I've been meaning to get into the "modern age" now for awhile and post some images from the side of the world, and figured with it already 105 degrees outside and it's too hot to work on my junk in the hangar, here goes.
(Bear with me ya'll.... I'm new to Photobucket by all of 20 minutes or so, so this thing is more a test for me than anything else....)
This one's for Mr. Peters... what was left of a complete ball turret that was reduced to a mere shell for a Hollywood appearance back in the 1960s.
Back in 1968, the studio responsible for the film "Tora, Tora, Tora!" arrived in PHX and spoke with the owners of Globe Air, and aerial application firm that operated several B-17s as fire bombers. During the "off season" the movie studio had made arrangements to use on the the firm's B-17s for some film work and the owners were asked to do something to "militarize" their airplane for the screen.
Globe's B-17 fleet had been procured largely from military surplus sales from the Litchfield Naval Air Facility, and these ex-Navy birds had been purged of gun turrets during their final service in the 1950s. The owners weren't terribly keen on spending a lot of time and energy to put gun turrets back on the airplanes - which earned their keep dropping slurry during the summer season - but the producers insisted upon a "more military look." And seeing as how the film work paid well, the search began for turrets.
A top turret dome was discovered in a neighboring junkyard. A brand new, crated ball turret was found at Palley's Supply in Los Angeles (a war surplus dealer) for $100. The guys dragged it back to PHX, broke down the crate, and were frustrated to discover they had a complete ball turret but no easy way to hang it on the airplane. The Navy had removed the ball turret hangar and had covered the hole with a sheet metal patch when the bird served in this service branch. What to do?
Someone suggested that all anyone really needed to see was about two-thirds of a ball turret hanging down under the belly of the beast. The modifications began. All the internal parts were removed and tossed to the junk pile outside the hangar. Out came the hacksaws, and the aluminum shell of the ball turret was modified and shortened. The addition of a few pieces of angle iron and a series of bolts permitted the fitting of the chopped shell to the correct spot on the airplane without further modifications. Pieces of shop broom handle were painted black and installed into the gun ports. The bomber was ready for her movie debut.
After the film work had finished, the bumps and warts were hastily removed and the B-17 went back to fighting forest fires around the country until it was finally retired and sold at auction in 1985. Both the top turret dome and ball shell remained hidden in the weeds behind the hangar until they were hauled away by someone who had an interest.
I'm not sure who ended up with the Sperry upper dome, but what a score that must've been for someone. This poor old ball turret shell went from PHX down to Tuscon. At some time during the early 1980s it appeared briefly on the belly of the B-17 that is now on display in the Pima Air and Space Museum's 390th BG collection, shorltly after their acquisition of a former borate bomber. It was temporarily fitted to this airplane once again until a complete ball turret was found for that restoration and subsequently installed.
This poor battered ball shell once again found its way out to the storage yard in the back of Pima Air and Space Museum until sometime in the 1990s when it officially "went missing." I've often wondered what became of it, as current museum staff members have no record of it being traded or sold, and I can't imagine it was scrapped.
Sure would've been at least something to help those of us with turret projects. Anyone have a clue as to where it ended up?