Shay wrote:
Wikipedia boasts that Flak Bait
Quote:
"holds the record within the United States Army Air Forces for number of bombing missions survived during World War II."
Is this accurate, no other Bomber attained more than 202/207 missions?
Buzzking wrote:
Flack Bait was set aside for the fact it was the only Bomber in the ETO that flew 200+ Combat Mission with out an abort. That is the reason it was set aside.
There was no other Bomber in the ETO that even came close the top B-17 was 42-40003 Ole Gappy from the 524th Bg/379th Bs which had 157 mission but had one mechanical failure abort, the next close's was 909 with it's 140 with out an abort.
I don't know about any 'aborted missions' in this case, but the record for an
Allied* bomber:
Quote:
A Mosquito B.IX holds the record for the most combat missions flown by an Allied bomber in the Second World War. LR503, known as "F for Freddie" because of its squadron code letters, GB*F, first served with 109 and subsequently 105 Squadron of the RAF. It flew 213 sorties during the war, only to crash at Calgary airport during the 8th Victory Loan Bond Drive on 10 May 1945, two days after Victory in Europe Day, killing both the pilot, Flt. Lt. Maurice Briggs, DSO, DFC, DFM and navigator Fl. Off. John Baker, DFC and Bar.[65]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilla ... to#BombersWhat most people don't realise was that
this aircraft was slated for preservation, had it not been lost with its crew in a tragic, pointless accident.
An RAAF DAP Beaufort with over 100 missions to its credit (a high record considering the nature and duration of the Pacific as against the European war) was sold for scrap by the Australian War Memorial (AWM) in 1953; thankfully much later another 100+ veteran was obtained and restored. The AWM Has ex-RAAF Lancaster G for George with 90 missions on display, while the RAF Museum has Lancaster S for Sugar with 137 missions. If only we had Freddie in Canada, too.
Regards,
*Effectively excluding Russian machines, as we don't know any reliable records.