Operating ball turret in the Collings B-24J at Bomber Camp

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • I had a vision in my head about putting a camera on the end of the 50 cal gun facing the ball turret so you could see the aircraft rotating in the background. Whitney, the crew chief on the B-24 and a great guy, installed his Gopro camera and captured exactly what I had in mind. Thank you Whitney!!
    Thanks also to the Collings Foundation for making this possible. You can take a ride in the ball turret and a lot more at the Vintage Aircraft Bomber Camp next May in Stockton, California. Call the Collings Foundation (978) 562-9182 or contact Vintage Aircraft (209) 982 0273 for more information.

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @oldcet5277
    @oldcet5277 Před 3 lety +1353

    huge shoutout to the cameraman for not falling off the plane

    • @kremit5084
      @kremit5084 Před 3 lety +88

      I’m waiting for the dumbass to comment here

    • @rayneb5313
      @rayneb5313 Před 3 lety +29

      @@kremit5084 it's been 4 months now

    • @Shanoyu19271
      @Shanoyu19271 Před 3 lety +13

      @@rayneb5313 yeah

    • @thegermanfool8953
      @thegermanfool8953 Před 3 lety +41

      What are you talking about there's a camera on the plane not a human!! 🙄

    • @kremit5084
      @kremit5084 Před 3 lety +94

      @@thegermanfool8953 I FUCKING FOUND YOU

  • @mrKozmoz
    @mrKozmoz Před 8 lety +1138

    I always found the ball turrets to be mechanically fascinating, quite a feat in engineering

    • @regulator5521
      @regulator5521 Před 6 lety +11

      mrKozmoz AA guns are made the same way :^)

    • @MajorCaliber
      @MajorCaliber Před 6 lety +48

      YEP, zero CAD/CAM, just drafting pencil, T-square, and *smarts* ... and the urgency of winning a massive World War which actually threatened N. America... hats off to The Greatest Generation (who, btw, NEVER refer to themselves that way... ;')

    • @sheep1ewe
      @sheep1ewe Před 4 lety +7

      I always think about the possibility to use something similar in space for example, and mount say a robotic arm on it in the middle where one can put various tools and other things, in space, or under water, it would be possible to even stop the vehicle and still and keep floating.

    • @hectorandres2921
      @hectorandres2921 Před 4 lety +3

      Yep, and also wondered how cramped it felt. Too bad I will never be able to try it... (Not referring in war time of course...)

    • @RedWolf777SG
      @RedWolf777SG Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah....however it's also the worst gun position to be assigned to. Especially when the bomber needs to make emergency crash landing and they cannot retract the ball turret and get you out of it. Its It's especially worse for B17 ball gunners.

  • @DistantEarlyWarning611
    @DistantEarlyWarning611 Před 8 lety +1880

    My father was a belly gunner in a B-24 Liberator durring WW2. He survived 54 bombing missions. He turns 91 this week. A true American hero.

    • @andrewmacdonald5884
      @andrewmacdonald5884 Před 7 lety +84

      DistantEarlyWarning 611 Congratulations! My grandfather, who's still around at 92, was a front gunner on a B-24 during the war.

    • @callumheyes4171
      @callumheyes4171 Před 7 lety +13

      Spelt "during" wrong mate

    • @jamrvkids1475
      @jamrvkids1475 Před 7 lety +51

      My dad was a waist gunner on B-24 during WWII past away back in 1982.

    • @DistantEarlyWarning611
      @DistantEarlyWarning611 Před 7 lety +14

      siemensohm "Civilians" weren't flying Nazi fighter planes jackass.

    • @DistantEarlyWarning611
      @DistantEarlyWarning611 Před 7 lety +7

      Ryan Davidson None. He was in Europe and Africa.

  • @IrishSoyBoy
    @IrishSoyBoy Před 3 lety +655

    I feel like the motto behind American planes in WW2 was "How many .50 cals can we slap on this thing?"

    • @ShrikerN955MG
      @ShrikerN955MG Před 3 lety +8

      uh 5001 no more no less

    • @F4Wildcat
      @F4Wildcat Před 3 lety +29

      John="Alright our bomber boys are taking an increasing beating against those huns. We need to come up with an escort fighter that can escort them the entire mission.
      Steve= *looks at spare turrets and .50's
      Steve= Or we double the amount of turrets and .50's!
      John= Or we double the amount of turrets and .50's!
      John= AMAZING! same idea!
      Steve= I know right?

    • @gavinsepulveda6460
      @gavinsepulveda6460 Před 3 lety +2

      30 cal

    • @macvadda2318
      @macvadda2318 Před 3 lety

      @@gavinsepulveda6460 party pooper

    • @ns6q333
      @ns6q333 Před 3 lety +2

      @@gavinsepulveda6460 20mm

  • @1timcat
    @1timcat Před 9 lety +438

    Now we need a gunner's eye view.

    • @twinbeechdotcom
      @twinbeechdotcom  Před 9 lety +78

      Check out my other videos for a ball turret view from inside

    • @1timcat
      @1timcat Před 9 lety +8

      Taigh Ramey Cool, thanks. Always thought I'd enjoy the seat if I wasn't getting shot at. I' thin and fold easily.

    • @Rayculdio
      @Rayculdio Před 3 lety +7

      Bro this comment is old

    • @akusiapa1915
      @akusiapa1915 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Rayculdio yep

    • @atrociousbean4096
      @atrociousbean4096 Před 3 lety +1

      It’s pretty cramped in there, to be honest.

  • @MonteOlsen
    @MonteOlsen Před 8 lety +230

    My father was a ball turret gunner in a B-24 in World War 2. Wish he could have been around to see this airplane and perhaps take a ride in it if he was of a mind to. He really didn't like to fly after he came home. They were all white knuckle trips for him. This from a man who was Oregon's youngest licensed pilot in the 1930s and who couldn't get enough flying before the war. Great video. Thanks very much!

    • @582AIR
      @582AIR Před 8 lety +1

      Flying in the USA in the thirties, well ,he was not siting to be shot at,and one must eel damn exposed in a ball!

    • @Janni069
      @Janni069 Před 6 lety +8

      U can be proud to had a such a good person as father. WW2 was really dangerous for the crew of bomber planes and the plane's crew knew there was a high chance of getting shot down. Those people who fought for the freedom in WW2 are my real heros.

    • @Janni069
      @Janni069 Před 6 lety +5

      All the people who fought against the nazi, fascists and japanese army and all of their allies were heroes.

    • @timhancock6626
      @timhancock6626 Před 6 lety +7

      My wifes uncle Arthur was a nose turret gunner in Wellington bombers. He was only 5ft 2 ins tall and underage when he joined the RAF. He vowed never to fly again after WW2 and he never did. I don't know how ball turret gunners kept their sanity. Its an awful job and your dad has my utmost respect. My dad was a very low flying gunner...well he was in a Sherman tank in Normandy.

    • @pctrashtalk2069
      @pctrashtalk2069 Před 5 lety +5

      I talked to a vet who was a belly turret operator on thw B24 in europe. He sewed chords in his flight suit to be used as tourniquets by him. He said that he could bleed to death before they cranked the ball back up and it could also be damaged. He said that when they crossed over german areas near the coast they would send up rockets that looked like telephone poles coming up thru the formation. He also said it was scary when the weather was cloudy and the bombers had to form up with poor visibility. Planes would collide and crash.

  • @johnparsons894
    @johnparsons894 Před 2 lety +29

    This is incredible. My grandpa was a ball turret gunner on a B24, 15th AF, 484th, 824 Bombardment Squadron. His plane was shot down during his 17th mission after bombing Vienna on 21 Feb 1945. The 10-man crew bailed out and were captured by the Germans. He was a POW until liberated by Patton’s 3rd Army on 29 Apr 45. I was too young to appreciate his stories, but I remember many of them. They were real heroes.

    • @roberthughes4308
      @roberthughes4308 Před rokem

      Hey! My Great Uncle was in the 15th AF too! San Giovanni Airfield with 740th BS(H), 455th BG(H). Also a Ball turret gunner/assistant radio operator. He was killed in an air to air with another B-24H over the Adriatic on their way back from Austria, it was the 455th's 11th mission.

  • @gustavonmesquita70
    @gustavonmesquita70 Před 2 lety +35

    The amount of courage needed to operate this in combat is impossible to be measured. True heros. Respect.

  • @taofledermaus
    @taofledermaus Před 9 lety +867

    Very cool camera angle! Great video!

    • @midgrave
      @midgrave Před 8 lety +5

      +TAOFLEDERMAUS :D you

    • @trey6989
      @trey6989 Před 7 lety +3

      i love ur chanel cool 2 see u hear

    • @deanbeach1828
      @deanbeach1828 Před 7 lety +2

      love ur channel

    • @Glostermeteorf3
      @Glostermeteorf3 Před 6 lety +4

      Dude every video I watch you’ve commented on. You’re everywhere

    • @roymclovetoy9041
      @roymclovetoy9041 Před 6 lety +1

      lol that camera angle was absolute shit, i was expecting some footage from the inside

  • @doggedout
    @doggedout Před 6 lety +91

    "From my mother's sleep I fell into the State,
    And I hunched in its belly till my wet fur froze.
    Six miles from earth, loosed from its dream of life,
    I woke to black flak and the nightmare fighters.
    When I died they washed me out of the turret with a hose."
    - Randall Jarrell's 'The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner
    My dad was a B-24 pilot in WWII. This poem and "High Flight" are the only two I ever heard him recite completly from memory. He passed in 93.
    All of these guys had "balls of steel".

    • @soldtobediers
      @soldtobediers Před 6 lety +5

      rob black
      Condolences. Here's to His, & all who serve,, & have served's memory.
      ''None are closer to the very aurthor of sacrifice Himself...
      Than those who perform it, for the very sake of others.''-gilpin
      -former recondo sgt. 'rock' 82nd abn. inf. 2318

    • @purplealice
      @purplealice Před 4 lety +2

      "High Flight" is from WW 1, but it does capture the experience of flying (without mentioning the horror of war). "Up, up, the long delirious burning blue!"
      Now if the human race can just learn to go along without blowing each other up...

    • @steventhornton4716
      @steventhornton4716 Před 3 lety

      Do you mind if I put that on my Facebook page on remembrance day sir?

    • @apexxxx10
      @apexxxx10 Před 3 lety

      *Not steel ALUMINUM!*

    • @TheSillyRobot87
      @TheSillyRobot87 Před 2 lety

      SHUT UP SOUP TRUSTED YOU MAN

  • @fixizin
    @fixizin Před 10 lety +61

    Just look at those monster radial engines, going on *70* years old... and not a wisp of smoke at cruise, or even idle. *That* takes a whole lot of love and diligence and no-excuses competence on the part of these preservationists. SALUTE!

    • @leegenix
      @leegenix Před 4 lety +3

      My dad used to service those engines in Corpus Christi,Texas and Lathrop, California. He also did jet engines and was trained by Beechcraft. Somewhere, I have the diploma signed by Beech.

  • @warrenchambers4819
    @warrenchambers4819 Před 9 lety +34

    Awesome, I sure am glad someone cared enough to save these old warbirds. Great to see the turret up and running.

  • @twinbeechdotcom
    @twinbeechdotcom  Před 10 lety +343

    The turret was retractable only on the B-24 because of the very limited ground clearance of the that the Liberator had. There was plenty of room for the ball turret on the B-17 so it didn't need to be retracted.
    For the gunner to get in the ball turret the guns had to be pointed straight down which allowed the hatch to be accessed from inside the aircraft since the hatch is on the opposite side of the turret than the guns.
    On both the B-17 and the B-24 the guns cannot be pointed straight down when the aircraft is on the ground so the gunner really cant get in the ball turret from inside the aircraft unless it is flying. The hatch is accessible on the B-17 on the ground from the outside when the guns are horizontal as can be seen in many wartime photos.
    The gunner could in theory bail out of the ball turret in flight if he wore his parachute while in the turret and he could have the guns horizontal in flight. It seemed like the normal procedure was for the gunner to keep is quick attachable chest pack parachute stowed inside the aircraft near the turret in case he had to bail out.
    If the turret became jammed at any position of the guns outside of nearly straight down then the hatch would be blocked by the turret ring structure and the airframe thus trapping him inside. There were manual cranks both inside the turret for the gunner and outside for the crew to crank the turret in azimuth and elevation.
    I would like to hear any stories of a ball turret gunner bailing directly out of his ball turret as I have not come across any evidence of this happening but I am sure it must have happened sometime.
    Check out my other videos of the view from inside the ball turret on the Collings B-17G

    • @bellator11
      @bellator11 Před 10 lety +19

      To your first comment: Except when a B-17 was forced to belly land - this caused atleast a few unnecessary deaths.
      In the event that the hydraulics for the landing gear was damaged the B-17 was forced to ditch on landing, and there was nothing that could be done to prevent the loss of the poor belly gunner.

    • @50shadesofcerakote
      @50shadesofcerakote Před 10 lety +12

      bellator11 he could get out of the turret maybe... you know, so he didnt die a horrible death..

    • @KingKorihorMinecraft
      @KingKorihorMinecraft Před 10 lety +6

      *****
      Unless flak damage made it so the belly turret couldn't move into a position where the gunner could get out. There were some people in the belly turret that did die... not unnecessarily but simply because in spite of surviving the mission they couldn't get out. It didn't help if the plane was shot down and falling, the guy in the belly turret was usually the last to bail out... if it was even possible.
      Fortunately, you are correct that most of the time they would just be sitting in the back of the plane with the rest of the crew and enjoying the ride.

    • @aaronseet2738
      @aaronseet2738 Před 10 lety +10

      333keb There had been at least one case where the ball turret was damaged and the gunner could not get out. And the B-17's landing gear were also damaged forcing a belly landing, thus trapping and crushing the gunner.

    • @bellator11
      @bellator11 Před 10 lety +5

      333keb Problem is that the turret had to be in a certain position for this to be possible, and if the power traverse to the turret was lost or it was jammed in some way, well then the poor gunner was trapped in there.

  • @blackchallis
    @blackchallis Před 10 lety +346

    Tie Fighter the humble beginning

  • @AndreaRoll
    @AndreaRoll Před 7 lety +45

    that looks already scary as it is. Now think about doing that in a flak field while flying wing to wing beside other bombers and with dozens of enemy fighters strafing you. For fuck sake that is hell

    • @alphaadhito
      @alphaadhito Před 7 lety +18

      Yeah, that's why turret ball gunner is one of the most respectful crew position in a bomber. Imagine the turret stuck in lower position and you can't get out

    • @MichaelThe-Pyro
      @MichaelThe-Pyro Před 7 lety

      that's why they wore parachutes so if they have to jump or get shot out they can survive

    • @monkeyanimationandgaming
      @monkeyanimationandgaming Před 2 lety

      @@MichaelThe-Pyro i am pretty sure they could not wear chutes, too big for the ball turret

    • @user-qy9tf2im7f
      @user-qy9tf2im7f Před 2 lety

      Don't forget it's 50 below Zero and you are in an inner electric suit with a bulky Lamb Skin and Fleece Suit and boots, a 90 lb Flak Jacket over your shoulders to your waist, a full Oxygen Mask Fleece Hat and saliva dripping out of you mask and freezing on you chin.
      You could always tell if someone was from a Heavy Bomber Crew because they always had slight frost bite
      on their cheeks where the mask did not cover. It was no picnic, Missions could be 10-12 hrs long.

  • @RoadCaptainEntertain
    @RoadCaptainEntertain Před 10 lety +1688

    Gimme 3000 rounds of Ammo and fly over my ex's house.

  • @MegaUpholsteryman
    @MegaUpholsteryman Před 10 lety +8

    My grandfather was a ball turret gunner on the maiden warrior of the 454th.The stories he would tell me would give me goose bumps. They dropped allot of bombs.

  • @notabigfan9437
    @notabigfan9437 Před 3 lety +15

    *Me going to bomber camp after playing war thunder:*
    JUST LIKE THE SIMULATIONS

  • @c5back9
    @c5back9 Před 6 lety +8

    Saying a little prayer for the young men who endured real hell in these warbirds so that we all could live as we do. Thanks to all who serve and have served!!!

    • @user-qy9tf2im7f
      @user-qy9tf2im7f Před 2 lety

      My Father was a 24 Navigator and believe me they we
      always scared, but they took it like Job. Their CO always
      said at the end of each Mission Briefing. "Gentlemen lets go to work". They also removed the exact number of chairs based on casualty reports they received on the Flight back, so no one knew how many Crews were lost until later in the evening
      because there were no empty chairs in de-briefing.

  • @johntrough2660
    @johntrough2660 Před 3 lety +1

    A great video! I flew on this aircraft about 12 years ago, and had an unforgettable experience-however, seeing the ball turret in operation is awesome! Thank you Collings Foundation!

  • @Stick4.4
    @Stick4.4 Před 8 lety +45

    TIE Fighter...anyone?....knew it looked familiar...

  • @sethdaigle2284
    @sethdaigle2284 Před 7 lety +100

    #BestSelfieStick

    • @covenant5552
      @covenant5552 Před 7 lety +3

      seth daigle true

    • @techmaniac43
      @techmaniac43 Před 6 lety +3

      Until the cannons get in action and the camera gets burned by the extreme heat lol

    • @YCTedy
      @YCTedy Před 3 lety +2

      @@techmaniac43 Goes BRRRRTT

    • @techmaniac43
      @techmaniac43 Před 3 lety

      @@YCTedy the thing goes really
      Hot

    • @siks7583
      @siks7583 Před 3 lety

      @@YCTedy yea

  • @randallsnyder9569
    @randallsnyder9569 Před 11 lety +1

    Great video. I have seen the Collins B-24 in Huntsville, Al. My uncle was a tail gunner on a B-24, he and his crew were all killed on a mission to bomb Ploesti on July 15, 1944. Their bomber was shot in half by flak, they had no chance. I have great respect for the men who flew during World War 2. Thank you.

  • @rogerm2420
    @rogerm2420 Před 4 lety +2

    Although I’m not a real war historian, the photography captures an amazing perspective. What an engineering accomplishment almost 80 years ago!! Thanks for posting this fascinating look 👍

  • @Atlas_Amadeus
    @Atlas_Amadeus Před 3 lety +3

    I love the fact these planes are restored and still flying. Makes me want to be part of the crew just so I could keep up with it.

  • @EnterpriseXI
    @EnterpriseXI Před 10 lety +190

    id pay 150$ to ride in a ball turret in the air

    • @bummer6
      @bummer6 Před 10 lety +47

      If someone tried to force me to ride in a ball turret in the air, I'd GIVE you 150$ to take my place.

    • @EnterpriseXI
      @EnterpriseXI Před 10 lety +21

      ill hold u up to that

    • @MrRover2007
      @MrRover2007 Před 10 lety +25

      bummer6 The ball looks heavy and since it moves, I would be afraid that it would fall out from under the plane. The WW2 generation had guts!

    • @MrKirby2367
      @MrKirby2367 Před 10 lety +9

      I won't fit!
      SUCKERS!!
      Looks like belly guns for me..

    • @joesalazar102670
      @joesalazar102670 Před 9 lety +7

      Bruh I woud be scared and some how happy give me 2000 rounds and fly over my school to scare the crap out of my classmates the

  • @Lynchfan88
    @Lynchfan88 Před 3 lety +1

    This is absolutely awesome and the coolest use of a GoPro camera I've ever seen. Gives one a different perspective of what ball turret gunners went through as we watch from the outside & underside.

  • @davem5333
    @davem5333 Před 9 lety +51

    Nice camera work. But it would have been nice to have a camera inside looking outward

    • @twinbeechdotcom
      @twinbeechdotcom  Před 9 lety +10

      Check out my other videos to see a video shot from inside the ball turret

  • @twinbeechdotcom
    @twinbeechdotcom  Před 8 lety +89

    If you want to actually fly in a powered up ball turret in a real B-17G or a B-24J you can do just that and tons more at Bomber Camp in California. Check out www.bombercamp.org or bomber camp on facebook. Come on out and be a part of "Battle of the Bombers" for a great living history event like no other. You can shoot a full auto 50 cal from the waist window and drop a bomb with the famous Norden bomb sight. Not only that but experience an action packed camp using all of the equipment from WWII. You can even fly in a P-51, B-25, BT-13, AT-6 or C-45 and come along on the missions and see both bombers shoot and drop from one of the best seats in the house. Just google Bomber Camp for more information photos and videos or try bombercamp.org to sign up. Enlistments start at $1400 and up for the day. Come and see why so many previous campers keep coming back each year.
    If you could, please help us to spread the word about Bomber Camp so we can keep this living history alive.

    • @Scottzilla1970
      @Scottzilla1970 Před 8 lety

      +Taigh Ramey That would be awesome although I live on the other side of the globe in Australia. Don't suppose you could come and pick me up? Haha

    • @Diax1324
      @Diax1324 Před 8 lety +4

      +Old glory It's funding the fuel, blank ammo, maintanence, and personell. I'd hardly say it's not worth it for just keeping the planes running.

    • @Unmedicated_Moments
      @Unmedicated_Moments Před 8 lety

      +Diax1324 Its still too much for only 2 days

    • @Diax1324
      @Diax1324 Před 8 lety

      Old glory I could go to school for two years or two times at bomber camp. Really, it's your situation. Do you have the resources necessary to accomplish this sort of mini vacation goal? Certain people would probably even spend more to do this.

    • @Unmedicated_Moments
      @Unmedicated_Moments Před 8 lety

      +Diax1324 Sorry bud, but I don't got the funds.

  • @mmayorga5386
    @mmayorga5386 Před 10 lety +5

    Amazing! I could not imagine how cramped it was for the gunner to be inside that ball.

  • @aussierheinhardt4390
    @aussierheinhardt4390 Před 3 lety

    Whenever i saw tie fighter in star wars movie. I always remember the ball turret gunner. Salute to the men who operate this during WW2. A BIG THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE!

  • @treasureplanet9082
    @treasureplanet9082 Před 6 lety

    Very nice! Thanks for posting this. My father was Flight Engineer / Top-Turret Gunner on B24s out of Seething (Sta. 146) 1943-44, and flew 32+ missions, Sq 712 lead crew with radar.

  • @MikeKeller
    @MikeKeller Před 9 lety +10

    This may be the coolest thing ever! I didn't know that the ball retracted into the plane fuse. Now I was to see the same thing on a B-17!

    • @Nav130
      @Nav130 Před 9 lety +1

      God, I'd love to take this ride (inside the airplane, though...)!
      Thanks for sharing, Mike Keller!

    • @robertflores9564
      @robertflores9564 Před 4 lety

      B-17 ball turrets dont retract

  • @MajorCaliber
    @MajorCaliber Před 6 lety +5

    As a kid growing up in the 1960s, I remember people buying WW2 surplus ammo, .30 caliber--belted for machine-gun use--in the original rugged and waterproof green ammo cans. This was pre-NATO so it was identical dimensions to the .30-06 civilian rifle cartridge. You could just slide them out of the cloth belt, and into your bolt-action deer rifle... or surplus (never issued!) M1 Garand! IIRC the tracer every 5th round was already removed--don't want to start the woods on fire.
    But one "odd" neighbor had a couple cans of belted *.50 cal* ammo, all metal-linked... but nothing to shoot it in. I remember how *huge* the rounds were in my then-tiny hands. He was aware of the 1934 NFA, but his theory was that US factories had cranked out SO DANG MANY of the "Ma Deuces" that he was bound to find one, "lying around somewhere"... and who knows, maybe he did... lol...

    • @crispwhitesheets2175
      @crispwhitesheets2175 Před 4 lety

      Hopefully he did heck I think today you could still find one somewhere

  • @cptcosmo
    @cptcosmo Před 6 lety +2

    My Grandafther, may he rest in peace, served as a B-24 ball turret gunner with the 459th bomb group based at Coffee Tower, Guilia Field in Cerignola, Italy. He survived 32 missions. I have his air service medal with silver oakleaf cluster. He had some amazing but horriffic stories to tell...

    • @allanfranklin9615
      @allanfranklin9615 Před 2 lety

      Interesting to hear that your Grandfather was stationed in Cerignola, so was my Dad, a ball turret gunner 764th Sq, 461st BG. He flew 51 missions and was shot down on last mission before being rotated out and was a POW for remainder of war. . Quite possible they knew each other. (Dad was shot down on 7-25-44.)

  • @MTarantino
    @MTarantino Před 6 lety

    I got to fly in this exact plane(the witchcraft). The ball gun was not in use but in the waist gun bay you could stick your head out plane, by far the coolest thing I've ever done.Thanks pappy for letting me ride in ur bird.

  • @okrajoe
    @okrajoe Před 9 lety +32

    Amazingly cool effect. Great video.

  • @Lockbar
    @Lockbar Před 10 lety +6

    seriously, how can anybody dislike this?

  • @goring19
    @goring19 Před 11 lety +2

    Wow, awesome video! I always wondered what it looked like under the belly of a B-24 or B-17 in the ball turret at 20,000+ feet. I'm sure this was lower but still. Man, those guys had "guts" to do what they did with flak and fighters all around. We owe them a lot forever. Thanks for posting!

  • @simonbertioli4696
    @simonbertioli4696 Před 4 lety +1

    Absolutely brilliant camera angles...and colours well worth the effort...and for those gunners too what balls...others can move around the aircraft...but this person...no stays put...courage...l salute you...we 👍

  • @donaldparlettjr3295
    @donaldparlettjr3295 Před 6 lety +13

    A great view and great editing you didn't waste time either. Thank you for no music because the engines and the slipstream WAS the music.

  • @toothpasteboy2019
    @toothpasteboy2019 Před 3 lety +44

    Fun fact: being a ball turret gunner in WW2 is one of the most dangerous jobs in history

  • @richard4short5
    @richard4short5 Před 3 lety

    The fact that people didnt like this video should be none of our business-great video!

  • @NavyCWO
    @NavyCWO Před 9 lety

    Awesome! My brother-in-law's Father piloted a B-24 in the Pacific in WW II. He passed away last fall. John R. was a great guy and I was luck and proud to know him!

  • @imakms8632
    @imakms8632 Před 7 lety +16

    Did anyone else think of a tie fighter when they saw this?

  • @galicije83
    @galicije83 Před 9 lety +28

    My cousin was in 512th squadron of 376th Bomb Group. He was in Yugoslavian Royal detachment and he was pilot on B-24D. He was a crew member on B24 42-73085 #20 when it collided in mid air with B24 44-40502 #31 after a mission to Lobau in Austria (US B-24 #31 was badly dmg by flack). He died on August 22nd 1944. In that collision only 2 members of 2 crews survived, from Yugo B-24 # 20 was 2nd Lt.Vojin Stojkovic, and one from US B-24 #31 unfortunate i dont know his name...
    His name was Blagoje Radosavljevic and he was Cap. 1st class and pilot of that Liberator...
    This was crew of that Liberator die on that day:
    Cap. 1st class Blagoje Radosavljević
    Cap. 1st class Borivoje Vulić
    Cap. 2nd class Slobodan Pavlović
    Lt. Vuko Šijaković
    2nd Lt. Obrad Crvenković
    2nd Lt Boris Parapatić
    2nd Lt Toma Živanović
    Ssgt. Milutin Bobek
    Sgt. Emil Trampuš

    • @regulator5521
      @regulator5521 Před 6 lety +1

      And I thought the us only used the b24 Lib. Rest In Peace.

    • @Janni069
      @Janni069 Před 6 lety +1

      I hope ur cousin is now in heaven and finds his peace

    • @gw5158
      @gw5158 Před 6 lety

      all the best to your cousin R.I.P
      slightly odd that you remember all that though

    • @user-zs7eb5uc9r
      @user-zs7eb5uc9r Před 6 lety +1

      RIP
      They are real heroes.
      We will never forget those who fought bravely.

  • @danpatterson8009
    @danpatterson8009 Před 3 lety

    Sending this to a WWII veteran whose brother was a copilot in a B-24 and was one of the many who never came home.

  • @ThePauperPrepper
    @ThePauperPrepper Před 10 lety +1

    Now that was neat, plain and simple. Thank you for getting that put up for us to see.

  • @DesertDigger1
    @DesertDigger1 Před 9 lety +12

    Its too bad we didn't get some glimpses of the gunners birds eye view as well.

    • @keymankeys1960
      @keymankeys1960 Před 9 lety

      I have to agree. My father was a ball turret gunner, I would like to see that. The B-24 came to a local airport and my father gave me a guided tour through it. It was great.

  • @MotorStorm
    @MotorStorm Před 11 lety +3

    Love this sound !

  • @ArieteArmsRAMLITE
    @ArieteArmsRAMLITE Před 3 lety

    This has to be the single most exciting footage I have seen in my entire life!!!!

  • @dawnotto4981
    @dawnotto4981 Před 6 měsíci

    Richard Marion Otto, my father in law did this job . I have a list of his missions. Cant imagine operating 2 50 caliber machine guns while under fire, sitting inside a ball turret. The balls on these men!

  • @kirabirkett9074
    @kirabirkett9074 Před 10 lety +5

    Amazing....

  • @panzerfaust_1821
    @panzerfaust_1821 Před 5 lety +10

    2:29 me need cookie (look in one of the windows)

  • @stevewest6534
    @stevewest6534 Před 11 lety

    Thank you for this video. I can ONLY imagine the courage, grace and patriotism the men that DID this job posessed. I hope we never again have to ask these kinds of men and women to DO these jobs

  • @apatheticempathy
    @apatheticempathy Před 12 lety

    ... timeless and priceless views that NO ONE has ever seen before. EVER ~
    Kudos from all the future aviation buffs who are not even born yet .
    THANK YOU !

  • @CurtisDrew1
    @CurtisDrew1 Před 10 lety +3

    I kept waiting to see the Gunnars view and it never came. Would love to see from the inside looking out as he rotated to get a feel for how they lived and died in those coffins. My Dad was a Bomber Mechanic in WWII and cleaned out a lot of airplanes after they landed. He said that was not something he enjoyed remembering.

  • @vetitoe362
    @vetitoe362 Před 10 lety +4

    If only they had go pros in WW2.

  • @cluxseltoot
    @cluxseltoot Před 9 lety

    This video is very impressive and well made. It must have been horrendous to have been a gunner suspended in one of these turrets. It makes us all appreciate the huge sacrifice Air Personnel made in WW2.

  • @blackspectre209
    @blackspectre209 Před rokem +1

    That bomb bay opening a 8:22 was unexpected but cool to see.

  • @Icarusv2x
    @Icarusv2x Před 8 lety +148

    Ladies and gentlemen, what you have witnessed here today was a plane going through puberty and its ball dropping. XD

  • @ethanthatcher794
    @ethanthatcher794 Před 7 lety +5

    The ball looks like the thing from portal

  • @Scotsman-hs6ss
    @Scotsman-hs6ss Před měsícem +1

    Therapist: Wheatley with a gun isn’t real he can’t hurt you.
    Wheatley with a gun:

  • @Dericheau
    @Dericheau Před 2 lety

    My dad was a ball turret gunner on a B 24 (Cherokee Maiden) out of Foggia Italy during WWII. They made 50 missions and no one even got a scratch. They did take an anti aircraft shell through the wing and up another 100ft. before it expldoded. When they got back the repair guy said, had it been a foot in any direction and they would have lost the wing. I was named after the pilot (Dean Buck Buchannan) very proud of that fact. I took a ride on the Dragon and his Tale out of Santa Barbara in 2003. What a trip. I asked about getting in the bottom turret and the guy said it's too dangerous and besides I'd never fit. at 6'3 & 225lbs. My dad was 6'3 but only 150. I actually talked to the nose gunner of his bomber and he said they never figured out how he got in there. My sincere thanks to all the brave men and women of that era. They deserve it.

  • @gofotolux
    @gofotolux Před 10 lety +9

    I would not want to sit in it, people shooting at me or not. It took tons of GUTS for those fly boys to volunteer for this. Salute!

  • @naufalctrlv
    @naufalctrlv Před 7 lety +19

    Here i am wasting 15 minutes of my life looking at balls rotating..

  • @BWTIII
    @BWTIII Před 6 lety

    "BZ" Loved every moment of this video. It gave me a perspective of the brave young men who manned those guns of long ago. We should never forget their sacrifice. My hat is off to you.

  • @clydesuckfinger7097
    @clydesuckfinger7097 Před 7 lety

    I could never have been a ball turret gunner. God Bless all that took on that roll.

  • @tankbomber98
    @tankbomber98 Před 8 lety +15

    Cod 3 memories anyone? ( ww2 cod 3)

    • @sexycat4326
      @sexycat4326 Před 6 lety +1

      And I thought I was the only one to still have it lol but the trolls are annoying

  • @Unmedicated_Moments
    @Unmedicated_Moments Před 8 lety +12

    Lose hydraulics and you're stuck in that thing

    • @simpsonfan13
      @simpsonfan13 Před 7 lety +3

      IIR on the B-24 it could still be hauled up manually. Would suck but if you made it back to England, all you'd really be is sore. And have the shit scared out of you. It was the B-17 guys that got royally fucked.

    • @huskyhockey3248
      @huskyhockey3248 Před 7 lety

      the hydraulic liquid powering the pistons in flammable so if a fighter got a good hit you'd catch fire or explode

    • @michaelfranco4918
      @michaelfranco4918 Před 6 lety

      both the 24 and 17 had manual ways of moving the turrets

  • @stevenvensko5789
    @stevenvensko5789 Před 3 lety

    Some time ago I had the honor to talk to Wilber Richardson, a WW2 ball gunner. Great guy with a lot of trigger time including D-Day. Well after talking for a bit somehow going to the bathroom came up, he said do your business before you fly cause there could be an 8 or 12 hour flight coming up. He did eventually say hey If you had to go, while cramped on the ball, you just went, no shame in it cause everybody did it. We both got a chuckel, God bless him.

  • @gofotolux
    @gofotolux Před 10 lety

    This is the coolest thing I've ever seen, even though this thing is 70 years old!

  • @MirageUchiha
    @MirageUchiha Před 7 lety +3

    Anyone here from CoD WWII? :]

  • @Christopher28fair
    @Christopher28fair Před 9 lety +36

    Awesome HD, fascinating to see. I just don't care for the 'greatest generation' crap. Let's remember that most Americans were opposed to entering that war and wanted nothing to do with it until Pearl Harbor. As far as the soldiers, I think we have just as many courageous Americans today as then, and had just as many during the Vietnam war too - those poor guys got sacrificed in an unwinnable war started by a bunch of arrogant armchair generals. I'd say the same about the Bush/Cheney war too - dragging on for ten years for what? For nothing.

    • @719n30trackify
      @719n30trackify Před 9 lety +3

      Too bad the government wanted to interfere into the South Manchuria Railway business in order to start a war with Japan.

    • @DavidSmith-jj5pr
      @DavidSmith-jj5pr Před 9 lety +5

      the bitterness is strong with this one

    • @719n30trackify
      @719n30trackify Před 9 lety +3

      agreed, the u.s. never learns from its past lol

    • @719n30trackify
      @719n30trackify Před 9 lety +4

      naww just mad that the u.s. is trying to enter wars that doesn't help its citizens at all. just look at communist china today, its no wonder general macarthur regretted starting war with Japan. the u.s. government just keeps on starting wars that never ends while the american people gets poorer every year lol

    • @DavidSmith-jj5pr
      @DavidSmith-jj5pr Před 9 lety +2

      Ym Mm
      what? oh sorry, I was busy deciding if I should take the car, or the motorcycle to head downtown and have a nice steak dinner. And I'm not even rich. you see what we consider "poor" in the US, is middle class in the rest of the developed world. and that makes the middle class in the US,... well I think you can figure that out.

  • @Riffer19
    @Riffer19 Před 2 lety

    The planes look so stable and solid..then u realise they could explode in a second. Respect and RIP.

  • @sharpshooter13ify
    @sharpshooter13ify Před rokem

    Mad respect for anyone who sat in one of those, not only were they the first thing on the plane to be shot at, any damage to it pretty much guaranteed it would become a coffin.

  • @fangkunhan4455
    @fangkunhan4455 Před 7 lety +3

    b24 flying coffin

  • @cavalrytm
    @cavalrytm Před 11 lety

    Well, this is definitely my new favorite video on CZcams. I didn't think in these "we can't do that because of the insurance, or it's too dangerous" times we live in, they would let anyone get in and operate a ball turret like this. Bravo.

  • @roadking99jokerst60
    @roadking99jokerst60 Před 5 lety

    I sat in this same aircraft in Omaha. A crew seating bench facing rearward. Hefty safety belts. Got chills. Dad was a ball gunner. 8th AF, 487 bg, 839 bs. Bless the folks keeping the warbirds flying.

  • @siphon9941
    @siphon9941 Před 3 lety

    I salute to all the great men who served as ball turret gunners

  • @ormmeford2204
    @ormmeford2204 Před 9 lety

    Fantastic! I can't imagine being back then and having to actually defend this aircraft without this. A camera view from inside would be fabulous.

  • @pointdan
    @pointdan Před 5 lety

    Ball turret gunners also took photos after bombs were released . . . my Dad flew out of Torino, Italy . . . 461st Bomber Group . . . his plane was shot down Aug, 1944 . . . spent the remainder of war in Stalag 4 . . . they were truly the "greatest generation" . . .

  • @davewood2902
    @davewood2902 Před 11 lety

    My Dad was a Ball Turret Gunner In the 455thBG Thanks for sharing

  • @truegamermoment6029
    @truegamermoment6029 Před 5 lety +1

    The B-24j Liberator is such a beautiful plane. The Witchcraft is by far my favorite B-24.

  • @jameswsomers
    @jameswsomers Před 4 lety

    That was super cool,best $25 I ever spent was for a tour of their B-17 and the '24.A must for all history buffs.

  • @chipsdubbo3493
    @chipsdubbo3493 Před 3 lety +1

    Nobody:
    CZcams : Ay let's recommend this after 8 year later

  • @andyrowlands50029
    @andyrowlands50029 Před rokem +1

    Amazing they have restored the aircraft to have an operating ball turret. It kind of resembles a TIE fighter cockpit, or even a space pod from 2001.

    • @jonathanwaggoner2265
      @jonathanwaggoner2265 Před rokem

      No it resembles A REAL PLANE THAT EXISTS
      what are you mental?
      where do you think Lucas came up with the idea for turrest on the millenium falcon from in the first place.

    • @andyrowlands50029
      @andyrowlands50029 Před rokem

      @@jonathanwaggoner2265 No I am not mental smartarse, and how should I know where he came up with the idea?

  • @margaretroselle8610
    @margaretroselle8610 Před 6 lety

    Absolutely amazing footage.....and the sound just makes it.Thanks so much!!

    • @twinbeechdotcom
      @twinbeechdotcom  Před 6 lety

      Thank you for the kind comments! You are most welcome

  • @amdg2023
    @amdg2023 Před 5 lety

    One of the finest videos on CZcams hands down.

  • @MrDave32825
    @MrDave32825 Před 11 lety

    When I was a young engineer I had the privilege of working with Dick Roberts who when he was the young engineers that designed the servo system for the ball turret. I still believe that that generation was best Engineers to have ever been produced. Today we have computers to model everything. image pulling out your slide ruler and solving problems. thank God for the Dick Roberts of the World.

  • @olentangy74
    @olentangy74 Před 9 lety

    Sweet. My uncle Willis Steburg, was in the 8th Air force during WW2. He was a ball turret gun on b-24's. He had 2 kills to his credit before he was shot down over France in 1944. He survived the downing, but spent the rest of the war in a POW camp. He passed away in 1980.

    • @RealPigeon
      @RealPigeon Před 7 lety

      olentangy74 Rest in Peace sounds like he would have quite some stories to tell.

    • @olentangy74
      @olentangy74 Před 7 lety

      Pigeon yes, although as I recall he did not like to talk much about it.

    • @RealPigeon
      @RealPigeon Před 7 lety

      olentangy74 No doubt. Talking about details of war and Nazi camps would for sure bring back some painful and undesirable memories.

  • @Wipsplash
    @Wipsplash Před 7 lety

    Awesome video. Puts things in perspective. Can't even imagine what it would be like sitting in there and fending for your life as bullets rained.

  • @Gunny1971
    @Gunny1971 Před 7 lety

    That sir is as bad ass as it gets!
    Thank you so much for sharing!!!!
    B-24 is da BOMB!!!!!

  • @jimleffler7976
    @jimleffler7976 Před měsícem

    That's awesome, my favorite heavy bombers ball turret retracts

  • @moxxie7610
    @moxxie7610 Před 3 lety +1

    A true hero because a ball turret is a really hard, dangerous, and big job,

  • @N.E.O.832
    @N.E.O.832 Před rokem

    Props to the camera man for holding on the machine gun

  • @glennsmith8676
    @glennsmith8676 Před 9 lety

    Nice video! This provided great angles, perspectives and views, which have not been seen before. Very well done. Thanks for sharing!

  • @Itsjustbeau
    @Itsjustbeau Před 4 lety +1

    My grandfather flew 22 missions in that ball he was wounded twice by flak. One thru his left lung. 443rd BG Tommy Francis Moody, came home alive in 45.

  • @belliott538
    @belliott538 Před 5 lety

    BUMP!!! Bleeping Awesome!!! Thank You for Sharing this Video..!

  • @MrEmersombiguns2002
    @MrEmersombiguns2002 Před 4 lety

    Flew on the WitchCraft 12 yrs ago...Surviving 54 missions-Wow! We owe them so much, keep em flying!!!!