Highly ironically as the inventors of the carrier, it seems the British attitude to Naval aviation was the most backward. Where the USN and Japan started WW2 with aircraft designs that would still be in service in large numbers at the end, the RN had, to put it mildly, a load of crap. The honourable exception of course being the Fairey Swordfish. I can't help but conclude though had Bismarck faced the air group of a USN carrier that the battleship engagement that sunk her would have been unnecessary.
Yeah the RN paid a heavy penalty for being an early innovator. The smaller early carriers were not great, but were deemed "good enough," not justifying replacement in lean times. Small carriers led to small air groups, small air groups led to small aircraft contracts, and that led to less money for R&D. Even when bigger and better carriers came along, the aircraft remained compromised and behind the times.
On the other hand, the "local" threats to the RN did not really have carriers at all, and using aircraft to find and slow the enemy so they could be pounded by the gun line was a valid way to go in the situation. And Taranto showed that the RN would use its air power in novel and daring ways. The Swordfish, what a classic. They should almost qualify as a V/STOL aircraft! I remember seeing Sink the Bismarck on TV when I was a kid and being absolutely thrilled with those brave biplanes.
In hindisight of course, if when the RAF was formed it had taken only part of the RNAS and most of the RFC, while maintaining a strong Fleet Air Arm, then things could have been different. Sadly though it seems unlikely that the Navy would have foreseen aircraft like the Fulmar having to engage such formidable fighters as the Bf-109.
Another radical innovation (formation of an independent air force) which answered some problems of command and control in WW1 but had unfortunate side effects for the navy. RAF control of FAA flying personnel for 20 years was pretty unfortunate. The USN was lucky that it had an individual, RAdm William Moffett, who was not only forward thinking and innovative, but knew how to work Washington politics to get things done. He insisted not only that the navy keep control of its own air arm, but that aviators not form a separate branch and remain "sailors," line officers who would aspire to command ships and fleets. He began to recruit senior officers from the "black shoe" fleet to enter aviation. The result was that the WW2 US Navy -- arguably the most powerful navy in history -- was run by a naval aviator, something that would have been unthinkable in the British or Japanese navies. Billy Moffett was really more successful than Billy Mitchell, but remains much less well-known.
It all depends whether you’re standing on the flight deck or trying to land on it! Don’t carrier pilots say that every landing is essentially a controlled crash?
Oh yes. The RN invented the arrested landing, but the USN ran with it in the '30s. While British and Japanese carriers landed one plane at a time at more "normal" speeds and sent them below to the hangar, the USN had them banging down at high speed in rapid succession, pushed them behind the barrier and left them parked on deck. That gave the US carriers a much better turn-around time for landing, re-arming and re-launching a strike. As bigger jet aircraft came along there was really no other choice than the "controlled crash," but the USN did adopt the British ideas of the angle deck and the optical landing system. The steam catapult also originated in the Royal Navy.
Justin