I was recently reading a book about a P51 pilot. Theres some interesting parts in it. He flew 23 missions before getting shot down and became a POW.
The Biography of a Rabbit
by Roy Benson Jr. :
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/7190/7190-h/7190-h.htmOne interesting passage was this:
> When you are starting the plane there is a knob that you push out and pull in called the primer pump and it gives extra gas to the engine for starting. On one mission Paul Maxwell was in our flight and his engine quit on the way back. He found that the only way he could keep it running well enough to stay in the air was to work the primer pump. We all slowed down enough to stay with him and prayed that he could make It across the Channel. On the east coast of England at the point closest to Europe there was a landing strip on top of the white cliffs. It was called the Masden emergency field and all the planes that were damaged or having problems would head for there. A lot of the bombers would land there if they couldn't make it back to base. The runway was wide and straight in from the Channel so they didn't have to make any turns. Paul Maxwell landed there and his fingers were covered with blood from his having to work, the primer pump constantly.
I have no idea what a primer pump is, since I've never flown. All I have done is drive automatic cars (maybe drove stick shift like 5 times in my entire life)