I am just shy of 5' 11" and I fit in that exact turret in you photo! Of course, that was 20 years ago and I weighed one or two pounds less and was in jeans and a shirt!Atticus Finch said:As I looked into the cramped space, I realized that I wouldn't have had to worry about being assigned to a B-17's B/T position. I couldn't have fit in there butt naked and greased....much less while wearing a flight suit, a heated bunny suit and fleece outergear.
AF
I believe because the turret could/would be stuck in a position where it was unable to be opened at all.kampkatz said:If the hatch could be opened to the outside, why was there the fear of being stuck in the turret with inoperable landing gear. Couldn't the operator just open it from the inside and bail out?
Don't know about the 12 guage shotguns but...The Dover AFB museum has a top turret assembly on a frame collecting alot of dust in their restoration hanger.Sgt Brown said:Why as a kid? I want one now!
In actuality, what I DO want is a training turret that mounted two 12 ga shotguns for shooting at clay pigeons.
Tom
rumblefish said:I believe because the turret could/would be stuck in a position where it was unable to be opened at all.
Most ball turret gunners didn't wear parachutes because there was not enough room. But I talked to some, that wore their chest chute hooked on one side and stowed on the other side, that way flop it over and hook the remaining hook, and out the back!, They would jam from time to time from battle damage, but usually they were able to get out. Andy Rooney does talk about being on a base where a B-17 belly landed with the gunner still down there!kampkatz said:If the hatch could be opened to the outside, why was there the fear of being stuck in the turret with inoperable landing gear. Couldn't the operator just open it from the inside and bail out?
Stearmen said:Most ball turret gunners didn't wear parachutes because there was not enough room. But I talked to some, that wore their chest chute hooked on one side and stowed on the other side, that way flop it over and hook the remaining hook, and out the back!, They would jam from time to time from battle damage, but usually they were able to get out. Andy Rooney does talk about being on a base where a B-17 belly landed with the gunner still down there!
Good story with Sweat Pea. Really don't read much like hat in the history books. The spat between pilot and copilot that is.Fletch said:Sgt. Bill Carter, of Ames, IA, ball turret gunner with the 358th BS, 303rd BG(H), lived not far from me. (In 1937, his uncle built my house.)
Bill flew in the B-17Gs Swee Pea, Princess Pat, and Sack Time in 1944-'45. Our local historical society has gun-camera film he took on a few runs (unfortunately not online yet, but I've seen it and it's fascinating).
Here is a story of Swee Pea's forced landing in France, before which Bill and another crewman had to clear the bomb load by hand!
Lieut. Joe Gordon (2nd from r top) and crew. Sgt. Bill Carter (l bottom).
kiltie said:That episode of Amazing Stories pretty much took care of any desire to crawl in there.
Phantomfixer said:Don't know about the 12 guage shotguns but...The Dover AFB museum has a top turret assembly on a frame collecting alot of dust in their restoration hanger.