Swing
New Member
Roughwear said:unclegrumpy said:One thing to also consider is that if your A-2 got too worn, you could just turn it in and get a new one.
Of course A2s were refurbished in USAAF depots and re-issued. As far as turning in your A2 and getting an new one I'm not sure how common this was? Do you have evidence to show this was common practice? A2s were sought after and when they were replaced by cloth jackets from 1943/4 there would not necessarily have been quantities of them in the USAAF stores to do this. The shortage of issued A2s was one reason why servicemen bought A2 varients themselves.
In one of my books the author mentioned that at the end of training he and the rest of the crew turned in all of their gear, and were issued a completely new kit before going over seas. Did he get a brand new A-2 before shipping out? Don't know, but IIRC he mentions getting a new sheepskin jacket (I assume a B-3). I don't think that once you reached the front you would just exchange gear unless it was damaged and needed repaired. Then you'd probably be issued a reconditioned A-2, and your damaged one would be reconditioned to give to the next guy.
~Swing