Picture of the day

Just got this book off Amazon.ca - for just over $5.00. Some pretty cool pictures, including of some aircraft I had never heard of. Well worth the price in my opinion.

https://www.amazon.ca/Picture-History-American-Aircraft-Production/dp/048627618X

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From the 5000th B-17 built (which was unsuccessfully saved from scrapping) to the final ignominy of being cut up and melted down:

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8 crewmen and all that metal to deliver a measly 3500 pounds of bombs when a Mosquito could deliver 4000 pounds with two crewman and far more safely and effectively.
 
8 crewmen and all that metal to deliver a measly 3500 pounds of bombs when a Mosquito could deliver 4000 pounds with two crewman and far more safely and effectively.

True, but it's even more wasteful than that. The '17 carried ten crewmen:

- pilot
- copilot
- bombardier
- radio operator / engineer
- navigator
- upper turret gunner / engineer
- ball turret gunner
- left waist
- right waist
- tail gunner

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Chas mentioned "5 Grand", a.k.a. 43-37716, the 5000th B17 to be manufactured by Boeing in their Renton, WA plant.

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Signed by every person who played a hand in her manufacture, some thirty-five thousand individual signatures. Those dang kids and their graffiti...

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Cruise speed was 8 MPH slower than an unpainted B-17 due to the weight and drag of the paint. Fuel consumption was worse, too.

When the war ended, she became one more unwanted bird. She was offered to Seattle for free as a memorial. Seattle refused after considering the cost of housing such a thing. Imagine what she would have been like sitting in the Museum of Flight.

Sent to Kingman, cut up and fed to the smelter.

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So goes all flesh.
 
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Adolf Galland on the right. Who's the other gentleman? Stanford Tuck? This looks like it was taken during the filming of Battle of Britain.

One imagines them making "NEEEEEEOW! TAKKATAKKATAKKA" noises...
 
Story behind a famous pic.

https://www.ww2research.com/hit-blast/

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It's crazy to think those white dots trailing water vapour were superheated metals travelling at stupid fast mph.

Similar incident, different result:


https://www.warhistoryonline.com/history/p-47-thunderbolt-utm_sourcepenultimate.html

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When a squadron of P-47 Thunderbolts attacked a gunpowder storage depot, the ensuing explosion destroyed one of their aircraft. The grave for the pilot was made by a refugee French couple, with .50cal ammunition for a border.

I also recall the story of a poor RAF pilot whose Thunderbolt crashed in combat in Burma. The Army personnel had recovered his remains and strapped them to their jeep. The stench in the jungle heat was pretty noissome according to the soldiers involved.




The gallant crew of Wee Willie


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Shot down April 8 1945.

https://www.ww2research.com/wee-willie-b-17-91st-bomber-group


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Lest We Forget
 
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Excellent post, mate. Lots of detail and a recognition of the humanity of those involved. Poor buggers.

And let's spare a thought for the men who did the soul-destroying work of filling out what may have been hundreds of forms documenting the deaths of people they knew. A young life summed up by some pencilled notes on a stock form.
 
True. They say James Stewart simply was remembering many similar incidents during his USAAF service rather than acting during filming of 'It's a Wonderful Life.'

And let's spare a thought for the men who did the soul-destroying work of filling out what may have been hundreds of forms documenting the deaths of people they knew. A young life summed up by some pencilled notes on a stock form



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In the 1940s, CPR’s Ogden Shops in Calgary produced some 3,000 naval guns and 1,650 gun mounts during the war, including 12-pounder guns and gun-mounts for Canada, and 105-mm Howitzers for the US Army.
 
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