Night Fighter books
Posted: 03 Feb 2025, 11:31
I hope this is of some interest to you.
I've read "Night Fighter" by C.F. Rawnsley & Robert Wright.
It gave an inside story from the aircrew perspective, tracing from the early days when the RAF was unable to provide any resistance to night bombers, through to "A.I." = "Air Interception". Aircraft were Blenheims, replaced by Beaufighters, replaced by Mosquitos.
A.I. was secret, and after the first downing of a night raider, the RAF said they were training pilots to see in the dark.
The name "Cat's eyes Cunningham" was invented by the Press, hated by John Cunningham.
The early equipment regularly failed and/or caught fire, and could only be operated by non-aviators who had been taught how to read the black boxes.
Of course, improvements were constantly sought, and in time, Air Gunners were trained as Observers or Operators.
There were many incidents involving anti-aircraft fire, not to mention mistaken identity. Night binoculars were intended to eliminate friendly fire.
RAF crews thought of their work more as murder, than fighting, because they had to creep up on their target and blast it with 20mm cannons.
Germany added rearward facing detectors to their bombers, introduced "Window," and so cat and mouse continually escalated.
The Americans called the system RAdio Direction And Range (RADAR).
The screens which Operators watched over are depicted in the photo below; very basic and apparently difficult to read with interference and rebounding earth signals.
[I am now into "Cover of Darkness" by Roderick Chisholm]
I've read "Night Fighter" by C.F. Rawnsley & Robert Wright.
It gave an inside story from the aircrew perspective, tracing from the early days when the RAF was unable to provide any resistance to night bombers, through to "A.I." = "Air Interception". Aircraft were Blenheims, replaced by Beaufighters, replaced by Mosquitos.
A.I. was secret, and after the first downing of a night raider, the RAF said they were training pilots to see in the dark.
The name "Cat's eyes Cunningham" was invented by the Press, hated by John Cunningham.
The early equipment regularly failed and/or caught fire, and could only be operated by non-aviators who had been taught how to read the black boxes.
Of course, improvements were constantly sought, and in time, Air Gunners were trained as Observers or Operators.
There were many incidents involving anti-aircraft fire, not to mention mistaken identity. Night binoculars were intended to eliminate friendly fire.
RAF crews thought of their work more as murder, than fighting, because they had to creep up on their target and blast it with 20mm cannons.
Germany added rearward facing detectors to their bombers, introduced "Window," and so cat and mouse continually escalated.
The Americans called the system RAdio Direction And Range (RADAR).
The screens which Operators watched over are depicted in the photo below; very basic and apparently difficult to read with interference and rebounding earth signals.
[I am now into "Cover of Darkness" by Roderick Chisholm]