DryMartini wrote:
Actually, the story is this:
Tom Wilson called me up one evening, and
said that someone on another message board said that
"Mary Ann" was a B-17B, and that no one believed him.
He did not mention the board, but I decided to look at
some pictures, and watch my old "Air Force" VHS tape,
and confirmed that she was indeed a B-17B. I posted my
findings on this, the B-17 oracle-of-information board.
(That has to count for something)
So, I wasn't the first, but I did independently confirm the finding.
And now you have the whole story... .
Thanks Bill Stanczak.
Yes, when I first floated the idea that Mary Ann was a B-17B back in July 2006 it was frustrating that people did not want to look and see. Even more frustrating about the whole two year exchange on armyairforces.com was that people would chime in on the thread without reading what had been hashed out before. Some hadn't even watched the movie or hadn't seen it for some time. If I remember correctly, there were about three different threads on armyairforces.com concerning this topic.
When we had eliminated about 35 of the 38 B-17C airplanes I thought that we were getting close. Things were not checking out and I was getting the idea that we were barking up the wrong tree rather than getting closer. When I re-watched the movie again (I must have watched the movie about 20 times that summer) it was evident that the airplane had the commander's dome off set to the right. This was noticable at four points in the first hour but was espcecially noticable when the airplane was at Wake Island (00:57:43 and at 00:59:00). Then I was a believer. Did not have a lot of support for the idea right off, then I posted a point by point identification of the airplane as a B-17B on Sept 4, 2006. After that, I did not care if people did not want to believe me. I knew what I was seeing.
Yes, this is the "B-17 oracle-of-information board".
Sincerely,
C-47B
Anthony J. Mireles
Author
FATAL ARMY AIR FORCES AVIATION ACCIDENTS
IN THE UNITED STATES, 1941-1945