Very interesting film. Interesting to see what and how much wireless/electronics gear was added to the aircraft as the war progressed. Also noticed the RCA AR88 Comm receiver in use at the base in one shot.
The other thing that I did not realize was how incredibly unprotected the crew of the Lancaster was in combat. Only one small armour plate to protect the pilot's head! That it even worse than the B-17 (not by much) where the ventral gunner was the luck one to be enclosed in an armoured ball turret.
Technically speaking for either aircraft, an enemy aircraft coming straight astern, with a well aimed burst of gunfire could take out the tail gunner and place a stream of lead down the full length of the fuselage with little to stop it.
They talk of the 70 odd thousand Bomber crew killed during the war. I wonder what percentage of them were killed in aircraft that actually made it home? One tends to assume they would all have died in aircraft shot down. We look at the actions of World War One where commanders sent unprotected infantry against machine guns again and again and think how terrible that was and if they had to do it again the commanders would do a better job. Move ahead to WW2, go into the air instead of fighting on the ground, and it seems the commanders didn't really get the message.
David
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