“… for the story of the early development of US military air
transport and the Libertors that were its backbone, nobody has
provided anything to match this book.” -The Journal of the Air Force
Historical Foundation With iconic images depicting it in the skies
over Occupied Europe or the Far East, the B-24 Liberator is remembered
for its part in the Allies’ bombing campaigns during the Second
World War. But there was another part to this famous four-engine
aircraft – one that is less well known. While the Douglas C-47
Dakota is deservedly celebrated as the most important twin-engine
transport aircraft of the war, the early use of the four-engine
Consolidated B-24 Liberator bomber as a passenger carrier is virtually
unknown but was as important. Since the B-24 had more interior room
than the B-17, it could be more easily be converted into a personnel
carrier. These early Liberators operated America’s and Britain’s
early diplomatic missions and then were to be extensively flown by the
Atlantic Ferry Organization and the Transport Commands on missions
that opened the world to air transport as never before. Several B-24s
were converted for VIP personal and diplomatic use, which included
Harriman’s Moscow and round-the-world diplomatic mission, and those
used by Churchill and Eisenhower to ‘get around’. To meet the need
for a cargo and personnel transport which had longer transoceanic
range and improved high-altitude performance than the C-47, in early
1942 the C-87, a hastily designed B-24 derivative, was placed into
production. By installing a built-up floor section that replaced the
bomb bay doors, the C-87 could carry six tons of cargo loaded through
a cargo door cut into the side of its fuselage or through a special
hinged door in its nose. Most C-87s were operated by the US Ferrying
Command and Air Transport Command; by the late summer of 1943, they
were extensively operating regular routes from the United States to
the world’s most remote areas. To meet this increased requirement
for air transport, the ATC was forced to turn to four civil commercial
airlines for help operating the system. Of the 287 purpose-built
C-87s, 24 were transferred to the RAF under Lend-Lease for RAF Ferry
and Transport Command. The C-87 would remain as a prime mover until
the dedicated C-54 Skymaster four-engine transport came into service.
The 218 C-109s were fuel tanker conversions of completed B-24 bombers
which had all armament removed and extra fuel tanks added to carry
fuel from India for B-29s based in China. Due to the lack of C-47s
after D-Day, conventional B-24s were again converted for transporting
vital supplies and bulk fuel to troops in France. Once Allied troops
broke out of the Normandy beachhead, converted Liberators flew
Trucking supply drop operations delivering emergency fuel and supplies
to Patton’s fuel-starved armies racing across France. Later these
B-24s supplied the ill-fated Operation Market Garden at Arnhem.
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Transport and Personnel Variants During WW2
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781399031639
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Casemate Publishers and Book Distributors, LLC
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter