USAAF Bomber / Fighter Pilot Handbook Airforce - Cockpit instruments - Flying - Named to Co-pilot of B17 of 427th Bomb Group - Stationed in England - 1943





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Naamgeving aan Copiloot van de B-17 van de 427e Bomb Group - gestationeerd in Engeland, een originele, uit 1943 daterende Engels-taal piloteninstructiehandleiding, 200 pagina’s, in goede staat.
Beschrijving van de verkoper
Offered for auction is a rare and original, 1943 dated WWII-era pilots instruction manual covering instrument flying with the B-17 and B-24 bombers, among others, that showed the trainee piloot to use, understand and control the various cockpit instruments, but also any other aspects. The manual is nicely named to R. C. Waggoner, who was co-pilot on a B-17 from the 427th BG, which was stationed in Engeland and the first unit to fly B-17 oer Europe. This manual was designed to promote safe flying and operational efficiency. It includes information on flight safety; training; weather flying; effects of height/altitude; oxygen equipment; engines; parts of aircraft; armament & gunsights; baling out; forced landings; ditching; parachutes; emergency kits; life-vests; 1st aid kits etc. Superb reference material. This is an original copy - not a reprint. Beautifully illustrated with comic like drawings and very realisitic depictions o flying and instrument panels. A very nice manual related to combat and flying of aircraft during WW2; a gem for the aviation collector! See photo's for the condition, as they are part of the description; it is quite good condtion overall.
Nice pilot flying manual from WW2 for your USA WW2 collection!
History of the 427th BG
In April the Army Air Forces recognized there was little difference between the reconnaissance squadrons assigned to heavy bombardment groups and their companion bombardment squadrons, and dropped their "reconnaissance" designation. In this renaming, the 38th became the 427th Bombardment Squadron. The ground echelon departed Biggs Field, Texas, in August 1942, arriving at Fort Dix on 24 August. It sailed aboard the RMS Queen Mary and arrived in Great Britain on 10 September. The air echelon flew through Kellogg Field, Michigan, and Dow Field, Maine, before ferrying its planes across the Atlantic.[13][15]
Due to the haste to move heavy bombers to Europe, the squadron was insufficiently trained for combat[16] and it continued to train in England until it entered combat on 17 November 1942[15] in a strike against Saint-Nazaire, but returned without striking, having been unable to locate its target. It attacked Saint-Nazaire the following day, although its intended target was La Pallice.[17] Its initial raids were on airfields, railroads and submarine pens in France. As a unit of one of only four Flying Fortress groups in VIII Bomber Command during late 1942 and early 1943, the squadron participated in the development of the tactics that would be used throughout the air campaign against Germany.[18]
In 1943, the squadron began flying missions to Germany, participating in the first attack by American heavy bombers on a target in Germany, a raid on the submarine yards at Wilhelmshaven on 27 January 1943. From that time, it concentrated primarily on strategic bombardment of German industry, marshalling yards, and other strategic targets, including the ball bearing plants at Schweinfurt, shipyards at Bremen and an aircraft engine factory at Hamburg.[13]
The 427th received a Distinguished Unit Citation when adverse weather on 11 January 1944 prevented its fighter cover from joining the group, exposing it to continuous attacks by Luftwaffe fighters. Despite this opposition, the unit successfully struck an aircraft assembly plant at Oschersleben.[13]
Although a strategic bombing unit, the squadron was diverted on occasion to close air support and interdiction for ground forces. It attacked gun emplacements and bridges in the Pas-de-Calais during Operation Overlord, the invasion of Normandy, in June 1944; bombed enemy troops during Operation Cobra, the breakout at Saint Lo, and during the Battle of the Bulge. It bombed military installations near Wesel during Operation Lumberjack, the Allied assault across the Rhine. Its last combat mission was an attack on 25 April 1945 against an armament factory at Pilsen.[13]
Following VE Day in May 1945 the 303d Group was reassigned to the North African Division, Air Transport Command and moved to Casablanca Airfield, French Morocco, to use its B-17 bombers as transports, ferrying personnel from France to Morocco. However, the two B-17 groups moved to Casablanca proved surplus to Air Transport Command's needs and the squadron was inactivated in late July 1945 and its planes ferried back to the United States.[13][15]
De verkoper stelt zich voor
Offered for auction is a rare and original, 1943 dated WWII-era pilots instruction manual covering instrument flying with the B-17 and B-24 bombers, among others, that showed the trainee piloot to use, understand and control the various cockpit instruments, but also any other aspects. The manual is nicely named to R. C. Waggoner, who was co-pilot on a B-17 from the 427th BG, which was stationed in Engeland and the first unit to fly B-17 oer Europe. This manual was designed to promote safe flying and operational efficiency. It includes information on flight safety; training; weather flying; effects of height/altitude; oxygen equipment; engines; parts of aircraft; armament & gunsights; baling out; forced landings; ditching; parachutes; emergency kits; life-vests; 1st aid kits etc. Superb reference material. This is an original copy - not a reprint. Beautifully illustrated with comic like drawings and very realisitic depictions o flying and instrument panels. A very nice manual related to combat and flying of aircraft during WW2; a gem for the aviation collector! See photo's for the condition, as they are part of the description; it is quite good condtion overall.
Nice pilot flying manual from WW2 for your USA WW2 collection!
History of the 427th BG
In April the Army Air Forces recognized there was little difference between the reconnaissance squadrons assigned to heavy bombardment groups and their companion bombardment squadrons, and dropped their "reconnaissance" designation. In this renaming, the 38th became the 427th Bombardment Squadron. The ground echelon departed Biggs Field, Texas, in August 1942, arriving at Fort Dix on 24 August. It sailed aboard the RMS Queen Mary and arrived in Great Britain on 10 September. The air echelon flew through Kellogg Field, Michigan, and Dow Field, Maine, before ferrying its planes across the Atlantic.[13][15]
Due to the haste to move heavy bombers to Europe, the squadron was insufficiently trained for combat[16] and it continued to train in England until it entered combat on 17 November 1942[15] in a strike against Saint-Nazaire, but returned without striking, having been unable to locate its target. It attacked Saint-Nazaire the following day, although its intended target was La Pallice.[17] Its initial raids were on airfields, railroads and submarine pens in France. As a unit of one of only four Flying Fortress groups in VIII Bomber Command during late 1942 and early 1943, the squadron participated in the development of the tactics that would be used throughout the air campaign against Germany.[18]
In 1943, the squadron began flying missions to Germany, participating in the first attack by American heavy bombers on a target in Germany, a raid on the submarine yards at Wilhelmshaven on 27 January 1943. From that time, it concentrated primarily on strategic bombardment of German industry, marshalling yards, and other strategic targets, including the ball bearing plants at Schweinfurt, shipyards at Bremen and an aircraft engine factory at Hamburg.[13]
The 427th received a Distinguished Unit Citation when adverse weather on 11 January 1944 prevented its fighter cover from joining the group, exposing it to continuous attacks by Luftwaffe fighters. Despite this opposition, the unit successfully struck an aircraft assembly plant at Oschersleben.[13]
Although a strategic bombing unit, the squadron was diverted on occasion to close air support and interdiction for ground forces. It attacked gun emplacements and bridges in the Pas-de-Calais during Operation Overlord, the invasion of Normandy, in June 1944; bombed enemy troops during Operation Cobra, the breakout at Saint Lo, and during the Battle of the Bulge. It bombed military installations near Wesel during Operation Lumberjack, the Allied assault across the Rhine. Its last combat mission was an attack on 25 April 1945 against an armament factory at Pilsen.[13]
Following VE Day in May 1945 the 303d Group was reassigned to the North African Division, Air Transport Command and moved to Casablanca Airfield, French Morocco, to use its B-17 bombers as transports, ferrying personnel from France to Morocco. However, the two B-17 groups moved to Casablanca proved surplus to Air Transport Command's needs and the squadron was inactivated in late July 1945 and its planes ferried back to the United States.[13][15]

