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Naming a plane

JumpBoot

One of the Regulars
Messages
140
Location
Alaska
Hello all,

I was showing my daughter a picture of much great uncle next to the Liberator he flew in the pacific and, like kids often do, she asked me “who named the plane?”. My child is a pitbul on the pant leg of curiosity.

I have no idea and he’s long since passed on. So can anyone square me away to the general rule of thumb for bombers? Did the pilot name it himself, did the crew vote, something else?

JumpBoot
 

Siggmund

One of the Regulars
Messages
111
Location
Bellingham, Washington
Hello all,

I was showing my daughter a picture of much great uncle next to the Liberator he flew in the pacific and, like kids often do, she asked me “who named the plane?”. My child is a pitbul on the pant leg of curiosity.

I have no idea and he’s long since passed on. So can anyone square me away to the general rule of thumb for bombers? Did the pilot name it himself, did the crew vote, something else?

JumpBoot
What I have read is that USAAF bombers were named by either the pilot or by the crew, if the pilot so desired. Often, planes were referred to by the end of their i.d. number, e.g. "739", if not by name.
 

JumpBoot

One of the Regulars
Messages
140
Location
Alaska
I didn’t know that, about being referred to by number. I suppose it makes sense though. I would assume if a crew was slated to fly and their plane was down for repairs, they would just use whichever was available.
 

Siggmund

One of the Regulars
Messages
111
Location
Bellingham, Washington
I didn’t know that, about being referred to by number. I suppose it makes sense though. I would assume if a crew was slated to fly and their plane was down for repairs, they would just use whichever was available.
You should read, Combat Crew by John Comer. It has tons of interesting details about the American air war from a crewman's perspective. My favorite war memoir.
 

1930artdeco

Practically Family
Messages
673
Location
oakland
I talked to a radioman who flew in the pacific and his crew flew over in a brand new B-24 outfitted with radar. They got to their base and the plane was promptly taken from them and they got a beater. The other plane made the news reels taking a direct hit between #2 and the wing root. He even had bomb footage of it going down. I think his pilot named their plane eventually.

Mike
 

tsores

Familiar Face
Messages
87
Location
Chicagoland
You should read, Combat Crew by John Comer. It has tons of interesting details about the American air war from a crewman's perspective. My favorite war memoir.
I did and I also recommend it. It is a fast read the is very well written. Matter-of-fact description of stressful, deadly warfare. Sorry if this is a little off topic.
 

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