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The common wisdom in WW II was that tail gunners and bombardiers suffered the
highest casualties among bomber aircrews. Anyone have any actual statistics on aircrew casualties by position in USAAC bombers? Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#2
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![]() "ArtKramr" wrote in message The common wisdom in WW II was that tail gunners and bombardiers suffered the highest casualties among bomber aircrews. Anyone have any actual statistics on aircrew casualties by position in USAAC bombers? 'COMMON WISDOM" OF WHOM? Luftwaffe statistics- Pilots 85% Waist Gunners-8% Dorsal und Ventral Gunners- 3% Upper turret Gunners-2% Navigators- 1 1/2% Nose Gunners/Bomb Togglers.05% Schematische Kriegsgliederung, RH 2. Has also been published in Kurt Mehner's Geheime Tagesberichte der OKW, 12 vols. Erik |
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Subject: Aircrew casualities
From: "Erik Plagen" Date: 9/16/03 11:36 AM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: ArtKramr" wrote in message The common wisdom in WW II was that tail gunners and bombardiers suffered the highest casualties among bomber aircrews. Anyone have any actual statistics on aircrew casualties by position in USAAC bombers? 'COMMON WISDOM" OF WHOM? Those of us who were there. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#5
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Erik Plagen wrote:
"ArtKramr" wrote in message The common wisdom in WW II was that tail gunners and bombardiers suffered the highest casualties among bomber aircrews. Anyone have any actual statistics on aircrew casualties by position in USAAC bombers? 'COMMON WISDOM" OF WHOM? Luftwaffe statistics- Pilots 85% Waist Gunners-8% Dorsal und Ventral Gunners- 3% Upper turret Gunners-2% Navigators- 1 1/2% Nose Gunners/Bomb Togglers.05% Schematische Kriegsgliederung, RH 2. Has also been published in Kurt Mehner's Geheime Tagesberichte der OKW, 12 vols. Erik Overall statistics may or may not be all that helpful- what were the numbers of (for instance) waist gunners flying with the Luftwaffe, and what were their casualty rates compared to the other crew positions in the same aircraft? Different casualty rates for different aircraft, along with the total numbers of each type involved in the overall statistics, make it difficult to come up with a single, overall answer. Mike |
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Subject: Aircrew casualities
From: Michael Williamson PAM Date: 9/16/03 8:11 PM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: Erik Plagen wrote: "ArtKramr" wrote in message The common wisdom in WW II was that tail gunners and bombardiers suffered the highest casualties among bomber aircrews. Anyone have any actual statistics on aircrew casualties by position in USAAC bombers? 'COMMON WISDOM" OF WHOM? Luftwaffe statistics- Pilots 85% Waist Gunners-8% Dorsal und Ventral Gunners- 3% Upper turret Gunners-2% Navigators- 1 1/2% Nose Gunners/Bomb Togglers.05% Schematische Kriegsgliederung, RH 2. Has also been published in Kurt Mehner's Geheime Tagesberichte der OKW, 12 vols. Erik Overall statistics may or may not be all that helpful- what were the numbers of (for instance) waist gunners flying with the Luftwaffe, and what were their casualty rates compared to the other crew positions in the same aircraft? Different casualty rates for different aircraft, along with the total numbers of each type involved in the overall statistics, make it difficult to come up with a single, overall answer. Mike I don't think there is a single answer. Some postions in some planes are very diffciult to get out of. The nose of a B-26 for example. But the A-26 Invader had a trap door under the nose. One twist and you were falling through space. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#7
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ArtKramr wrote:
The common wisdom in WW II was that tail gunners and bombardiers suffered the highest casualties among bomber aircrews. Anyone have any actual statistics on aircrew casualties by position in USAAC bombers? I wish you had asked that a few weeks ago, as I had a source here which gave the stats for B-17s. AFAIR, pilots were top of the list (because they had to stay while everyone else got out), with ball turret gunners about equal in loss rate. Bombardiers were actually among the best in survival rate if not the best (I think the navs were the best), because many of the attacks were from the rear, and because they had an escape hatch in their compartment that was easy to get to. Guy |
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Subject: Aircrew casualities
From: Guy Alcala Date: 9/16/03 3:21 PM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: ArtKramr wrote: The common wisdom in WW II was that tail gunners and bombardiers suffered the highest casualties among bomber aircrews. Anyone have any actual statistics on aircrew casualties by position in USAAC bombers? I wish you had asked that a few weeks ago, as I had a source here which gave the stats for B-17s. AFAIR, pilots were top of the list (because they had to stay while everyone else got out), with ball turret gunners about equal in loss rate. Bombardiers were actually among the best in survival rate if not the best (I think the navs were the best), because many of the attacks were from the rear, and because they had an escape hatch in their compartment that was easy to get to. Guy In the B-26 we had no escape hatch at all. The bombardier had along path to creawl in front of the copilot then out the bombay. A long trip indeed. Maybe we should break down the losses by aircraft type rather than lumping all bombers together 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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#10
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" wrote:
(ArtKramr) wrote: Bombardiers were actually among the best in survival rate if not the best (I think the navs were the best), because many of the attacks were from the rear, and because they had an escape hatch in their compartment that was easy to get to. Guy In the B-26 we had no escape hatch at all. The bombardier had along path to creawl in front of the copilot then out the bombay. A long trip indeed. Maybe we should break down the losses by aircraft type rather than lumping all bombers together Arthur Kramer Lancasters were good to Bombardiers (and nose gunners), they had their own good sized hatch in the bottom of the nose compartment, matter of fact the Pilot and Engineer used that hatch too. OTOH, the survival rate was considerably worse than for Halifax crews, who had better placed escape hatches. The survival rate of either was pretty dismal at night -- IIRR, Middlebrook stated an 86% fatality rate for Lanc crews when shot down, with the Halifax being slightly better. Crew fatality rates by U.S. heavies operating by day were much better, about the inverse of the RAF night bombers, roughly 15%. You could probably chalk that up to more armor, being able to see the enemy approach so more defensive fire (and thus less effective fire from the fighters, due to evasive action and longer firing ranges), and in the last resort, it being much easier to find and put on parachutes and then locate the exits by day. It would be interesting to see if B-17s and B-24s that operated with RAF 100 Group by night, had similar crew survival rates as the RAF heavies doing the same missions. Guy |
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