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Got a new book out of the library, Marching Home by Kevin Coyne. In it
is a story about Bill Lopatin,radio operator on "We Dood It" with thw 322nd. Seems to be a straight forward account of life in the Marauder over Europe. What say you Art? Ron |
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Subject: marauder radio operator
From: (Ron) Date: 12/6/03 7:03 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: Got a new book out of the library, Marching Home by Kevin Coyne. In it is a story about Bill Lopatin,radio operator on "We Dood It" with thw 322nd. Seems to be a straight forward account of life in the Marauder over Europe. What say you Art? Ron Don't know. But I'll ty to find a copy and let you know.The 322 nd was a good outfit located just to the North of us. Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
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Subject: marauder radio operator
From: (Ron) Date: 12/7/03 8:51 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: (ArtKramr) wrote in message ... Subject: marauder radio operator From: (Ron) Date: 12/6/03 7:03 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: Got a new book out of the library, Marching Home by Kevin Coyne. In it is a story about Bill Lopatin,radio operator on "We Dood It" with thw 322nd. Seems to be a straight forward account of life in the Marauder over Europe. What say you Art? Ron Don't know. But I'll ty to find a copy and let you know.The 322 nd was a good outfit located just to the North of us. Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer Hi Art, A couple of things; They had a load of 8 300# bombs and he pulled the safety pins off just before dropping them. 4 didn't release so he re installed the pins and they returned to base with them. Is this correct? Ha had almost completed his 50 missions but when D-Day came the criteria changed to an indefinite number of missions. Also correct? Regards Ron None of it sounds correct. We had no pins, we had arming wires. They stayed in all the time and were pulled automatically when the load was dropped. Any bombs that failed to go out would have had their arming wires intact, and were therefore safe. We never carried 300 pounders. We carried 8 500 pounders to make upo the full load of 4,000 punds. But 8 300 pounders is less than our limit but he could have flown a short load to get greater range. That is a possibility. There never was an indefinite number of missions. When the war ended you needed 65 missions to go home. That is quite a definite number, This is one strange sounding book. I gotta get a copy. Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
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ArtKramr wrote:
Subject: marauder radio operator From: (Ron) Date: 12/7/03 8:51 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: (ArtKramr) wrote in message ... Subject: marauder radio operator From: (Ron) Date: 12/6/03 7:03 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: Got a new book out of the library, Marching Home by Kevin Coyne. In it is a story about Bill Lopatin,radio operator on "We Dood It" with thw 322nd. Seems to be a straight forward account of life in the Marauder over Europe. What say you Art? Ron Don't know. But I'll ty to find a copy and let you know.The 322 nd was a good outfit located just to the North of us. Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer Hi Art, A couple of things; They had a load of 8 300# bombs and he pulled the safety pins off just before dropping them. 4 didn't release so he re installed the pins and they returned to base with them. Is this correct? Ha had almost completed his 50 missions but when D-Day came the criteria changed to an indefinite number of missions. Also correct? Regards Ron None of it sounds correct. We had no pins, we had arming wires. They stayed in all the time and were pulled automatically when the load was dropped. Any bombs that failed to go out would have had their arming wires intact, and were therefore safe. We never carried 300 pounders. We carried 8 500 pounders to make upo the full load of 4,000 punds. But 8 300 pounders is less than our limit but he could have flown a short load to get greater range. That is a possibility. The four B-26 groups that were active in the ETO in 1943 (322nd, 323rd, and IIRR 386th and 387th) were using 300 lb. bombs for most of the year, at least until the VIIIth Support Command became part of the Ninth Air Force. Depending on when he started his tour, it's certainly a possibility. BTW, the 300 lb. bomb actually weighed 260 lb., and was later slightly modified while retaining the same size, shape, and weight; the later version was known as the M57, and was called a 250 lb. bomb even though it still weighed the same 260 lb. as the earlier version, which IIRR was the M31). I've never been able to establish just what the modification was, but maybe it had something to do with the fuzing/arming method, as I've certainly read accounts of heavy bombers using the older 300, 600 and 1,100 lb. bombs early in the war, where the bombardier entered the bomb bay during flight to arm the bombs. I wonder; the sole difference between the B-26F model and the B-26G that Art flew was the substitution of A/N (Army/Navy, i.e. universal) bomb shackles for purely Army ones. Is it possible the arming method could be part of that? It would be impossible for navy single-engined a/c and AAF fighters which carried their bombs externally to use a manual arming method unless they took off with armed bombs, so they'd have to use the retained arming wire method Art describes (and which was universal after the war, except for nukes). Guy |
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