On Apr 6, 2:37*am, "Jim Wilkins" wrote:
"Nightjar" wrote in message
...
On 03/04/2012 17:49, David E. Powell wrote:
On Apr 3, 1:18 am, Bill *wrote:
wrote:
So, by then, the B-17 crews had figured out that high altitude
level
bombing of moving ships wasn't working out very well?
Did anyone ever try equipping the B-17 with torpedoes?
Well, sorta.
http://tinyurl.com/7sr3lmu
Thank you! If this was 1940 than this stuff is huge! It's huge
either
way, but wow!
The GT-1 does not seem to have been tested until 1943, so the
caption has to be wrong. The British Toraplane, a similar air
launched gliding torpedo was around in 1940*, but, of course, that
would not have been launched from a B-17.
* Work started in 1939 but was abandoned in 1942, as it proved to be
very inaccurate.
Colin Bignell
A field-expedient PBY torpedo attack from Guadalcanal:http://www.daveswarbirds.com/cactus/jackcram.htm
For decades, we had a docent taking tickets at our front desk that
kept a photo nearby of his "Black Cat" following a successful mission
- they were hit on their run and a shell carried away one of their
props, narrowly missing the cockpit as it careened on by with a roar.
Already committed, the pilot got his bombs off and accounted for a
troop ship with his single-engine Catalina. Just a little reminder
that men that go to war in elegant, pedestrian seaplanes are just a
little different than most.