From an interview with B-17 waist gunner Robert McBride: "about the middle to end of 1942 we got electric heat stuff to wear. Boots, socks, sweaters a lot of them. They plugged in to plugs near the gun and when they worked, they helped a good bit. But the electric cords were fragile and when things were rolling, you didn't pay a lot of attention to them and they ripped apart. They also shorted out and a wet sock against a shorted boot insert could be uncomfortable but taking your boot off at high altitude would be worse so you did your best to ignore the "hot foot" or unplugged it. The ground pounders kept adding to the things you were ordered to wear until, if you wore it all you couldn't move very well. So you made choices, according to your preferences. The rest was put in your bag so it was there if some officer came around it was there. There was also a fair amount of trade for British gear. I traded for a pair of British goggles with lamb fur around them, a pair of high flying boots which were also sheepskin lined and easier to move around in. Many of the US issue googles would fog or ice up which made shooting mighty interesting....the boots were very thick sheepskin and with two pairs of socks, one cotton one wool they didn't need electricity."
The Royal Air Force 1939 - 45. https://drive.google.com/file/d/11m5xPHWvWZ4_P57iyaTTnGSMksHedrio/view
1-5) 339th Fighter Group Pilots, P-51 Fighter Plane. 6) 360th Fighter Squadron Fighter Pilot Posed in Flying Kit.
1-8) 34th Photo Recon Sqd Pilot, F-5 (P-38 Variant). 9) 34th Photo Recon Sqd Pilot in Full Flying Kit. 10-11) Fighter Pilot, P-47.
1-6) 8th Air Force B-17 crewmen 7-8) US Pilots check map by P-38 on airfield 9) US Pilot with chute by F-5 recon plane (P-38 variant)
1-2) B-17 pilot who sank first U-Boat from Azores - F/Lt Drummond 3-4) 401st Bomb Group US B-17 Bomber plane PILOT & CREW GI in GEAR
OFFICIAL U.S. NAVY PHOTOGRAPH shows photographic officer Richard R Rubner standing in his Navy reconnaissance aircraft. Rubner set a new record for sustained combat duty among Navy pilots and served three years in the Navy during World War II as a torpedo bomber pilot aboard the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown.
Бортстрелок штаб-сержант Фрэнк Лусик готовится к боевому вылету на бомбардировщике B-17 «Летающая крепость» из состава 423-й эскадры 306-й бомбардировочной группы ВВС США. Авиабаза Моулсворт в Великобритании, май 1943 года.
1-2) 385th Bomb Group B-17 ball turret gunner credited with 5 kills 3) USAAC bomber airman in flying kit 4-5) US Fighter Squadron pilots posed for group pic by P-47 6) US fighter pilot posed in cockpit of his P-38
Publicity shot purporting to show the captain of a Boeing Fortress Mark II of Coastal Command holding a final conference with his crew before taking off. The photograph was taken at Benbecula in the Outer Hebrides in front of a Fortress Mark II, FL462 'W' of No. 220 Squadron RAF. The 'crew' were, in fact, an ad hoc group drawn from No. 206 Squadron RAF, and the 'captain' (3rd from right, wearing SD Cap) was Flying Officer L W Taylor RAAF, an Air Ministry public relations officer.
1) US pilots with unit emblem on jacket posed by P-51. 2-3) US fighter pilot by damaged wing of his P-47, 1945. 4) US airmen posed with P-51 "ROSE GLORI". 5-6) US aircrew in flying kit posed by their B-24, 1944. 7) Airmen with A-20.