Chas said:There was no miracle, no danger that Sealion would succeed in spite of "what ifs" about German air supremacy, and the RAF could have easily pulled it's a/c out of range of German day fighter range, licked it wounds and come back whenever it wanted.
As I said in the BoB book thread Sealion was a threat that Hitler did not want to undertake but a threat which he wanted to keep on the table to exert pressure on Britain.
The RAF pulling aircraft back behind London was exactly what Goering wanted. This would have given the Luftwaffe free range to conduct operations over the Channel, disrupting the vital convoys arriving, and to bomb the southeast of Britain at will. It would have been very hard to maintain public support for the war if the southeast was being bombed without check.
Just saying "the RAF could have easily pulled it's a/c out of range of German day fighter range, licked it wounds and come back whenever it wanted" shows that you really haven't read much about the BoB at all. It's a factor which is mentioned in virtually every serious narrative on the subject.