On the morning of 30th, Manser and another pilot were instructed to collect two Manchesters from Coningsby, Lincolnshire. As many of these aircraft were drawn from reserves and training squadrons, it was inevitable that many would be in poor condition. Manser’s was no exception, it had no mid upper turret and a sealed escape hatch.
When the order came and Manser took off, his aircraft L7301 ‘D’ Dog, an Avro Manchester Mk1, with a full bomb load of incendiaries, was now difficult to manoeuvre and he was unable to reach an altitude of more than about 7,000 ft. Hoping the main bomber force would attract the greater concentration of flak, he decided to continue on.
What happened to this young 20-year-old as he flew with his crew? find out…
The Avro Manchester was an operational failure…
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avro_Manchester
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Certainly was disliked by many for it’s slow and cumbersome flying attributes. The follow up, the Lancaster, was far superior and a real legend. Thanks for the comment.
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Thanks for paying homage to this young pilot.
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Reblogged this on Lest We Forget and commented:
Read on…
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