View Full Version : Rosie, pt 2 - Rosie 16.jpg (1/1)
Mitchell Holman[_4_]
February 13th 10, 01:56 PM
Fabio
February 13th 10, 06:15 PM
A-20
ciao
Fabio
"S.B." > ha scritto nel messaggio 
...
> What type is that?  The nearest I can get is B-26, but that
> had a round fuselage.
>
Fabio
February 13th 10, 06:28 PM
A-20
ciao
Fabio
"S.B." > ha scritto nel messaggio 
...
> What type is that?  The nearest I can get is B-26, but that
> had a round fuselage.
>
Fabio
February 13th 10, 06:29 PM
A-20
ciao
Fabio
"S.B." > ha scritto nel messaggio 
...
> What type is that?  The nearest I can get is B-26, but that
> had a round fuselage.
>
Fabio
February 13th 10, 06:30 PM
A-20
ciao
Fabio
"S.B." > ha scritto nel messaggio 
...
> What type is that?  The nearest I can get is B-26, but that
> had a round fuselage.
>
Fabio
February 13th 10, 06:31 PM
1942 A20C Havoc being serviced at Langley Field Virginia United States
ciao
Fabio
"S.B." > ha scritto nel messaggio 
...
> What type is that?  The nearest I can get is B-26, but that
> had a round fuselage.
>
Fabio
February 13th 10, 06:33 PM
1940 A20 Havoc
ciao
fabio
"S.B." > ha scritto nel messaggio 
...
> What type is that?  The nearest I can get is B-26, but that
> had a round fuselage.
>
hielan' laddie
February 15th 10, 06:30 PM
On Sat, 13 Feb 2010 11:44:27 -0500, S.B. wrote
(in article >):
> What type is that?  The nearest I can get is B-26, but that
> had a round fuselage.
Douglas Boston (RAF name) or Havoc (USAAF name). The girl on the step-stool 
on the lower right is doing something inside the section of the nose where 
the bow gunpods would be mounted. Single or twin guns, .30, .303, or .50, 
depending on service and model. The RAF (and the Free French in RAF service) 
used them for very low-level daylight cross-channel raids. Look up in 
particular 342 (Lorraine) Squadron, 2 Group, 2nd Tactical Air Force. 
<http://www.raf.mod.uk/history_old/h342.html> has a pic of a Boston III with 
the .50 gunpod.
Milton Lewis
February 16th 10, 02:09 PM
As a ten year-old boy, I remember visiting Lambert Field in St. Louis, 
MO and watching a flight of six Bostons on their way to England from San 
Diego make a fuel stop in 1940.  They were already painted in RAF 
markings and were quite impressive to me at my age.  That same day, my 
father lifted me up and put me in a brand new  model 17 Beechcraft his 
buddy had just bought.  Of course, I fell in love with that plane and 
the owner.  Lacking four days of being 54 years later, I laid my hands 
on that same identical aircraft at the Staggerwing museum in Tullahoma, 
Tennessee.  Needless to say, it gave me indescribable feelings.
It truly is a small world.
S.B. wrote:
> On 15 Feb 2010, hielan' laddie wrote:
> 
>> S.B. wrote
> 
>>> What type is that?  
> 
>> Douglas Boston (RAF name) or Havoc (USAAF name). The girl on the step-stool 
>> on the lower right is doing something inside the section of the nose where 
>> the bow gunpods would be mounted. Single or twin guns, .30, .303, or .50, 
>> depending on service and model. The RAF (and the Free French in RAF service) 
>> used them for very low-level daylight cross-channel raids. Look up in 
>> particular 342 (Lorraine) Squadron, 2 Group, 2nd Tactical Air Force. 
>> <http://www.raf.mod.uk/history_old/h342.html> has a pic of a Boston III with 
>> the .50 gunpod.
> 
> OK.  Thanks.
-- 
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