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Few airmen were trained to cope with the insidious dangers of icing. A treacherous combination of high humidity and freezing temperatures would cause “clear ice” to build up on the bomber’s surface “so rapidly,” one pilot described the phenomenon, “that the craft became too heavy to fly. When this happened there was no recovery.” Under the intolerable weight of gas, bombs, and ice, planes would begin spinning wildly until they fell apart.
Masters of the Air: America's Bomber Boys Who Fought the Air War Against Nazi Germany
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