I had a cousin that flew 30 missions over Europe with the 384th Bombardment Group as a B-17 gunner. He flew his last mission th day before D Day.
This is him.
https://384thbombgroup.com/_content/...PersonKey=7365
I had a cousin that flew 30 missions over Europe with the 384th Bombardment Group as a B-17 gunner. He flew his last mission th day before D Day.
This is him.
https://384thbombgroup.com/_content/...PersonKey=7365
Last edited by P2Vaircrewman; 03-24-24 at 08:58.
Best part of the video was the pilots checking out the secretaries ass on the way out of the office at the end, bet you don't get that in today's training films.
“The Trump Doctrine is ‘We’re America, Bitch.’ That’s the Trump Doctrine.”
"He is free to evade reality, he is free to unfocus his mind and stumble blindly down any road he pleases, but not free to avoid the abyss he refuses to see."
Jimmy Doolittle saved the B-26 program. It had a reputation as the "widow maker" if it lost an engine. He went down, by himself without a copilot, a shut down an engine on the takeoff roll. He continued the takeoff and went out and accomplished normal maneuvers with that engine shutdown. Came back and landed then did it all over again with the other engine shutdown. Confidence in the airplane went up and the green pilots got more training on how to handle it. Doolittle was a helluva a pilot and commander.
According to some history, the 17 guys got to go home after 25 missions. (Memphis Belle) I don't know how many accomplished that or how many they said tough s##t we still need ya cuz 50/100 other planes got shot down on the last mission! Not sure how accurate it is but I'm watching "Master Of The Air" now and it's pretty good. I've heard mixed reviews about it but I will finish it and I'm sure it gives somewhat of a feel for it all. The 26 is a different plane for sure but it certainly earned its place in history.
B-26's in general were called "The Baltimore Whore" because they had no visible means of support.
The short wings were replaced with longer wings which greatly increased handling and takeoff/landing speeds. However, the increased drag meant that it was a fair amount slower.
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