One thing about using dynamotors with your milsurp, they last a very long time on the ground, compared to operating at up to 30K feet in unpressurised planes where they arced like the dickens up there. A contact I have who restores electrically operated turrets for WWII AC like the B17, said he has never replaced the brushes in the amplidynes that power those turret motors. That also brings up a question as to their composition. I wonder if those brushes intended for high altitude, had a different make up than those used in motors that stayed at sea level? Maybe a harder carbon formula to last over several missions from England to Germany and back? Is there any data on how long the brushes did last in the ETO and how often they were changed? Perhaps they left the radio gear off most of the time, but the intercom system had a dynamotor powered amplifier, BC347, that had to be running all the time.
Charie, W4MEC in NC