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![]() The comments about this being a Naval Aviation News Group are, of course, well taken, but I trained in and flew the Navy version of the B-24 in Hutchinson, Kansas, over fifty years ago, immediately after basic training in the SNJ (T-6). I guess we didn't know any better but I don't recall it being an exceptional challenge or a particularly dangerous or accident prone aircraft. It was, however, a damn truck at first, until you got used to it - and I think someone else has commented on its taxi and climb characteristics. I recall it as an easier aircraft to land than some of the 30 or so types I subsequently flew - just line up that protrusion (was it a Navigators bubble or part of the nose turret?) with the right horizon reference for the landing weight and fly it in. It might be interesting to you to get the accident statistics for NAS Hutchinson, KA, in the early fifties - which I don't recall as being significant - and compare them to your Air Force numbers. Might show that the Navy's basic training was a better prelude to the aircraft that the AF version. |
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