Are numbers everything? Of course they aren't. But neither is quality. What matter is the total effectiveness.
Air situation: In total it has been something like 300 ravens versus 800 enemy fighters. Which means about 600 'fighter-equivalents' vs 800 of theirs. And, in fact, our remaining force supports that, with 77 remaining vs ca 330 for them. Win for us due to a better fighter in sufficient numbers.
The artillery war we've basically won only through luck (Cod). Before, they all but annihilated our artillery positions. Loss for us due to less numbers of about equal quality.
The naval war is far from won, after all, there hasn't been any real engagement.
On the Raven(T) conversion: It has an increased wingspan, among others, meaning you need new wings to use it. You have not only to take off the MGs and bolt on a torpedo, but have to balance it, increase structures to hold said torpedo and so on. Compare the empty (that is without torpedo) weights: 800kg vs 1350kg. Somewhere those 550kg have to come from, even if you could otherwise use it completely. So that modification is going to require more than bolting.
I would rather propose a Raven Mk. II update, placing bombs on the fighter and keeping it otherwise intact, with concentration on keeping the modification as simple as possible. Thoughts on that?
three Raven(T)s are, at the very least, equal to Osprey in anti-ship role, that's so obvious to me that I can't understand how people can claim otherwise.
However, the Osprey has more range and speed, allowing it faster strikes.
Don't get me wrong - I like the Raven(T) as secondary, cheap torpedo bomber to harass, for example, enemy shipping and to place it almost everywhere (aerodynamic). For attacking warships, harbours and convoys, I'd rather have the Osprey.