Just Jane. A great project.

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Drago

Legendary Member
Have you seen how much the BUFF's wings flex? T'was in the nwws the other day that a re-engine programme is out to tender with a view to extending their service life. They'll be 100 or more years old when they're retired.
 
OP
OP
steveindenmark

steveindenmark

Legendary Member
Some of you may be interested in this site. It catalogues all the allied aircraft lost over Denmark. It also lists all the memorials and graves of the airmen. It is best viewed on a computer. It is the most in depth , fascinating site I have ever seen on the internet. The amount of data is extraordinary.

https://www.airmen.dk/fafsummary.htm
 

stephec

Legendary Member
Location
Bolton
Duxford's a good day out, we had a walk round the inside of their Lancaster, at least I think it was there as I can't think where else it would be.

Then at the BBMF at Coningsby we got to chat to a veteran who was a radio operator on Lancasters, he was shot down over France and ended up as a POW.
 
My Dad was RAF Ground Crew during the war - I don;t think he ever worked on Lancs - mostly on Stirling then Halifax

If anyone is interested they have a Halifax in the Yorkshite Ait Museum near York - they do a few guided tours in normal years - I intend to go along when all this virus stuff calms down
Friday the Thirteenth ! I think the centre section and wings were from a Handley Page Hastings . It is a good museum to visit .
 
I wish someone would rebuild a Halifax (and a Beaufighter). Apart from being able to carry bigger bombs, I don't see what the Lancaster had over the Halifax. The Halifax did not share a design flaw of the Lancaster: escape hatches too small for big men with parachutes to bale out of.
I used to prefer the Lancaster over the Halifax until I read up about the Halifax . Handley Page were a very good company in designing aircraft. They adopted the idea of four engines instead of the 2 I'll fated Rolls Royce Vulture engines of the Avro Manchester .
 
I had the privilege of going in to the forward gun turret of a Lancaster, static on the ground obviously. It left me in even greater awe of those that had to sit there under fire. My great uncle was a gunner in a bomber that had a turret on the underbelly, where the only access was from outside. If the wheels failed, they were doomed.

There was an interesting documentary where they got modern bomber crews to try and drop a flour bomb on a target in Belgium after a UK take off. They ended up with masses of respect for the WWII crews.
 

Oldhippy

Cynical idealist
When you look at what some of these young men put themselves through it is astonishing. Nowadays people complain about the most trivial things of no consequence. How entitled are so many today compared to them. Sadder still many places around the world are still in dire situations and many first world countries supply the weapons and stand back and watch.
 

winjim

Smash the cistern
I had the privilege of going in to the forward gun turret of a Lancaster, static on the ground obviously. It left me in even greater awe of those that had to sit there under fire. My great uncle was a gunner in a bomber that had a turret on the underbelly, where the only access was from outside. If the wheels failed, they were doomed.

There was an interesting documentary where they got modern bomber crews to try and drop a flour bomb on a target in Belgium after a UK take off. They ended up with masses of respect for the WWII crews.
Obviously I'm biased, but with the exception of the Pathfinders and the two precision squadrons, 9 and 617, bomber command couldn't hit a target for toffee. They switched fairly early on to area bombing of entire cities and often got that wrong as well.
 
Obviously I'm biased, but with the exception of the Pathfinders and the two precision squadrons, 9 and 617, bomber command couldn't hit a target for toffee. They switched fairly early on to area bombing of entire cities and often got that wrong as well.

I accept your argument on the precision, but the programme covered a whole range of the requirements, including age, training, experience and the equipment available, navigating by landmarks etc.. Obviously they couldn't recreate the additional element of doing it underfire.

The walk around museums was revealing looking at the ages of those involved, and comparing them to youths I knew that were the same age.
 

winjim

Smash the cistern
I accept your argument on the precision, but the programme covered a whole range of the requirements, including age, training, experience and the equipment available, navigating by landmarks etc.. Obviously they couldn't recreate the additional element of doing it underfire.

The walk around museums was revealing looking at the ages of those involved, and comparing them to youths I knew that were the same age.
I know, it's just a chance to big up my grandmother (Pathfinders) and grandfather (9sqdn). Just going up in the things would have been enough of an ordeal, nevermind navigating to and hitting a target under fire. I think both my grandparents were about twenty years old in 1943ish, so less than half my age now. Makes me think of what I was doing at that age. When I was twenty I was not flying heavy bombers over hostile territory.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
I accept your argument on the precision...
Ah, the big argument of the war.

British night boming, which was grossly inaccurate and indiscriminate, but safer (although that's relative) for the valuable crews and aircratt.

Or...

American daylight bombing, which was marginally more accurate, but also a much more inviting target for the hun.
 

Andy_R

Hard of hearing..I said Herd of Herring..oh FFS..
Location
County Durham
One of my favourite quirky aircraft is the Beaufighter. Stirling did a good job early on too. I seem to remember reading there are none of those left at all.
I know where there's one....it's at 42m depth about 1km from St Julian's in Malta. Lovely dive!

1613995330479.png
 

Yellow Fang

Legendary Member
Location
Reading
The RAF could hit some precision targets during the early part of the war at night. They managed to hit some crucial German aqueducts in 1940 to hinder what they thought would be a German invasion. They used depth charges and Handley Page Hampdens for that. They had to get pretty low down for that, and the attrition rate got high.
 
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