My uncle died in his ball turret in a B17 named Leap Year Lady in 1944 when it was hit with shrapnel. This video helped me understand what he dealt with. I have the utmost respect for him. He was 26 years old.
The Narrator sounds familiar and the animation looks familiar. Im gonna leave it as an inside joke. If you know, you know.
Holy hell the technology for this was nuts. Especially when you consider it was the 40's.
Always heard that the ball turret was the worst seat in the house but never knew the specifics on how bad it would truly be. Fantastic video
My grandfather was a ball turret gunner in WW2 on the B-17. His plane was shot down over Magdeburg Germany. He often described the harrowing escape he had to do to get the ball to line up correctly so he could escape, all this while his plane was on fire and plummeting down. He had to grab his parachute and successfully landed on the ground, but I believe all other members of the crew died with the plane crash. After he landed, the German military found him and he was a POW for years. It was always fascinating listening to his story. RIP. Thank you so much for this video, it was wonderful to understand thoroughly how the ball turret worked and what it was like.
Had absolutely no idea such a targeting computer even existed back then, much less inside the ball-turret.
My uncle Andrew was a Mighty 8th B17 ball turret gunner. His plane was hit and went down after a successful bomb run over the loading docks of Palermo, Sicily. He was able to parachute only to be machine gunned while floating. He was 27. Thank you for this wonderful video. I always knew he died a true hero but this educational film shows me how extraordinarily so!
My neighbor, a Seminole native American 5'7", was a B-17 ball turret gunner,lived to be over100, served in the Pacific theatre the entire war told me not much room in there.This vid proves it.RIP good buddy.
My uncle was a ball turret gunner in a B-17 that flew 111 missions with zero casualties. He flew 35 total missions in a few different Forts but Li'l Audrey was his main plane (42-32006). He claimed at least one enemy plane shot down, and he caught a piece of flak in the sole of his boot but wasn't injured. He also had to bail out of one Fort over Belgium and with their help made it back to England. Excellent video!
"contrary to popular belief, the ball turret could not retract into the fuselage" I'm just imagining a bf109 coming from below and the turret getting performance anxiety and not being able to get out
The historical accuracy and attention to detail here is astounding. The uniforms, models, even the voice chatter in the background all add to this concept of what it must have been like. Incredible work here.
My grandfather was a ball turret gunner on a B24 and I always thought that he had the coolest position on the plane and wanted to be just like him. The stories he told about his time up there were amazing.
My father was a ball turret gunner. Shot down twice Belgium & Holland. He talked good bit about how good the German pilots were mostly ME 109s. For years he had nightmares. He was 19.
My dad was a tail gunner. I was visiting him on day and he said “there’s a B17 out at the airport.” When we arrived, we walk up to it and the crew was there. They knew instantly that he was a former crew member. It is a tiny airplane. The most interesting story was how he got the job. They had him stand in the back of a pickup truck and use a shotgun to hit targets that were thrown up. So the gunners were all good shots. He and another fella both hit a 262 one day. The second jet aircraft ever downed in combat. Late in the war apparently most of the rounds were armor-piercing and incendiary. The exceptions were the tracers. My dad’s parents were German and Italian Americans. So often it was cousins fighting cousins. My dad and most of the ex-
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My grandpa was a bellygunner, trained in B-17s but after coming overseas they trimmed the crews from 10 down to 9 and he ended up being shipped down to Italy and working on B-24s most of the time. One of my favorite memories was when we found a B-17 and B-24 at a municipal airport for Memorial day and he took us through both and pointed out lots of cool bits of trivia. This video was amazing, thank you.
I can't believe a YouTube channel doing ART like this.
A couple of years ago I visited a museum with one of the few operational B-17's. For a fee I was able to sit in the ball turret. I'm 5'9", 175lbs, and it was tight, and I was wearing shorts and a t-shirt. The men that flew these beasts had balls of titanium.
Single greatest animated breakdown of anything i've ever seen. The shear amount of detail is amazing. The willingness to add in the extra dramatic flair was not even necessary but absolutely incredible and added so much to it. It's strange to be on the edge of your seat during an informative video but i loved every second of it. fantastic work. I'm about to go watch the rest.
I took care of a WW2 Veteran who recently passed away. He was a Speary Ball Gunner , part of a ten man crew out of New Guineau. He said you could not fire the gun for more than 10 seconds or the Barrels would Melt. He had some great war stories.
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