How many were ever flown that way, and armed that way?
10? 20? 40?
All of the PBY squadrons were rotated in such a manner. In fact, due to Catalina's night time interdiction and bombing raids, all Catalina squadron designations changed from VP (Patrol) to VPB (Patrol Bombing) in 1944.
Of the more than 4000 built, it's such a small number as to be statistically insignificant. You might as well mention how F-15s broke the world climb speed record -- oh wait that was just a single stripped down version. See what I mean though?
It's not such a small number because it wasn't. ALL USN PBY squadrons were used in this fashion, from the beginning of the war until the very end.
Far above and beyond their other uses they were [relatively] unarmed sitting ducks and were used as recon, rescue, some limited shipping duties, etc. Mostly behind friendly lines, rarely flying directly into combat unless under the cover of night to sneak by any patrols/defenses, drop off or extract some group of people.
Your comments are born out of not knowing how the PBY performed during the war. You are wrong, pure and simple. PBY's flew into direct combat each night they took off to bomb Japanese bases and shipping, that was their main job all throughout the war.
Again, take some time to actually read about the PBY's service during the war and it will open your eyes to what they really did. I used to believe the same stuff you did in regards to the Catalina but after reading some books on the PBY, I found out that I was wrong and the PBY was in fact a major player in the PTO, from the beginning of hostilities until the Japanese surrender.
Again, read Black Cat Raiders and you'll see that Catalinas regularly attacked and hunted Japanese ships such as destroyers, cruisers, battleships, destroyer escorts and even aircraft carriers and were not the shrinking violets you think they were.
They were not combat craft as a whole.
They regularly attacked enemy shipping, bases and other installation as well as troops as a normal part of their mission profile. The PBY, despite your claims, was a combat aircraft as a whole and its wartime service reflects that.
Whether or not it has a place in AH, that I'm not trying to debate or convince anyone of. I am, however, correcting the false claims put out by you and others about the PBY's wartime service record.
ack-ack