Hi Davey;
Can't say for sure about the B-17, but the whole design "community" was going through a re-assessment of directional stability needs in multi-engine aircraft at that time. The original B-17, and contemporaries like the Do17 and some of the French twins had very small vertical surfaces, sized for minimum drag in normal cruise flight. Little or no thought was given to low speed, engine out, requirements. It took designers (and their customers) a while to realize that the safety advantage of multiple engines was usually negated by stall/spin accidents while trying to land with an engine out. These were generally power-on stalls in a turn at low altitude - never much fun. Old aviation joke from that time: on a twin, the second engine is there to get you to the accident site after the first one fails.
WARNING: optional math bit. The side force generated by a fin is directly proportional to fin area, and proportional to the square of airspeed. The need for side force is greatest when you are trying to balance one engine out. Lower speed to normal landing speeds, and the available side force quickly drops, until the pilot can't keep the nose straight. Up goes the drag, down goes the speed and you are in a vicious spiral - literally.
After a series of accidents like this, people started to investigate the causes, and came up with concepts like Vmc (minimum control speed with one engine out) - usually well above stall speed or even normal landing speed if the aircraft had a small vertical fin like the early B-17s. There were 2 ways to reduce these landing accidents: keep speed well up after an engine failed, which wasn't easy with airfield sizes back then, or grow a bigger fin so you could land at similar speeds to all-engines-on.
I suspect that when the need for a tail gun came up on the B-17s the designers realized it would be a major re-design of the tail cone and vertical fin, and took advantage of this to incorporate the larger fin area. There wasn't much change in rudder area, but the fixed fin grew considerably. Also, the large ventral fin prevented tail stall at high sideslip angles. Look at the leading edge extensions on something like an F-18. Same idea, just in a different direction.
Hope I haven't bored anybody.
_________________ Bill Walker
Canadian Military Aircraft Serials
www.ody.ca/~bwalker/
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