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America's Pursuit of Precision Bombing, 1910-1945

America's Pursuit of Precision Bombing, 1910-1945

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Author: Stephen L. Mcfarland
Creator: Richard P. Hallion
Publisher: University Alabama Press
Category: Book

Buy New: $33.50



New (9) Used (3) from $30.15

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 637311

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 312
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.4 x 1.2

ISBN: 0817355030
Dewey Decimal Number: 355
EAN: 9780817355036
ASIN: 0817355030

Publication Date: July 30, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - America's Pursuit of Precision Bombing, 1910-1945 (Smithsonian History of Aviation Series)
  • Hardcover - America's Pursuit of Precision Bombing, 1910-1945 (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Describes the refinement of American military technology.


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars good study of the American obsession with the pickle barrel   November 26, 2000
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

In the 1930s, the American air forces like most others believed that bombers were invincible. What's more, we convinced ourselves that with the proper bombsight we could "drop a bomb in a pickle barrel from 15,000 ft." McFarland describes the development of the Norden bombsight and how inevitable countermeasures--mostly the "German 88" flak cannon--drove the bombers up to 25,000 feet, from which altitude they were lucky to hit a city, never mind a pickle barrel

Meanwhile, the navy (which had dibs on the Norden bombsight) took the wiser course and depended on single-engine dive bombers, whose pilots essentially turned themselves into missile guidance systems.

The pursuit of precision bombing ended over Hiroshima, where the best bombardier in the USAAF with no flak, no fighters, and perfect weather managed to miss his target by 800 feet. But with the atomic bomb on board, what did it matter? A miss was literally as good as a mile, and Hiroshima vanished.

A good, stolid, valuable history.


5 out of 5 stars A highly readable, comprehensive and fascinating account.   August 6, 2000
The dry title suggests little more than an obscure scholarly monograph when, in fact, this is a fascinating and highly readable account.

Between the years 1942-45, hundreds of thousands of young Americans embarked on an unprecedented struggle: To destroy, from the air, an enemy nation's ability to wage war. This was the first trial of the untested theory of daylight precision bombing. In the event, the reality was often much less than precise. But thousands of lives were risked daily, and many lost, on this premise.

Precision aerial bombing was not a natural outgrowth of the new science of aviation. It was the result of competing and bitterly debated bodies of opinion, inter- and intra-service rivalries, the appalling legacy of the Great War, America's image of itself as reflected in its warmaking philosophy and, a central topic of this book, engineering genius.

The book traces the evolution of the science of aerial bombardment from its origins in WWI to the detonation of the first atomic weapons. Along the way, the author covers not only the technical challenges, but includes portraits of the many personalities, at all levels, involved in the struggle to perfect a force capable of precision destruction. Chief among these is Carl Norden, the inventor of what was, up until the Manhattan Project, America's most closely guarded military secret. A reticent, strong-willed, driven and intensely proud man, this Dutch immigrant who never attained American citizenship created the principal instrument upon which the entire American daylight precision bombing campaign of WWII was founded: the Norden bombsight.

Touted as being capable of putting a bomb in a pickle barrel from 20,000 feet, this precision instrument was the ultimate analog computer--a collection of gears, dials, electromechanical linkages and optics which could calculate the variables of airspeed, altitude, drift, ordnance weight and trajectory to place high explosives close enough to a target to effect its destruction. Almost entirely handmade in its early versions, it was a product of Old World craftsmanship, conceived in the New World, sent as a mechanism of destruction to that same Old World.

From the first crude attempts to design aerial bombsights and formulate tactics, to the service funding debates of the interwar years; from the competition between the Norden company and its rivals, to the procurement battles between the Navy and nascent Army Air Forces; from the manufacturing difficulties inherent in mass-producing a precision instrument, to the training of WWII bombardiers, and even going so far as to include a step-by-step guide to the operation of the Norden sight--this is a comprehensive, thoroughly researched and completely fascinating history. It is highly recommended to any reader of history and technology.


2 out of 5 stars The Legendary Norden Bombsight   March 3, 2000
 1 out of 5 found this review helpful

Mr. McFarland needs to read the book The Legendary Norden Bombsight to get the full picture and history of the Norden. This book was published by a person that worked on the bombsight and managed the bombsight shop before and after World War II. This is the first book to detail the Norden Bombsight (NBS)

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