WWII-era bomber gunners
I'll give rep to anyone who can give me an answer to this argument, with citations.
My grandpa was an Aviation Machinist's Mate 2/c during WWII (and Korea, too, I think that was the highest rank he reached), with the USN and then the USNR. He was a mechanic, and on at least some occasions, he flew on a PB4Y-2 Privateer (B-24 Liberator) as a gunner.
My dad and I were discussing (read: arguing like ten-year-olds) about this. My grandpa was a mechanic. That is inarguable. What I was saying was that all gunners on bomber crews were mechanics. It was part of their duties, because it makes ****-all sense to train guys dedicated solely as gunners. This is the same reason that the gunners on helicopters today are usually machinist's mates or something.
My dad's argument was that he was a mechanic, and they occasionally let him go up because he really like shooting the big guns, as a special treat. I think this is balls-out stupid, but I haven't been able to find any data on it.
So, anyone who can find me data on who and what the USN used as their gunners on bombers gets rep. You get rep whether you prove me right or wrong. On second though, you get triple rep for info on the Navy and double rep for info on, say, the Army. You'll get one for, say, the RCAF.
I'll give rep to anyone who can give me an answer to this argument, with citations.
My grandpa was an Aviation Machinist's Mate 2/c during WWII (and Korea, too, I think that was the highest rank he reached), with the USN and then the USNR. He was a mechanic, and on at least some occasions, he flew on a PB4Y-2 Privateer (B-24 Liberator) as a gunner.
My dad and I were discussing (read: arguing like ten-year-olds) about this. My grandpa was a mechanic. That is inarguable. What I was saying was that all gunners on bomber crews were mechanics. It was part of their duties, because it makes ****-all sense to train guys dedicated solely as gunners. This is the same reason that the gunners on helicopters today are usually machinist's mates or something.
My dad's argument was that he was a mechanic, and they occasionally let him go up because he really like shooting the big guns, as a special treat. I think this is balls-out stupid, but I haven't been able to find any data on it.
So, anyone who can find me data on who and what the USN used as their gunners on bombers gets rep. You get rep whether you prove me right or wrong. On second though, you get triple rep for info on the Navy and double rep for info on, say, the Army. You'll get one for, say, the RCAF.