B-26 Marauder In Action - Aircraft No. 210
by Hans-Heiri Stapfer /
2015 / English / PDF
34.5 MB Download
Updated and packed with 20 new pages. Probably no other aircraft
type in the inventory of the United States Army Air Force (USAAF)
can rival the reputation of the Martin B-26 Marauder. The B-26,
nicknamed Flak Bait, was the only US bomber to accomplish more than
200 missions during WWII. More than 60 percent of the Marauders
that started bombing operations from English bases during the
summer of 1943 were still operational a year later. A total of
129,943 Marauder sorties over Europe were recorded by the USAAF at
the cost of 911 B-26s lost in combat. The Marauders belonging to
the 9th and 12th Air Force dropped a total of 169,382 tons of
bombs, mainly on tactical targets, such as bridges, enemy strong
points, and marshaling yards, but also on V1 flying bomb sites in
northern France. Between November 1940 and March 1945, a total of
5,266 B-26s were built. Many senior pilots of the 22nd Bomb Group
in Australia, the outfit that pioneered the Marauder, recalled the
B-26 as "the best damn airplane the Air Force ever had." There is
nothing more to add.
Updated and packed with 20 new pages. Probably no other aircraft
type in the inventory of the United States Army Air Force (USAAF)
can rival the reputation of the Martin B-26 Marauder. The B-26,
nicknamed Flak Bait, was the only US bomber to accomplish more than
200 missions during WWII. More than 60 percent of the Marauders
that started bombing operations from English bases during the
summer of 1943 were still operational a year later. A total of
129,943 Marauder sorties over Europe were recorded by the USAAF at
the cost of 911 B-26s lost in combat. The Marauders belonging to
the 9th and 12th Air Force dropped a total of 169,382 tons of
bombs, mainly on tactical targets, such as bridges, enemy strong
points, and marshaling yards, but also on V1 flying bomb sites in
northern France. Between November 1940 and March 1945, a total of
5,266 B-26s were built. Many senior pilots of the 22nd Bomb Group
in Australia, the outfit that pioneered the Marauder, recalled the
B-26 as "the best damn airplane the Air Force ever had." There is
nothing more to add.