Position Firing | B-17 Gunner Training Film (1944)

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  • Опубліковано 13 чер 2023
  • United States Army Airforce training film TF I-3366. An instructional film for B-17 bomber gunners on how to aim at attacking aircraft. Animated drawings depict a fighter's curve of pursuit and motion imparted to a bullet by a forward movement of a bomber. Applications of rules of position firing are illustrated by moving diagrams.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 21

  • @papajon62
    @papajon62 2 місяці тому +7

    The paperboy analogy is sobering. It wasn’t long ago in these brave young men’s lives that they were paperboys….

  • @Caratacus1
    @Caratacus1 Рік тому +10

    Loved that. Just been reading Middlebrook's Schweinfurt book. The B-17s on that raid were carrying 4,500 .50cal machine guns between them. But this vid shows how difficult it was for air gunners. Unfortunately the fighters attacking the un-escorted Schweinfurt raid used head-on attacks. So the air gunners couldn't bring their guns to bear at all. They (and the crew) could only sit and wait and pray very hard indeed. 60 B-17s were lost in that disaster.

  • @briannicholas2757
    @briannicholas2757 Рік тому +9

    These training videos were excellent, especially given the age of most of the recruits.
    These were kids, fresh out if high school, they watched cartoons, read comic books, and played sports, so the various services learned quickly that if you prrsented to necessary information like it was advanced trigonometry, it wasnt going to stick. Hollywood could make these training films by the ton for any topic. And they worked. These young kids learned, and didnt just fall asleep in class.
    For all their other beurocratic faults, the services learned how to adapt as they fought for real and put that to work teaching each new group of recruits.
    Thanks for sharing these with us.

    • @cyprianalexzander6628
      @cyprianalexzander6628 8 днів тому +1

      Or, like my Grandfather a waist gunner serving in the ETO, dyslexic. This matched his learning style. He was an intelligent man, though he had a hard time reading.

  • @jonsguitarbarn4270
    @jonsguitarbarn4270 2 місяці тому +3

    I'm building a B17G model kit right now so have been soaking up any info I come across. This is a little out of the norm and not totally relevant but interesting none the less. Hats off to those men who maned those guns, I'm sure no amount of imagination can begin to fathom the true reality of those moments in the air.

  • @PrimarisBlackTemplaDraven
    @PrimarisBlackTemplaDraven 4 місяці тому +4

    Watching this cause it helps me win in war thunder.

  • @theapostatejack8648
    @theapostatejack8648 Рік тому +4

    I knew they had to lead the target, but it didn't occur to me until now the right reason why. Interesting!

  • @redskindan78
    @redskindan78 Рік тому +2

    Ah...my uncle became a waist gunner on a B-17. He was about seventeen years old then. They were all so young. My dad, a USN Aviation Machinist's Mate, who had joined the USNR at fifteen, was nineteen when called to active duty early in 1941. Thinking about it, he must have been about eighteen when he served aboard a four-stacker Clemson-class destroyer "inviting" German ships to get away from the US Atlantic coast during the summer of 1940...a "reserves training cruise". So these gunners were not much older than the paper-boys that the film mentions.

  • @MsZeeZed
    @MsZeeZed Рік тому +4

    11:53 - 4) Suppressing Fire!

  • @ronhudson3730
    @ronhudson3730 Рік тому +2

    No comment on the drop of the bullets during flight. Was that a factor at the usual ranges?

  • @wakkowarner4288
    @wakkowarner4288 Місяць тому

    Why'd you crop it to widescreen? There's another copy out there with full 1:33 aspect ratio.

  • @mrpistonrecaro6483
    @mrpistonrecaro6483 4 дні тому +1

    Waist gunner the best position if you wanted out of this world 🌍

  • @just4therecord
    @just4therecord 3 місяці тому +2

    I wonder how they don’t hit the other bombers in formation by mistake

  • @robertmarsh3588
    @robertmarsh3588 Рік тому +1

    Great video, but interesting that it doesn't include any compensation for gravity and the resultant bullet drop. What kind of ranges are we talking for the 0.50 cal to be effective? 300 yds or less?

    • @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935
      @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 Рік тому

      Out of effective range 800 yds is 2,400 ft. Average bullet speed is _about_ 2,400 ft/sec so time of flight is _about_ 1 second at 800 yds, 1/2 sec at 400 yds, 1/4 sec at 200 yds.
      S = UT +- 1/2 A T squared. Initial falling speed U is zero so UT is zero.
      1/2 times 9.8 M/sec squared (4.9) by 1 squared seconds (1) is _about_ 5 metres, 16.5 feet for 800 yds.
      1/2 times 9.8 M/sec squared by 1/2 squared seconds (1/4) is about 1.25 metres, 4.1 feet for 400 yds.
      1/2 times 9.8 M/sec squared by 1/4 squared seconds (1/16) is about 0.63 metres, 2.1 feet for 200 yds.
      It will be a bit more because of the bullet slowing but that will be much less than at sea level, there is about a 300 knot true airspeed tail wind on the bullets and the air density at 30,000 feet would have fallen by about 70%.

  • @retepsnikrep
    @retepsnikrep Рік тому +1

    When you say remastered what processing exactly do you do on them. Thanks.. AI restoration?

    • @ArmouredCarriers
      @ArmouredCarriers  Рік тому +3

      Yes, AI upscaling for modern tv’s and monitors, clip centering on the focus of the event, and audio cleanup. Still learning the ropes.

    • @retepsnikrep
      @retepsnikrep Рік тому

      @@ArmouredCarriers Excellent what software are you using please?

    • @wakkowarner4288
      @wakkowarner4288 Місяць тому

      @@ArmouredCarriers Stop cropping please, it destroys the original presentation.