Oscar Duck wrote:
Steve P. my late father-in-law took pilot training on PT-22's at King Flying Services in Ca. half-way through that phase he and about half his class were terminated and sent to gunnery school [mid-1943]. They were starting to lose a bunch of crews then.
He served as a flight engineer/top turret gunner on B-17's at Sterapone also with the 483rd Bomb Group. [815th BS] arriving in Italy in Mar'44..
That is a common occurrence during certain phases of the War. Many pilot cadets were washed out or surplused for what would normally be very minor discrepancies in order to send the "bodies" to where there were vacancies. Sometimes it was bombardier, navigator, or gunnery school depending on where the manpower shortages were at the time. In addition, the B-29 flight engineer schools took a good number of pilot-trainees during the early phase of the program.
I've been working on the later phases of training primarily, but there was a lot of swapping of pilot trainees from single to multi (and from multi to single when necessary) for much the same reason. Pilots were sent to where the slots were, and sometimes it was sink-or-swim, especially with co-pilots in the bombers.
Scott