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ATA DUTIES: FERRYING

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  Although the Air Transport Auxiliary was founded with a open mandate to do "whatever it could" with the resources it had (pilots), ferrying was not envisaged at the start. Yet from 1 May 1940 until the summer of 1945, the ATA held a monopoly on this function in Britain. But just what did that actually entail?   In the early days, Britain was under attack from the air (part of the Battle of Britain), and aircraft factories were receiving particularly intense attention from the Luftwaffe. In consequence, the ATA was asked to help clear newly produced RAF aircraft away from these prime targets. This task entailed picking up aircraft that had just rolled off the assembly line and were completely untested to the nearest RAF Maintenance Unit, where they were be fitted with such vitally important equipment as radios and armaments. In short, the ATA was flying potentially faulty aircraft without communications or self-defensive capabilities.  As soon as the modifications were c...

Aircraft of the Berlin Airlift : C-74 Globemaster

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  The largest cargo aircraft to fly the Berlin Airlift was the USAF C-74. Yet while this impressive cargo carrier made some spectacular attention-grabbing flights, it was not routinely employed on the humanitarian effort to keep Berlin free.   In early 1942, just after the US military laid claim to all DC-4s in production, Douglas Aircraft Corporation started work on the design of a larger more capable cargo plane to meet the exploding transport needs of the army. Top of the list of requirements was the ability to transport light tanks, howitzers and bulldozers. A prototype was finished by 1945, but the end of the war caused the military to reduce their order from 50 to 14. Of these, only 11 saw service, and one lost a wing during a test flight, causing Douglas to undertake major modifications that resulted in a new aircraft, the C-124, which proved to be more successful. The C-124, however, did not take flight until 1950, making the C-74 the largest aircraft available to the ...

ATA Training in Practice

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Although the ATA was conceived as means to employ skilled pilots in support roles, the pool of trained pilots was soon drained by the demands of war. The ATA and no choice but to start training pilots in order to meet the demands placed on it. With astonishing speed, it created a large -- and highly efficient -- training establishment. Women were as fully integrated in training as they were in flying.  Below one of ATA's women instructors, Joan Hughes, instructing on heavy bombers.   The ATA's first operational training school was co-located with ATA Headquarters at White Waltham. It opened in March 1941 with twenty instructors and twenty-nine aircraft. Just one year later, the number of training aircraft had grown to 100 and it was no longer safe to do all instructing at a single airfield, so a new training field was established at Luton. All the slow, elementary aircraft -- and the training conducted on them -- were moved to Luton, leaving only the faster, operational aircra...

Aircraft of the Berlin Airlift: The C-54 Skymaster

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  While the C-47/Dakota -- the military versions of the DC-3 -- became the symbol of the Berlin Airlift because they were the first aircraft Britain and the United States sent to Berlin with supplies, the DC-3 did not make the greatest contribution. That honour goes to the larger, four-engine C-54. The C-54 'Skymaster' was born out of a commercial design by Douglas Aircraft corporation which had been developed to meet commercial demands for a larger, long-range passenger transport. It was designated the DC-4. By the time the design was ready for testing, however, the United States had entered WWII. The US military immediately appropriated all 80 aircraft already ordered and pressed them into service. The government needed a plane that could rapidly deliver people and dispatches over long distances, notably across the Atlantic.  Within months, however, more orders were placed for a cargo version of the DC-4. These versions had removable seats and could carry either passengers o...