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In article , The Revolution Will Not
Be Televised writes They evolved that way, from roughly similar airframes as a starting point. Lancasters flying by day would soon develop heavier armour, especially around the engines, less bombload in exchange for more fuel to burn for higher height on the ingress route, and heavier armament like .50 calibres in the rear turret - all of which they were adopting by 1945, which cut into their bombload margin over the B-17. Interesting point, any sources for this. I haven't heard about increasing armour for daylight ops, or trading bomb load for fuel. The B1 Specials had virtually everything not nailed down stripped out, lost their armour and most of their guns. The Lanc achieved its greatest bombload in 1944-5 by daylight. The 50s in the rear turrets were IIRC fitted only as a pair instead of the quad 303s. -- John |
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