Due to some incomprehensible negligence on my part, some key aircraft were left out of the last poll, so I am making a revised one for the big flying boats only*. You can vote twice so vote for your favorite and your second favorite.
I added some stats to help you make your decisions. Flying boats were made in small numbers and there were many experimental types. The criteria I used was at least 5 produced, & saw action during the war, and had some kind of armament (i.e. it was not only a rescue or transport plane). Here is a little side by side comparison of the big flying boats, just for fun:
Flying boat / Engines / In service from / number built / top speed / Cruise speed / range / bomb load / guns / passengers
PBY Catalina / 2 / 1936 / 2,600 built / 196 mph / 125 mph / 2,520 miles / 4,000 lbs bombs / 3 x 7.62mm, 2 x 12.7mm / 3-10
PB2Y Coronado / 4 / 1944? / 217 built / 194 mph / 170 mph / 1,070 miles / 2 x torpedoes or 12,000 lbs (!?) bombs / 8 x 12.7 mm in 3 turrets and two waist positions / 44
Martin PBM / 2 / 1940 / 1,366 built / 205 mph / 135 mph / 3,000 miles / 2 x torpedoes or 4,000 lbs / 8 x 12.7mm in 3 turrets and 2 blister positions / 30
H6K "Mavis" / 4 / 1938 / 215 built / 211 mph / 138 mph / 2,981 miles / 2 x torpedoes or 1,000 lbs bombs / 4 x 7.7mm, 1 x 20mm /18
H8K "Emily" / 4 / 1942 / 334 built / 290 mph / 184 mph / 4,444 miles / 2 x torpedoes or 4,400 lbs bombs / 5 x 20mm, 5 x 7.7mm / 41
Short Sunderland / 4 / 1938 / 749 built / 210 mph / 178 mph / 1,780 miles / 2,000 lbs / 16 x 7.7mm machine guns in 2 turrets, 2 x 12.7mm / 24 - 82
Short Seaford / 4 / 1945 / 10 built / 242 mph / 155 mph / 3,100 miles / 4,960 lbs / 6 x 12.7mm, 2 x 20mm with three turrets, 2 x 7.7mm fixed / ?
Do 24 / 1937 / 3 / 279 built / 205 mph / 183 mph / 1,802 miles / ??? / 2 x 7.92mm mg's , 1 x 20mm / 10
Do 26 / 1939 / 4 / 6 built / 208 mph / 193 mph / 5,592 miles / ??? / 1 x 20mm, 3 x 7.92 mm mg / 4
BV 138 / 1940 / 3 / 297 built / 177 mph / 146 mph / 758 miles / 1200 lbs / 2 x 20mm, 1 x 13mm, 3 x 7.92mm mg / 10
BV 222 / 1941 / 6 / 13 built / 242 mph / 214 mph / 3800 miles (ferry) / ??? / 5 x 13mm mg, 3 x 20mm mg's, 3 turrets / "up to" 92
Supermarine Walrus / 1 / 1935 / 740 built / 135 mph / 92 mph / 600 miles / ??? / 2 x 7.7 mm mg / 10 (civilian version)
Latécoère 300-302 / 4 / 1932 / 7 built / 149 mph / 115 mph / 2050 miles / 660 lbs / 3 x 7.7mm mg / ???
(forgive me if I made any errors here)
Top 5 for top speed are: H8K (290 mph), Seaford (242 mph) & BV-222 (tied), H6K (211 mph), Do 26 (208 mph), & Martin PBM (205 mph)
Top 5 for cruise speed are: BV-222 (214 mph), Do 26 (193 mph), H8K (184 mph), Do 24 (183 mph), Sunderland (178 mph)
Top 5 for range are: Do 26 (5,500 miles), H8K (4,444 miles) & BV-222 (3,800 miles), Seaford (3,100 miles), and Martin PBM (3,000 miles)
Top 5 for armament are (arguably): BV-222, H8K, Seaford, Martin PBM & PB2Y (tied) and Sunderland
A few interesting facts:
The Short Seaford is the Sunderland Mark IV
The Do 24 fought for both sides and was used by the Dutch, Australia, Vichy french and Germans... plus the neutral Spanish and others.
Do 24's rescued 12,000 people per Wikipedia
According to this page, PBY Catalinas sunk 37 U-boats, Sunderlands sunk 26,
per Wikipedia Martin PBM Mariners sunk 10 U-boats, starting with U-158 in 1942.
According to this the crew of a Short Sunderland fought off eight Ju-88s on June 2, 1943
All images Wikipedia / Wikimedia commons
The poetic phrase "wine dark sea" is a bit of an affectation. It originally (or at least as far as we know) comes from Homer. Many find it confusing, there is even a bizarre theory that ancient Greeks didn't see color the same way we do today. But I remember it suddenly coming to me once on a ferry ride from Hamburg to Amsterdam- which I had booked as a train ride but that is another story. Looking over the side at the deep, deep blue of the water such as you only see very far from shore, that phrase came into my head and I felt like I understood it's meaning. It is that same deep rich shade as a glass of wine. Not quite as dark as ink or motor oil but much darker than say, beer. I have loved it ever since and always think of it now whenever I am far out to sea and the water turns that deep blue color.
* I also included the Supermarine Walrus due to the excessive patriotic zeal of certain individuals
I added some stats to help you make your decisions. Flying boats were made in small numbers and there were many experimental types. The criteria I used was at least 5 produced, & saw action during the war, and had some kind of armament (i.e. it was not only a rescue or transport plane). Here is a little side by side comparison of the big flying boats, just for fun:
Flying boat / Engines / In service from / number built / top speed / Cruise speed / range / bomb load / guns / passengers
PBY Catalina / 2 / 1936 / 2,600 built / 196 mph / 125 mph / 2,520 miles / 4,000 lbs bombs / 3 x 7.62mm, 2 x 12.7mm / 3-10
PB2Y Coronado / 4 / 1944? / 217 built / 194 mph / 170 mph / 1,070 miles / 2 x torpedoes or 12,000 lbs (!?) bombs / 8 x 12.7 mm in 3 turrets and two waist positions / 44
Martin PBM / 2 / 1940 / 1,366 built / 205 mph / 135 mph / 3,000 miles / 2 x torpedoes or 4,000 lbs / 8 x 12.7mm in 3 turrets and 2 blister positions / 30
H6K "Mavis" / 4 / 1938 / 215 built / 211 mph / 138 mph / 2,981 miles / 2 x torpedoes or 1,000 lbs bombs / 4 x 7.7mm, 1 x 20mm /18
H8K "Emily" / 4 / 1942 / 334 built / 290 mph / 184 mph / 4,444 miles / 2 x torpedoes or 4,400 lbs bombs / 5 x 20mm, 5 x 7.7mm / 41
Short Sunderland / 4 / 1938 / 749 built / 210 mph / 178 mph / 1,780 miles / 2,000 lbs / 16 x 7.7mm machine guns in 2 turrets, 2 x 12.7mm / 24 - 82
Short Seaford / 4 / 1945 / 10 built / 242 mph / 155 mph / 3,100 miles / 4,960 lbs / 6 x 12.7mm, 2 x 20mm with three turrets, 2 x 7.7mm fixed / ?
Do 24 / 1937 / 3 / 279 built / 205 mph / 183 mph / 1,802 miles / ??? / 2 x 7.92mm mg's , 1 x 20mm / 10
Do 26 / 1939 / 4 / 6 built / 208 mph / 193 mph / 5,592 miles / ??? / 1 x 20mm, 3 x 7.92 mm mg / 4
BV 138 / 1940 / 3 / 297 built / 177 mph / 146 mph / 758 miles / 1200 lbs / 2 x 20mm, 1 x 13mm, 3 x 7.92mm mg / 10
BV 222 / 1941 / 6 / 13 built / 242 mph / 214 mph / 3800 miles (ferry) / ??? / 5 x 13mm mg, 3 x 20mm mg's, 3 turrets / "up to" 92
Supermarine Walrus / 1 / 1935 / 740 built / 135 mph / 92 mph / 600 miles / ??? / 2 x 7.7 mm mg / 10 (civilian version)
Latécoère 300-302 / 4 / 1932 / 7 built / 149 mph / 115 mph / 2050 miles / 660 lbs / 3 x 7.7mm mg / ???
(forgive me if I made any errors here)
Top 5 for top speed are: H8K (290 mph), Seaford (242 mph) & BV-222 (tied), H6K (211 mph), Do 26 (208 mph), & Martin PBM (205 mph)
Top 5 for cruise speed are: BV-222 (214 mph), Do 26 (193 mph), H8K (184 mph), Do 24 (183 mph), Sunderland (178 mph)
Top 5 for range are: Do 26 (5,500 miles), H8K (4,444 miles) & BV-222 (3,800 miles), Seaford (3,100 miles), and Martin PBM (3,000 miles)
Top 5 for armament are (arguably): BV-222, H8K, Seaford, Martin PBM & PB2Y (tied) and Sunderland
A few interesting facts:
The Short Seaford is the Sunderland Mark IV
The Do 24 fought for both sides and was used by the Dutch, Australia, Vichy french and Germans... plus the neutral Spanish and others.
Do 24's rescued 12,000 people per Wikipedia
According to this page, PBY Catalinas sunk 37 U-boats, Sunderlands sunk 26,
per Wikipedia Martin PBM Mariners sunk 10 U-boats, starting with U-158 in 1942.
According to this the crew of a Short Sunderland fought off eight Ju-88s on June 2, 1943
All images Wikipedia / Wikimedia commons
The poetic phrase "wine dark sea" is a bit of an affectation. It originally (or at least as far as we know) comes from Homer. Many find it confusing, there is even a bizarre theory that ancient Greeks didn't see color the same way we do today. But I remember it suddenly coming to me once on a ferry ride from Hamburg to Amsterdam- which I had booked as a train ride but that is another story. Looking over the side at the deep, deep blue of the water such as you only see very far from shore, that phrase came into my head and I felt like I understood it's meaning. It is that same deep rich shade as a glass of wine. Not quite as dark as ink or motor oil but much darker than say, beer. I have loved it ever since and always think of it now whenever I am far out to sea and the water turns that deep blue color.
* I also included the Supermarine Walrus due to the excessive patriotic zeal of certain individuals
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