Survival at Altitude for Heavy and Very Heavy Bomber Crews

audiobook

Survival at Altitude for Heavy and Very Heavy Bomber Crews

by 2nd. Altitude Indoctrination Unit United States. Army Air Forces. Air Force

EN·~55 minutes·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total

55:49

Description

This short, factual guide was issued to U.S. airmen in the latter part of World II to keep bomber crews alive and effective while soaring above fifteen thousand feet. It explains why oxygen becomes a matter of survival at altitude, lists the exact heights where supplemental air is required, and outlines the physical symptoms of hypoxia that can cripple a mission. The tone is plain‑spoken, reflecting the urgency of lessons learned from combat sorties.

The manual walks the reader through the specific systems installed in the B‑17 Flying Fortress, B‑24 Liberator and the newer B‑29 Superfortress, describing demand regulators, mask types, cylinder inspections and emergency procedures. Practical checklists teach crew members how to detect leaks, adjust flow rates, and revive a comrade who has passed out from oxygen loss. By the end of the first part, listeners will have a clear picture of the routine drills that turned a dangerous environment into a manageable battlefield.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~55 minutes (53K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United States: 2nd Air Force Altitude Indoctrination Unit.

Credits

Kenneth R. Black, Sue Clark and Roger Frank

Release date

2021-11-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

2A

2nd. Altitude Indoctrination Unit United States. Army Air Forces. Air Force

A World War II training unit rather than a single writer, this Army Air Forces team produced practical guidance for bomber crews facing one of combat flying’s biggest dangers: extreme altitude. Their surviving manual captures the blunt, hands-on style of wartime instruction.

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