My grandfather's neighbour flew Liberators with the RAAF. He said that the only reason they took off was the curvature of the earth.
A matter often ignored about the take off performance of the B-24 is when and where.
The operational take off weight was steadily increased as the war went on. From 60,000lb (CC in 1943), through 63,000lb to 66,000lb and even 68,000lb.
Then there is the "hot and / or high" areas the B-24 flew in during the later war period compared to the B-17. No operational B-17 in the SEAC and Pacific areas from the latter part of 1943 to the end of the war, so no comparison is available.
Taken in combination of course there was an effect on take off performance. But look at what the Liberator V (based on the B-24D airframe) was achieving by mid-1945. Stripped of most of its heavy gun turrets, with 2 overload fuel tanks in the forward bomb bay and often another in the rear fuselage, taking off in the cool of the morning from Ceylon to drop supplies to Force 136 personnel just north of Singapore at night, on flights that regularly exceeded 20 hours and in some cases over 24 hours. A round trip distance of over 3,500 statute miles (5,500km, 2,600nm). Often encountering bad tropical weather in the monsoon season from May-Oct.
You will find a transcript of the 160 squadron ORB for 1945 here.

160 Squadron RAF - Robert Quirk's Home Page
160 Squadron RAF - Robert Quirk's Home Read more about aircraft, liberator, duration, squadron, mines and nickels.

Many RAAF personnel flew with the SEAC based Liberator squadrons. Many more with the RAAF Liberator squadrons based in the Darwin area, some of which moved forward to Morotai (between the top of New Guinea and the Philippines) in 1944/45. 25 RAAF was based at Cunderin, Western Australia from Jan 1945 using Corunna Downs and Truscott as forward bases.
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