美军的婊子飞机

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美军的婊子飞机
最近参观美国空军博物馆时,我看到一架机身绘有“草莓婊子”图案的美军飞机。这风情万种的美女,简直就是美军的空中慰安妇嘛。望梅止渴,望女好色,美军哪,难怪你们在世界各驻地到处撒种造私生子。下面是这位婊子飞机的生平介绍。主要信息:这架婊子飞机于1943年8月开始接客。
Strawberry Bitch
By Daniel P. Rice- Pilot- 512th Squadron, 376th Bomb
Group
The airplane which became named the Strawberry Bitch and later was
placed on exhibit at the United States Air Force Museum was
assigned to our crew at Herington Air Force Base, Kansas, in late
August, 1943. I signed an issue ticket for it there. At that point
it was merely one of many B-24Ds off the assembly line at San
Diego, distinguished from all the rest of its model only by its
serial number — at least until it had received its coat of
camouflage pink paint. At that point it became one of a much
smaller 'group.
We took the airplane up to check it out and found everything to our
satisfaction except for one thing. As we put it through its various
trial maneuvers, I noticed that the air speed indicator registered
consistently about seven or eight miles per hour slower than it
should. (Climbing speed, cruising speed, stalling speed, landing
speed, etc.) I recall commenting to the crew after landing that "It
looks like we have a real dog".
But I was not willing to let it rest that way. I sought out the
maintenance officer on the flight line, explained my observations
to him and asked him to check the airspeed meter for accuracy.
Clearly, he didn't want to do it. I'm sure he felt that it would be
an exercise in futility. But I persisted, and with all good grace,
in spite of his reluctance, he agreed to make the test. When I
checked back with him later, he told me with some wonderment that
his men had replaced the instrument. Their test procedure had shown
that it registered seven miles per hour too slow.
As the various necessary procedures preliminary to our departure
were being completed,
Someone on the crew was thinking that the airplane should have a
name. I had not given that any thought, so when our engineer,
Sergeant Haberman, came to me asking if they could name it, I
agreed. When he told me the name they had in mind, I was a little
taken aback. It would not be completely accurate to say that I
"approved" their suggested name but I did accept it, and overnight
through the talent of someone, there on the flight line, one pink
B-24D number 42-72843 became the Strawberry Bitch. That is, the
name was painted on there.
The picture of the red haired Vargas girl was not added until after
we had been in the 512th Squadron for a while. I don't remember for
sure just where that was done. It could have been at Enfidaville,
Tunisia, but I believe it more likely that the picture was added
after we moved up to San Pancrazio, Italy. We left Herington on the
morning of August 28, 1943, bound for Dow Field at Bangor, Maine.
On that flight, after much close observation, I concluded that our
artificial horizon was just slightly out of level, and wrote it up
on the proper form. Again, the flight line maintenance people
promptly installed a replacement instrument.
The next morning we were off again, bound for Gander, Newfoundland.
We carried a large brown sealed envelope with instructions to not
open it until after we were airborne. After we had gotten lined out
on course, I opened it and found Operations Orders Number 398
directing crew number 34-4, whose pilot I was, to proceed by air in
B-24D number 42-72843 to Cairo, Egypt, and report to the Ninth Air
Force for further assignment and duty. Two other crews from the
Bridges Provisional Group were included in the same order, those of
Lieutenant John M. Repp and Lieutenant William Metzger, Jr. I paid
close attention to the new artificial horizon on that flight and
found it satisfactory.
At about 08:45 PM local time on August 30, we left Gander for the
flight across the North Atlantic to Prestwick, Scotland.
Most of that ten hours and twenty minutes was about as dull and
boring as it can get. For the most part we were between cloud
layers, so we could not have seen the ocean even if there had been
something down there to look at or any light to see it.
Our navigator couldn't see the stars to check our position by
celestial observations, so we just sat there and kept the compass
on his dead reckoning headings. It was almost like spending ten
hours straight in a Link Trainer. I did have one small diversion
though. After a little while I had the feeling that we were flying
in a shallow bank to the left. Our instruments said we were OK, but
I couldn't help remembering that just two days ago I had an
artificial horizon, which was not quite accurate. Could I trust
this one? Should I?
That question was answered in favor of training over "feeling" and
it turned out that instruments were indeed a more reliable
indicator of attitude than the "seat of the pants". We made
landfall just where we were supposed to, or at least within
reasonable distance, and all was well.
I suppose that we would have been moved on out on the next leg of
our trip the next day except for the weather. As the day began, a
solid overcast hung low over the field, and nothing was moving. I
think it would be accurate to say that the field was closed except
for emergencies. We kept an ear tuned and an eye peeled for another
pink B-24D, serial number 42-72844, with Bill Metzger and his crew
who were traveling with us but who had been held over at Gander. We
watched in vain as his expected ETA came and went. The only
airplane that came in was a C-54, which rolled to a dead stop on
the runway and stayed there. It was rumored that he didn't have
enough fuel left to taxi in, and also that two very high-ranking
Air Force generals were aboard. I can neither confirm nor deny the
rumor.
It turned out later that Metzger and his crew had been up there
somewhere in that soup but were not allowed to land. He was
diverted to a small grass field somewhere in the general area,
where the airplane was lightened so he could get it back in the air
to come on to Prestwick when the weather would permit landing
there. Of course the things removed from the airplane had to be
brought on to Prestwick by some other means so it could all be
reassembled for the continuation of their journey.
The next morning, September 2, we were off to St Mawgen, in
Cornwall, which would be the jumping off place for the second long
over-water leg on our way to Africa. Here there was another hitch.
It was discovered that gasoline been dribbling down over the
exhaust pipe of our number one engine, so it was determined that we
should be sent to a B-24 repair depot at Watton, northeast of
London to get it fixed. There they found a fuel leak in the
auxiliary wing tip tank system, and corrected it. Then on September
6, we went back to St Mawgen. Another bug had to be worked
out.
That same day we took off for Africa a little while before
midnight, and landed at Marrakech about ten hours later. For some
reason we were allowed only a very short rest and then were told to
move on, even though we had been in the air about 12.5 hours out of
the last 24. We chose a fairly short hop (4:40) to Algiers, and
rested there a couple of days.
We made one more stop, at Tripoli, before arriving at Cairo on
September 11. There we received new orders, to report to Devesoir,
which was located on the west bank of the Great Bitter Lake, for
the airplane to be made ready for combat and then on (or back) to
Berka Two at Benghazi, Libya. There we would join the 376th Bomb
Group. We checked in there on September 16, and were further
assigned to the 512th Squadron. The Strawberry Bitch was now poised
to begin to fulfill its purpose, that of combat operations against
the enemy.
My crew did not have the Bitch on any of the airplane’s first three
missions. It was assigned to different squadron "old- timers" who
had the privilege of breaking in new airplanes, and I was sent out
as co-pilot with others who had the dubious honor of breaking in
new pilots. Others of the crew were also given temporary
"one-mission assignments during this break-in period. We finally
were put back together for my fourth mission but with a different
airplane.
It was the Bitch's fourth mission — my fifth — before we were all
back together again in "our" airplane. We took off from Benina
Plain at Benghazi to bomb Tatoi Airdrome near Athens which was
being used by the Germans in their fight with the British over some
islands in the eastern Mediterranean. We landed back at Berka
Two.
I think we caught them by surprise, for there was no fighter
opposition at all and no effective antiaircraft fire. I don't
remember any at all. The next day we were back in the Athens area
again for the same purpose, this time at Eleusis Airdrome. The
German fighters were ready for us. The "tail end Charlie" element
at the extreme right rear corner of the formation took quite a
beating as the fighters came at us from the rear. We were in the
left wing position of that element and saw both the right wing and
the lead ships catch fire and go down. We took a lot of hits
ourselves, including 20mm cannon shell bursts in our main wing fuel
tanks, but did not catch fire. Our top gunner (engineer) was
injured about the left side of his face and head by fragments from
the shell burst and holed Plexiglas, but fortunately the wounds
were not deep nor life threatening. After a short healing period he
was back in the harness and pulling his share of the load again. I
don't suppose I ever did know the full extent of the damage
absorbed by the airplane that day. Most of those details have long
since dissolved in the mists of time anyway. But I do remember the
three or four — possibly more — holes in the top of our wing and
fuel tanks through which I could look in and see the gasoline
gently sloshing back and forth as the airplane was slightly rocked
by our movement on it. If I had a coffee cup, I could have reached
in through the holes and dipped out the fuel. In retrospect, it
seems to me that as I was watching both of my element mates go down
in flames, that was the quintessential time and place for the
expression: "There but for the grace of God go I." I certainly am
at a loss for any other explanation of why they went down and we
did not.
I remember too the good sized jagged hole in the left vertical
stabilizer at or just above its attachment point to the horizontal
tail surface where other explosive shells had found us. And at
least one non-explosive one found us too. Curiously, it had entered
the trailing edge of our left wing exactly in the center of the
seam created by the riveting of two sheets of aluminum skin
together. It had traveled forward through the wing and out through
the de-icing boot on the leading edge. Then, there was a pronounced
dimple in the center of one of our propeller blades, which it had
hit after exiting the wing.
As we had approached the base, we could not establish contact with
the tower, and once on the ground it was easy to understand why.
All of our antennas had been shot away. That in itself was no big
deal, but I think it serves to indicate the amount of bullets and
shell fragments which had been, flying about the airplane.
So the Strawberry Bitch's fifth mission was sort of a rough one for
it. That was more damage than our squadron ground crews were
prepared to handle, so the airplane was transferred to a
maintenance squadron for repair. It did not return to duty until
November when my crew had it on the 10th and 11th for its 6th and
7th missions. We had it again for its 11th mission on November
29th, and Its 14th on December 15th.
The December 15th mission was my last flight in the Strawberry
Bitch. Our target was the Avisio viaduct just south of Bolzano in
northern Italy, but the airplane couldn't quite make it. Just about
the time we crossed the northern coast of the Adriatic Sea, our
number four engine started trailing a streamer of dense black
smoke, so we feathered the propeller, dropped out of formation, and
brought our bomb load back home. My recollection is that we had
blown a cylinder.
Thus did my own personal association with the Strawberry Bitch come
to an end after about 150 hours as its pilot. About 40 of these
were combat hours, about 40 were in non-combat flights in the
Mediterranean area, about 63 were in transit from Herrington to
Benghazi, and about seven were in check-out flights at
Herington.
The association ended, that is, until I found it again at the Air
Force Museum in the spring of 1975. With the gracious permission of
museum personnel I have enjoyed the privilege of revisiting its
cockpit on four different occasions with different members of my
family. I am deeply appreciative.
I am afraid that this brief "overview" has long since lost the
quality of brevity. Perhaps I can ration-alize this by claiming to
have added some bit of information about the airplane that is not
contained in the Museum's files on it.
Dan Rice was a pilot in the 512th Squadron of the 376th Bomb Group in the 15th Air Force. He completed 24 missions over southern and southeastern Europe and then spent more than 16 months as a POW in Germany. After discharge from the Air Force, he earned a B.S. Degree in Electrical Engineering and went to work in the electric utility industry. He retired in 1986.
Reprinted from the Friends Journal Vol. 27, No. 2, Summer 2004