Had a Lancaster hanging from the ceiling in my room when I was a boy. It was accompanied by about a dozen 1/48 scale plastic models from kits.
My brother and I spent hours and hours building plastic models. Probably accounts for my nostalgia for WWII aircraft.
Was surprised to walk into a toy store not long ago and to find out they don't even sell those kits anymore (at least not over here.)
I was always fascinated by the guy who had the job of lying on the deck of the Lancaster, all the way in the nose, doing the job of bomb targeting and helping with navigation. How exposed and vulnerable he must have felt. At the same time, the view out of that lower nose bubble must have been the closest thing you could get to flying like superman.
View attachment 66030
I knew a Halifax pilot, now sadly deceased. He told me the the only remotely armoured bits on one of those bombers was the pilots seat back.
Squadron Leader Leonard Cheshire became frustrated at all the losses of his squadrons Halifax, so he ordered the flame exhaust guards, extra gun turrets, and armor plating removed from the planes. The results were, far fewer losses! Why you ask? The planes were faster and could fly higher now. Curtis Lemay did the same thing to B-29s, even removing all the gun turrets except for the tail gun, and getting rid of the now useless aircrew. However, he then made the men fly lower, not very popular, but it did get results in the destruction of Japanese cities.I knew a Halifax pilot, now sadly deceased. He told me the the only remotely armoured bits on one of those bombers was the pilots seat back.
This will give you a little taste of what it sounded like! The BBC was recording the call of the nightingales, when it picked up some Lancaster and Wellington bombers headed for Germany. It gave me a chill down my spine!Just imagine seeing them all over the place back then! Beautiful plane. Brave souls those boys had.