What made you join the RAF? |
| Well I was in the air training core. The air training core was very
active in Inverness and I don’t think without the air training core
contribution educationally. I would qualify for air core. It was very
difficult to be selected to fly with the RAF and I had to go to Edinburgh
for three days for an interview with high ranking officers and take an
examination; Mathematics, English and Geography, before the selection
board. There were psychiatrists and intellectual people, and they asked
you questions. Probably about 50% or 60% of the candidates were rejected
so I was quite proud when I came home and I told my commanding officer
at the air training core that I was selected as a pilot to be trained
as a pilot in the Royal Air Force. As war time progressed we required fewer pilots because the planes became much bigger. Eventually I was a radar operator and a wireless operator, and that was the duties I carried out. But it made no difference to your career in the RAF because we were paid the same the amount. Eventually there were something like two thousand Lancasters in the RAF and each Lancaster had a crew of seven; a pilot, navigator, bombardier, engineer, radio officer and two gunners. We were different from the Americans because they had ten in their planes and they flew at a much higher height as we flew about 22,000 feet, the Americans flew over 30,000 feet and they flew in daylight and we flew at night. |
Why did they fly in daylight instead of night? |
| Well, the strategy of the Americans air force was involved
well before the war and they decided that they would build bombers big
enough and well defended so they could fly in daylight over Germany.
Right away, at the beginning of the war, two or three days of the war
started, the bomber command decided that there would be no daylight
flights over Germany because 70% or 80% of the planes were lost. We
found to our cost that it was not possible to fly and fight against
fighters. The fighters always got the advantage and we lost a lot of
planes early in the war and we decided that right from 1940 that we
would change our strategy and fly at night and it was much more successful,
with fewer loses, and of course the war developed radar and aircraft
became more formidable
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