PJ wrote:
Is there a way to crank the turret around without power? Is there a locking pin or something that would prevent it from being hand cranked? Any pictures to illustrate this would be appreciated.
Thanks,
PJ
The link shows a photo of a Martin 250 I worked on many, many moons ago for the CAF in Wisconsin.
http://www.cafwi.org/caf_thumb/pv_07.jpg
If someone were seated in this photo you'd be looking at the back of his head. In the center of the casting (behind his head) you can see a small hole in the vertical lip of the casting. I'm going from memory here, but I believe there's another hole below that one on the horizontal part of the casting. That hole will line up with a hole in the lower frame (which is ultimately attached to the upper fuselage of said aircraft). A simple pin dropped into those two aligned holes is what keeps the Martin 250 from spinning around.
This turret was restored to operate as a display using the manual controls alone, and for a small donation one could sit in and operate it when displayed at local shows. The decision was made not to electrify due to the danger of having untrained fingers or other body parts hurt during operation. I also seem to recall reading from the manual that some of the electrical components--especially the amplidynes--didn't have particularly long lifespans.