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The Reluctant Raiders is perhaps the most documented and researched
book on a United States Navy land-based squadron flying the PB4Y-1
Liberator and PB4Y-2 Privateer. The final result of five years of
research, the book traces the squadron's history from its
commissioning in August 1943, to the final days of World War II,
including: never before published combat and nose art photography;
the squadron's tactical organization; a chronology of each combat
aircrew's mission record; personnel killed in action; and an
appendix containing Japanese shipping and aircraft destroyed or
damaged by the squadron
This revised and expanded second edition covers USN and USMC
squadrons that operated the Consolidated B-24 Liberator heavy
bomber as the PB4Y-1 in the Pacific from early 1943 through
September 1944 in the Central Pacific. Combat air crews consisted
of eleven young men typically ages 18 to 26 led by a patrol plane
commander in his early to mid-twenties. They flew alone on
single-plane patrols often lasting ten or more hours. Alone on
patrol there were no witnesses when an aircraft failed to return to
base; they simply vanished, leaving little if any clues about their
fate. Other aircrews sent to look for the missing would
occasionally spot a deflated life raft floating or dye marker
spreading across the waterevidence marking where a four-engine
bomber and its crew had gone down.
The threat of enemy aircraft striking American naval forces at
night with impunity during World War II led the Navy to seek
fighter aircraft capable of stopping this threat. Trace the history
of radar-equipped night fighter aircraft produced for the U.S. Navy
and Marine Corps by the American aircraft companies Grumman and
Vought before the arrival of jets with nocturnal capabilities.
World War II squadrons operated night variants of the Vought F4U-2
Corsair and Grumman F6F-3/5N Hellcat while post-war night fighter
units were equipped with the Grumman F7F-3N Tigercat and/or Vought
F4U-5N/NL. Night Cats and Corsairs contains never before published
color and black and white photographs covering the night variants
of the F6F Hellcat, F7F Tigercat, F4U-2 and F4U-5N/NL Corsairs.
Alan Careys new book, his fifth on USN and USMC bomber units of the
Second World War, is the story of U.S. Navy Fleet Air Wing Seven
(FAW-7) and the men who flew the Navy version of the Consolidated
B-24 Liberator bomber out of Dunkeswell and Upottery, England
during World War II. Navy PB4Y-1 Liberator squadrons were unlike
their counterparts in the U.S. Armys 8th Air Force, who battled
their way through thick flak and swarms of German fighters while
flying to and from targets in continental Europe. The job of U.S.
Navy PB4Y-1 Liberator aircrews was to keep German U-boats from
successfully operating in the Bay of Biscay and the English Channel
by going out day after day, often in miserable weather conditions,
on unrelenting search and destroy missions. During the war, FAW-7
Liberators were responsible for the sinking of five U-boats and
damaging many more.
Consolidated-Vultee Aircraft Corporations (Convair) attempt to make
a few design changes to its famous B-24 Liberator for the U.S. Navy
in 1942 eventually evolved into the PB4Y-2 Privateer, a
70,000-pound patrol bomber equipped with state-of-the-art
electronics gear, armed with twelve .50-caliber machine guns, and
the capability to deliver bombs, depth charges, and guided
missiles. Beginning with the development and production of the
aircraft, this book presents an in-depth examination of the patrol
bombers entire operational history from 1942 to the present.
Containing over 260 photographs and line art, the book covers the
PB4Y-2s service with the U.S. Navy, French Aeronavale, Republic of
China Air Force, various countries of Latin America, and finally as
a slurry bomber for aerial fire fighting companies.
One of the most unusual and remarkable American fighter aircraft,
the F-82 Twin Mustang was the last mass production propeller-driven
fighter acquired by the U.S. Air Force. Originally intended as a
very long-range fighter escort for the Boeing B-29 Superfortress
during World War II, it arrived too late to see combat and evolved
into a night and all-weather fighter during the post-war years.
Combat operations in the Korean War followed, along with a host of
other dynamic episodes of deployment. This work traces the
developmental, operational, and combat history of this unique
American fighter and features 120 photographs and illustrations,
many of which have never been published before. Seven chapters, all
extensively illustrated, cover the aircraft's development,
descriptions of the variants and sub-types, details of initial
entry into service, three chapters covering the F-82's service in
the Korean War, and a final chapter detailing the type's removal
from the Korean War Theatre in February 1952, to see out its
operational days in the Alaskan Air Defence Command. An appendix
section follows, featuring tables of the different variants, an
illustrated list of known nose art applied to F-82s, and an entry
of losses suffered in the Korean War. All these additional details
bring new points of interest to the popular Images of War format,
making for a richer, more informative reading experience. Focussing
on an overlooked type, deployed in a conflict often side-lined
within mainstream war histories, this publication offers a much
deserved platform upon which to appreciate this dynamic and
immensely interesting aircraft.
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