Old MacDonald
Airman
- 63
- Mar 27, 2018
Do you have any information on the RAF Coastal Command's strike camera mirror attachment for taking photos directly aft of the aircraft during low level submarine attacks?
The Liberator IIIs and later had a standard B-24 fold-down camera mount just aft of the rear crew entry hatch, but it was intended for vertical strike photos from high altitude. Various cameras could be attached to this mount, including the F-24/K-24, which was the fairly standard unit for strike photography. Since the camera sat in a vertical orientation (90° object plane), a mirror attachment was devised to point directly behind and slightly below the plane to record the results of low level submarine attacks.
I also wonder whether the US Navy used this or a similar device on their PB4Y-1s, which in the Atlantic flew antisub missions similar to Coastal Command, and PB4Y-2s later in the war conducted low level attacks on many target types.
Any information on this device will help. I know it existed, but cannot find pictorial or textual information about it.
Thanks in advance.
Ol' Mac
The Liberator IIIs and later had a standard B-24 fold-down camera mount just aft of the rear crew entry hatch, but it was intended for vertical strike photos from high altitude. Various cameras could be attached to this mount, including the F-24/K-24, which was the fairly standard unit for strike photography. Since the camera sat in a vertical orientation (90° object plane), a mirror attachment was devised to point directly behind and slightly below the plane to record the results of low level submarine attacks.
I also wonder whether the US Navy used this or a similar device on their PB4Y-1s, which in the Atlantic flew antisub missions similar to Coastal Command, and PB4Y-2s later in the war conducted low level attacks on many target types.
Any information on this device will help. I know it existed, but cannot find pictorial or textual information about it.
Thanks in advance.
Ol' Mac