pacific to provide interlocking defensive fire from .50-caliber guns. Radar-directed intercepts further modified the tactic, as in British night defenses where Defiants used ground-controlled approaches to initiate circles against incoming raids, enhancing early warning but still reliant on visual mutual support once engaged.

Post-World War II Uses

In the , the Lufbery circle was employed on rare occasions by U.S. jet aircraft, such as the F-86 Sabre, as a defensive measure against superior MiG-15 jets, though the tactic was increasingly obsolete amid the transition to jet propulsion. For instance, during a mission, U.S. Air Force Dolphin A. Overton led his formation into a Lufbery circle to withstand repeated attacks from MiG-15s, maintaining formation integrity until the threat subsided. During the from 1965 to 1972, North Vietnamese MiG-17 pilots frequently resorted to the Lufbery circle as a defensive tactic when engaged by faster U.S. F-4 Phantom IIs, forcing the Phantoms into tight, low-speed turns where the MiG-17's superior maneuverability provided an advantage over the Phantom's wider and initial lack of an internal . This adaptation highlighted the circle's evolution from a mutual protection formation to a means of luring opponents into suboptimal conditions, exploiting jet-era disparities in speed and weaponry. The Lufbery circle appeared in other post-WWII conflicts with limited frequency, including unconfirmed reports of its use by Israeli Mirage III fighters for rapid defensive maneuvers during the 1967 . In asymmetric engagements like Arab-Israeli clashes and proxy wars involving insurgents, the tactic occasionally surfaced as a low-tech counter to more advanced aircraft. Overall, advancements in jet speeds and air-to-air missiles diminished its prominence, shifting its role toward baiting faster foes into close-range fights rather than standalone defense.

Legacy and Interpretations

Association with Raoul Lufbery

Gervais Raoul Victor Lufbery (1885–1918) was a French-American fighter pilot renowned for his service in the Lafayette Escadrille during World War I. Born in France to an American father and a French mother, he initially worked as a mechanic for French aviator Marc Pourpe before enlisting as a pilot in 1916. Lufbery quickly distinguished himself, achieving 17 confirmed aerial victories and becoming one of the first American aces of the war. In 1918, after the Lafayette Escadrille was transferred to the U.S. Air Service, he commanded the 94th Aero Squadron, training notable pilots including Eddie Rickenbacker. The defensive tactic now known as the Lufbery circle became closely associated with Lufbery due to his prominent use of it during patrols in 1917, where it provided mutual protection for slower aircraft against superior German fighters. Post-war accounts honored him by naming the maneuver the "Lufbery Circle" or "Lufbery Show," reflecting his leadership in its application within the unit. However, historical evidence suggests Lufbery adapted rather than invented the formation, which had pre-existing equivalents in the British , such as the circular defensive patterns employed by F.E.2 bomber crews as early as 1916 to counter rear attacks. Beyond the circle, Lufbery employed maneuvers like the corkscrew climb, a spiraling ascent that allowed pilots to scan for threats while gaining altitude during patrols over enemy lines. His innovations emphasized formation flying and defensive positioning, influencing early U.S. pursuit squadron training. Tragically, Lufbery's career ended on May 19, 1918, when he was shot down and killed while pursuing a German reconnaissance aircraft near Maron, France, highlighting the perilous nature of these early combat flights. Lufbery's legacy endures in American history, where he is celebrated as a pioneer ace and tactical innovator, enshrined in the for his role in shaping fighter doctrine. The naming of the circle after him has led to occasional confusion with modern airport traffic patterns, a misconception debunked by historians as the combat formation is unrelated to non-combat procedures, which evolved separately for safety in .

Decline and Modern Relevance

The Lufbery circle began to show vulnerabilities during , particularly to high-side attacks and diving maneuvers that exploited the formation's horizontal focus. German ace effectively countered Allied formations by diving directly into the circle, joining the orbit briefly to confuse silhouettes and achieve deflection shots before disengaging. This tactic, demonstrated in his 1942 North African engagements, highlighted the circle's susceptibility to attackers with altitude and speed advantages who could penetrate the defensive ring without committing to the turn. Post-World War II, the advent of accelerated the tactic's decline due to their superior speed and energy retention, which favored vertical maneuvers over sustained horizontal turns. In the , jets like the MiG-15 rendered the Lufbery obsolete by enabling attackers to maintain energy advantages, using boom-and-zoom tactics to avoid the circle altogether rather than engage in energy-bleeding turns. Jet fighters' larger turn radii at high speeds—often exceeding 1,000 feet compared to propeller aircraft's sub-500 feet—made tight circling inefficient, as defenders lost altitude and speed rapidly while attackers preserved options for extension or reversal. The introduction of air-to-air missiles in the and further diminished the Lufbery's viability by enabling beyond-visual-range (BVR) engagements, reducing the need for close formations vulnerable to weapons. Attackers could fire from outside the circle, targeting individual without exposure, while radar-guided missiles outranged guns and negated mutual tail protection. Counter-tactics evolved to emphasize energy fighting, such as vertical dives to split the formation, high yo-yos for repositioning, or rolling scissors to disrupt coordination, all of which exploited the circle's predictability. In modern , the Lufbery circle is rarely employed due to BVR tactics and electronic warfare dominance, though it persists in theoretical defensive wheels for combat air patrols where fighters orbit to maintain coverage. It retains relevance in flight simulators and programs, where pilots study it to understand historical and formation discipline in guns-only scenarios. Potential applications in (UAV) swarms for low-tech remain exploratory, drawing on the tactic's mutual support principles for coordinated defense.

Other Uses of the Term

In aviation literature, the term "Lufbery circle" has occasionally been extended beyond its original defensive formation to describe any prolonged horizontal turning engagement between aircraft, akin to a general maneuver where opponents circle each other to gain positional advantage. This broader usage appears in tactical analyses, such as Robert L. Shaw's Fighter Combat: Tactics and Maneuvering, where it refers to wheeled formations in multi-aircraft engagements, though distinct from the structured mutual-protection circle. The term is sometimes misattributed to non-combat procedures instituted by himself, particularly the directive for aircraft to circle an airfield at least twice before landing to scan for threats, a safety measure he implemented as commander of the in 1918. However, this landing approach pattern, while associated with Lufbery's emphasis on vigilance, is etymologically and tactically separate from the combat-oriented Lufbery circle, with aviation historians noting no direct invention or naming link to the maneuver by Lufbery. In modern contexts, "Lufbery circle" appears rarely outside core tactics, primarily in flight simulations and where it denotes the historical defensive maneuver. For instance, in the strategy game , developers reference it as a complex defensive tactic for formations under attack. No verified literal applications exist in non-aviation fields, such as , , or broader metaphors for circular defenses in naval or ground operations, underscoring the term's strong confinement to aerial terminology.

References

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