- Finger-four
The "Finger-four" formation (also known as the "four finger formation"), is a flight formation used by
fighter aircraft . It consists of four aircraft, and four of these formations can be combined into asquadron formation.Description
The formation consists of a flight of four aircraft, composed of a "lead element" and a "second element", each of two aircraft. When viewing the formation from above, the positions of the planes resemble the tips of the four fingers of a human right
hand , giving the formation its name.The lead element is made up of the flight leader at the very front of the formation and one
wingman to his rear left. The second element is made up of an additional two planes, the element leader and his wingman. The element leader is to the right and rear of the flight leader, followed by the element wingman to his right and rear.Both the flight leader and element leader have offensive roles, in that they are the ones to open fire on enemy aircraft while the flight remains intact. Their respective wingmen have a defensive role - the lead wingman covers the rear of the second element and the element wingman covers the rear of the lead element.
Four of these flights can be assembled to form a squadron formation which consists of two staggered lines of fighters, one in front of the other. Each flight is usually designated by a color (i.e. Red, Blue, Yellow, and Green).
History
The formation was initially developed during the
Spanish Civil War by "Luftwaffe " pilots, most notablyWerner Mölders and his fellow airmen. The "Schwarm" (flight) was made up of two "Rotten" or pairs of aircraft. Each "Rotte" was composed of a leader and a wingman. This flexible formation allowed the pilots to maintain greatersituational awareness , and the two "Rotten" could split up at any time and attack on their own."Luftwaffe" units used this formation during the
Battle of Britain , in which its effectiveness was shown to be considerably greater than the standard three-aircraft "Vic" close formation used by theRoyal Air Force (RAF). The RAF and later theUnited States Army Air Forces (USAAF) adopted this formation and used it themselves against the "Luftwaffe".Missing man formation
The finger-four formation became less common after
World War II . However, it is still used in the "Missing Man Formation" at pilots' funeral ceremonies. The formation performs a fly-by in level flight over the funeral, at which point the second element leader climbs vertically and departs the formation, symbolizing the departure of the person being honored.ee also
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Thach Weave Further reading
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=e_AFFjoqeoQC&pg=PA42&lpg=PA42&dq=%22finger+four%22&source=web&ots=NAlVgFJZg_&sig=2m7H1nc5S17pty3-taF3OYWLeZE]
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=GZCNhrm9eOYC&pg=PA478&ots=McM3TEHYgb&dq=%22finger+four%22&sig=zc7Ijgeielq7p4GXdQg1zhrq3YI]
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=vBkzCDI3F0EC&pg=PA78&ots=dWHRi2NS1_&dq=%22finger+four%22&sig=CrOgfa4ruLfxVFNKKyxGjwZ6wAc]
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