Illinois man has spent 40 years rebuilding a WWII-era B-17 bomber in his barn

32 frasermarlow 8 5/30/2025, 8:58:52 PM popsci.com ↗

Comments (8)

cafard · 21h ago
"The military wanted a new breed of bomber that would be able to travel beyond enemy lines at great distances and drop bombs with precision. It needed to be able to reach altitudes high enough to fly outside of the range of enemy antiaircraft artillery."

The precision was never what it might have been, and there were substantial losses to flak. But it was an impressive machine for its day.

erikig · 4h ago
Red Wrench films did a comparison of the B-17 and B-24 bomber's results based on flight characteristics, bombing accuracy, loss rates and more. Even though more B-24s were produced than B-17s the latter had much better results.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hM8eKEqiO2Y

spanktheuser · 21h ago
Well well… had no idea this was going on a few miles from me.
toomuchtodo · 1d ago
potato3732842 · 22h ago
Good for him. That's a hell of a project.
frasermarlow · 1d ago
"This restoration isn't just for show. Mike Kellner wants to fly the 'Desert Rat.'"
erikig · 23h ago
Wishing him the best, I recently watched some flights of the B24 Bomber "Witchcraft" which that team maintains and flies regularly.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcZmiFMlR3g

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=km3p-fapIMg

Seeing them in flight is a nice memorial to the bravery of the kids that originally flew these.

gedy · 18h ago
Been inside that! It's really cool