Advanced Training In England
Heroes Remember
Transcript
There was additional training to be
done in England. Here in Canada we had
basic trainers and basic uh, but once there
we found there was, we had to update
our training because of the equipment and
air craft that were in use over in England.
As far as my trade was concerned,
I needed additional navigation training in
England because of different country side.
Our Prairies are quite easy to map read,
come to England it's not.
A group of us, bomb aimers I think,
the class was about, there were about
30 of us in a class, were sent to Dunphreys,
just on the border of Scotland and England
to obtain this additional navigation training.
We were sent to what they call a heavy
conversion unit and that is when you convert
from a twin engine bomber to a Lancaster for
engine power and there at that unit you
acquire two more crew members and
then you become a bomber crew of seven.
Now, so all of us had to do initial training to
become familiar with the Lancaster bomber.
You were only trained to be familiar with your
machine guns in case if you needed them,
you would know how to operate.
Your turrets were hydraulically operated so
you could operate them to elevate them
or to rotate as required. We have here in
our museum practice bombs that were in
use for training and they were only 11 pound
bombs and what happened when you
dropped it on impact with the ground there
would be just a puff of smoke.
There would be spotters around the range
who would record the location and
then assess our accuracy.
But the size of the bomb doesn't really
matter because a falling object attains its
acceleration whether it's the size of a practice
bomb or the one that we dropped from a
Lancaster which was four thousand pounds.
The month of August in ‘42 we had completed
our training and was sent to 100 Squadron at...
close to the city of Grimsby in
England on the East Coast.
Description
Mr. Kondra discusses the additional training necessary to become crew on a Lancaster bomber.
William Kondra
On January 14, 1922, William Kondra was born in Prudhomme, Saskatchewan. He finished Grade 8 at his local school, and, with difficulty, finished high school through correspondence. He was working on local farms for a pittance, so he decided to enlist in the Air Force, where he trained as a bomb aimer/front gunner. Mr. Kondra's tour of duty was completed with his original crew members aboard a Lancaster Bomber, and primarily consisted of air strikes on industrial Germany. Mr. Kondra offers many insights into the technology, strategy and stresses of flying in a bomber.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 3:08
- Person Interviewed:
- William Kondra
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Rank:
- Flying Officer
- Occupation:
- Bomb Aimer
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