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For the most part, pilots will defend the aircraft they are currently flying.
For the most part, pilots will defend the aircraft they are currently flying. After all, they must have faith that the aircraft will do its job and bring the crew home safely. If the pilots doubt that simple fact, then they wouldn't get in the aircraft in the first place.
This could be controversial..
As per my previous post, a Canadian squadron received the first Canadian built Lancasters, this may have meant them having to stay on Halifaxes longer than neccessary.Thanks for the detailed response, Steve. Admittedly, I don't know much about Harris but he does come across as being vitally interested in "his boys" irrespective of their country of origin. If there were a nationality bias, one would expect it to show in Commonwealth squadrons routinely receiving the latest equipment last but that simply isn't borne out by the facts. Some RCAF and RAAF units received the Lancaster in 1943 while others soldiered on with the Halifax until 1945. The same could be said of mainline RAF squadrons.
I read in a post here a long time ago that regardless of the nationality of a squadron almost all flight engineers were British because there was no training scheme set up in Canada.
Good info, but the 49,808 pilots trained for RCAF RAAF RNZF and RAF puts it into perspective.Most engineers were trained in the United Kingdom, but about 1,900 engineers eventually graduated from the Flight Engineers School in Aylmer, Ontario, once it opened in July 1944.
The British Commonwealth Air Training Plan - The Second World War - History - Remembrance - Veterans Affairs Canada
Good info Steve, a question, do you live at the National Archive?Is that how you have access to all the official documentation? Thanks for sharing it all, by the way.
Thus it was to the Vale of York, between York and Middlesborough that the Canadians were sent, much to the dismay of many Canadian airmen who arrived at muddy camps consisting of nothing but grim Nissan huts, in the middle of nowhere, sometimes miles from the nearest town or railway station, and in a part of England that while noted for its rugged natural beauty (it is stunning) was far from cosmopolitan.
Cheers
Steve