JDK wrote:
I'm not sure, but I don't think that was the case for RN FAA pilots, who would rarely fly alone
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That depended on which squadron they were in of course. Those who flew Martlets, Buffaloes, Sea Hurricanes, Sea Gladiators, Seafires, Corsairs, Hellcats, etc all flew withough observers.
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I also know from interviews that RAF and RAAF pre-war general duties pilots had very poor standards of navigation skill; in fact the RAF learned the hard way relatively late on to raise that standard; for Bomber Command navigation failure was part of the Butt Report's conclusions as late as 1941. I can't comment on the RNZAF, but clearly Dave's info points in a different direction.
For the RNZAF, before the war most of our very few regular full time service pilots had previously trained in the RAF, and those who trained in NZ did so under the guidance of the ex-RAF types. The training system was probably exactly that of the RAF I'd guess, as NZ was training pilots for the RAF under their Short Service Commission scheme.
The majority of active operational pilots in the immediate years pre-war were in fact in the Territorial Air Force. They flew Baffins and Vincents on general reconnaissance training every weekend from Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch. The majority of those pilots were also Aero Club members, many were Aero Club instructors and a fair few were airline pilots, and some like Walker had flown long distance across the world. Also many were ex-RAF. And one or two were even barnstormers. One was a flying soldier of fortune wh'd been to the Antarctic, China, Spanish Civil War where he was an unofficial ace, and more. So there was a fair bit of experience there inn the TAF.
I'm not sure when cross country navigation became a strict part of the pilot's syllabus, maybe pre-war, maybe during. I don't know. But most pilots I have talked to say at the Service Flying Training School level they began the navex's and even part of their trade testing involved navex's. This continued as they moved into OTU and then Squadron work up level. I am talking about both single engine stream pilots and multi pilots.
At squadron level the Kittyhawks and Corsairs for example while working up at Ardmore before heading off on a tour to the Pacific spent a month or more flying daily rhubarbs up and down the country in flights of maybe twelve in tight formation at low level, but they also got sent off on naxex's as solo pilots and in pairs and sections of four.
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In short, the RAF saw navigation as a minor part of the pilot's role, and developed the specialised navigator task in the late 30s; the RN naturally saw navigation as a specialist role, and took that into the air when they flew. I'd suggest the RNZAF's later development may have driven a different approach than the other 'clone' air forces of the Commonwealth.
I had never really thought about the training systems being different before but as you say maybe our NZ training was more nav concious than the RAF. Many pilots I have spoken with reckon in England you cannot get lost, as there are so many recognisable landmarks like spires and villages, and you just had to find a railway line and read the sign at the station; perhaps not the same here in 1940's NZ where you have hours of rolling hills and forest below.
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Any which way you cut it, IMHO, having a pilot responsible for the core navigation in the 1930s (and a couple of years after) was a bad idea. A pilot could carry out dead reckoning navigation perfectly well, but to get a fix by sextant or Direction Finding (when available) was not best carried out by someone also flying the aircraft. In single seaters it was a necessary evil, however in multi-crew aircraft it was not, I'd suggest, best use of the resources.
Agreed, but regardless if there was room in one of our aircraft for a second person doing the navigating he was carried, only the fighters didn't have them.
Actually a key point here is that the RNZAF and its predecessor the NZPAF never trained Observers before the war. The first Observers were trained by the Territorial Air Force. They learned on the job at weekends for some time initially and then as war loomed the majority of them arranged time off work and went into camp at Wigram in mid-1939 for a few months to train up to top level in navigation, wireless telegraphy operation and air gunnery and bombing. They had planned another course to follow but Hitler intervened. So these men became the backbone of the General Reconnaissance force training others on the job operationally and at the GR School, etc.
Before these guys did this mid-1939 course the role of navigator in a crew was done only by a second pilot. Even into the early war months while there was a shortage of Observers the patrols were often flown with two pilots, one doing the nav work.
Its also worth mentioning that in December 1939 the Auckland (General Reconnaissance) Squadron was split in two, with one Flight of aircrew, groundcrew and aircraft going to Ohakea to for the Air Gunners and Air Observer's School, where they all became instructors for newbies coming into the RNZAF to be trained for the RAF.
All this detail will be in the book... as they say...
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Talking globally, naval, civil and air force until W.W.II it was not universally seen (as it is today) that the pilot was the important person aboard in all cases; often seen as a chauffeur for others in specific cases.
It reminds me of when I interviewed Tony Pierard who flew Hawker Hinds in No. 20 Army Co-operation Squadron in Northland, NZ, he told me he was given the task of flying an old school Army captain on a job one day. Tony was doing his preflight cockpit checks and awaiting the green light when the Captain tapped him and said "You can take off now, pilot". He felt as if the guy thought he was his chauffeur.

He said at the end of the flight he had a look and made sure the Captain his his monkey strap on, then gave him a few aeros. He said the Captain never treated him like a chauffeur again after that.
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Sadly aerial navigation isn't an area well documented in aviation history. Another loss due to the excessive focus on drivers, airframe we get.
I agree with that too. And so many different systems of navigation were deloped too, you could write a good book on it.
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That's not disputed. What I was pointing at was later views (assumptions of national capability by more modern Americans, in this case) and more senior and home-front or general views of the time.
If what you mean is that, with all due respect, most Americans these days have no idea of the contribution and sacrifices made by the likes of Australia and New Zealand and Britian and India and other Allied forces in the winning of the Pacific War, I agree. It has been quietly whitewashed out of their history for the most part, and even somewhat out of ours sadly. The aviation fans here on the forum will know more than the average joe blow Yankee, but even they seem to know little about the remarkable efforts of the RNZAF.
How many realise the Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm's part in the Battle of Okinawa? Most don't know the FAA were even involved, or that kiwis made up one in every four of the FAA's aircrew members, and were all officers.
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There might be low-level stores going 'back home' in things like LIFE and Stars and Stripes regarding great co-operation with our exotic allies, but there would not be acknowledgement of a need fulfilled by those allies due to a gap in home-team capability.
I do have an article that appeared in the US periodical called
Air Force Magazine from September 1944 which details the Kiwi contribution to the Allied war effort in the Solomons very well. Interestingly it is written by Air Commodore Sidney Wallingford, who was RNZAF and had previously been the Officer i/c of RNZAF in the Pacific.
Also
Flying magazine in October 1944 ran an article called One Ally about how the kiwis and US Navy were working as one group, not as seperate units.
They are both pretty positive articles on the relationship. There may have been others too but I have not had luck in finding them. I only found these two as they were in the No. 3 Squadron scrapbook, at the Air Force Musuem of New Zealand's archives.
But as you say at the time things are publicised but later they get forgotten and pushed aside.
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Add to that the general drive to smoothing the grand narratives of history, wrinkles and oddities like this get dropped out sooner or later; not to mention the tendency of less scrupulous historians to gloss (lightly or more) over the less edifying aspects of the armed forces story. For instance, in case anyone thinks this some anti-American diatribe, you have to do a bit of digging to find out that the RAAF was completely screwed up in it's high command at the latter stages of the Pacific war due to appalling behaviour by several of the senior commanders. It's there, but it's embarrassing and so it doesn't go front and centre in all accounts - understandably.
Really? I had no idea there was problems in the RAAF heirachy. What's the gen on this? Was that scoundrel Bluey Truscott involved?
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In short, there may have been period recognition of the RNZAF role in this case, and there will be contemporary operational, local records; but finding much beyond that is less likely as it will have been overlooked, ignored or dropped as minor, peripheral (or even embarrassing) in other secondary American accounts.
Yeah, so what you're saying is it's very unlikely that I will find the true answer to my original question by asking people here as they simply are unlikely to know the details. And though the discussion has been fascinating and enlightening I agree with you on that considering that American people generaly seem to not know the RNZAF were involved so intrinsicly in the US operations in the Solomons, and I have to wonder how will they ever know details like I need to find.
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But it's well worth looking, and has got the thinking juices going!
Sure has. I have learned a fair bit.
Cheers
Tailspin Turtle wrote:Quote:
Except for a handful of the the first production TBFs, the USN/USMC Avengers didn't even have a crew seat in the compartment directly behind the pilot except for some special mission aircraft. The enlisted radioman's position was in the fuselage in the vicinity of the lower compartment door, behind the bomb bay and ahead of and below the turret.
Another interesting post. I am now re-evaluating my knowledge of the kiwis who flew in these aeroplanes. What I know is that our Avengers certainly seem to have had a seat in the cocpit behind the pilot's cockpit. I have looked at wartime photos I have of kiwi Avengers and you can see crew in there on flights in some shots, but in other shots they are not present. I am trying to recall, did that compartment have an access down into the rear fuselage? Could someone go up and down internally or did they only have access from the wing?
I think i might have to talk with my mate Wally Ingham about this to clarify where the Observer/Navigator sat on an operation. He was on No. 30 Squadron as a Fitter and he runs the No. 30 Squadron Association.
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Short range referred to relative distance, not time. A four-hour mission including marshaling, time on target, etc is about 250 miles out and 250 miles back. Ferry range was about 2,500 miles with a bomb bay tank. It's a lot easier to get lost when you're flying 10 times as far. Ask Amelia. Oh, wait...
Yes I see your point.
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Thanks for the info on the joint Kiwi/US operations at Guadalcanal. New to me and an innovative operational concept.
The RNZAF had a system where its squadrons within New Zealand and at Fiji came under NZ command, but any further up the Pacific chain came under US command, but within the US command structure were also NZ officers placed at key points to ensure the working relationship worked. I have interviewed kiwi fighter pilot John Arkwright who flew a couple of tours on Kittyhawks and was then promoted to Wing Commander and placed onto the staff of the General in charge of air operations in the Solomons, and he was actually appointed as the general's deputy with a responsibility for overseeing several US fighter squadrons as well as the New Zealand Fighter Wing. He got to fly the P-38, F4U-4, Hellcat and other types on those squadrons, something most kiwis only dreamed of at that stage of the war. Sidney Wallingford, Geoff Roberts and Sir Robert Clark-Hall all filled similar roles working as RNZAF leaders within the US high ranks.