Oreo
Senior Airman
The B-18 was used as an AWS plaform and it served well sinking several submarines. Operationally there was nothing wrong with the aircraft, by WW2 it was just obsolete.
True. I suppose it was as reasonable an aircraft as the He 111 or wellington. It could have had some of the upgrades those two got along the way. It would have been relatively easy to convert it to self-sealing tanks, combat armor, more powerful engines, and better armament. I can see a B-18 armed with a Martin dorsal turret, B-26-like low waist gun positions, and a swivel-mounted .50 caliber mount in the nose. Then again, the B-23 was a development of the B-18 that took some of these thoughts into consideration, and they didn't think it was good enough for combat either, even though it had a tail position. The B-23 might have made a decent back-water bomber, given a Martin DT, twin tail guns, and flexible .50's in the waist and nose. My book gives it a moderate range of 1455 miles, but seems like there are always ways to improve range. I guess the B-25 and B-26 were able to do all the same things and more in a smaller package, probably cheaper, surely less aluminum. Curiously, its performance, weight, and bombload specs were similar or superior to the late-war B-25J. Of course the B-25J had much heavier armament and five years worth of improved systems. Available in 1940, the B-23 could have been a worthwhile bomber for any air force, especially with a few easy improvements, such as heavier armament.
But alas, poor Douglas could not make what the Army considered to be a good multi-engined bomber for use during the war. Its B-18, B-19, and B-23 just didn't cut the mustard. Of course the A-20 and A-26 count, and were excellent planes in their own right. I guess the 85-100' wingspan twin was an awkward size and considered unnecessary when smaller and larger aircraft were available. And they decided the giant B-19 wasn't workable.
So-- yes, I still guess I go with the Greif as the worst.