I do not know of any restrictions in the waist window guns on the B-17 and the B-24. At least I have not come across anything in the technical information or from the mounts I have seen. It seems like they could actually hit their own tails or wings if they were not careful.
Anyone have any examples of waist window cam or physical limit plates used in the B-17 or B-24 or other aircraft?
I have seen a cam plate in a ball socket mount that looks like it was intended to restrict the travel. The ball mounts were mostly used in the forward positions in the nose where I believe this restriction was to prevent the gun from hitting the bomb sight of a B-25 or possibly the B-26.
I think the principal method for this was training. I don't recall reading or hearing about too many examples of gunners hitting their own aircraft.
As for the B-25 Bendix upper turret and the bullet deflectors mounted just aft of the guns I heard (but have not personally seen it in print) that they came up with the deflectors to prevent the to turret guns from hitting the tail gunner.
Even if there is an electrical fire interrupter the guns can cook off rounds if the firing chamber gets too hot from sustained fire. As I understand it North American made the deflector out of stout steel plate and made an aluminum fairing over the top of it for aerodynamics. The story goes on that they had problems in the field where the bullet would hit the deflector and then the fairing could redirect the bullet back toward the tail gunners head. Supposedly there was a Technical Order that came out requiring the removal of the aluminum deflector to prevent further problems.
It is my speculation from this story and others that there became a requirement later in the war that if a crew member was exposed to the field of fire that the guns should be physically raised so the gun would never be able to point at a crew member. The idea was to not rely solely on the electrical fire interrupter to prevent this kind of accident. This shows up in the B-29 turret system where the 4 gun turret had a cam plate mounted on the aft end and a bar/roller assembly mounted just below the guns so when the turret turned to the rear the guns were forced to raise to point over the heads of the CFC and the tail gunner.
The 2 gun turrets also had a rod/cam assembly that would do the same thing.
I have often wondered if the vertical bar in the PBY was to keep the gunner from hitting the tail or was if simply a hand hold when getting in and out of the blister.

I seem to recall finding other examples in Navy aircraft of tubing type limits in some aircraft but no specifics come to mind.
The SBD and SB2C are good examples of flexible twin 30's that had no limits and could shoot their own structures. The SNJ/AT-6 flex gun also had no limits that I am aware of and a student could shoot their own tail and wing. Of course they had a lot of training by the time they went solo in the back of an AT-6 to shoot at target sleeves but you know it must have happened.


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