I would have been really interested in /if your father said that they used extra cylinders? Theres a ton of stuff I never had a chance to ask my father.
Same here. Mine died when I was 11 (WWII Gunboat Mechanic). We have built something of a picture from what he did talk about (just the drama stuff, aka Kamikaze and Rocket Launches at the beach). He had a fixation for exact course steering in a boat, ergo, suspect he did helm duty. LCL(L) and the R and G variations were squirrely. Probably passing ammo if he was on deck to see the rocket launches.
Its really easy to bash Mark Clark but perhaps not so easy to actually do a better job under the circumstances and with the intelligence he had available in real time rather than long after the fact. Most folks think Patton was a great general and in the big picture yes he got the job done very well but he also needlessly got a lot of guys killed hunting glory for himself.
Some side track but I do disagree on Clark. His record was rife with bad decisions. Going for Rome while the German army streamed by was all glory hounding. His record up to that point was poor to bad and that was the Candles on the cake. No I am no general but it takes a non generla to put them in perspective.
I don't disagree with aspects of Patton. War is ugly, you are going to order ops that you know people will get killed doing. Sicily is an interesting aspect. Yea he was trying to outdo Montgomery who was a blatant back pounder self promoter and a total ass (my take was he was a good defensive general and a logistics mans dream, but he was also a bean counter - El Alemein as close to a loss and the details of tactics were stupid. Saved by brave men and huge material advantage. As we saw latter in Normandy, inept. I would say Patton was right, allies would have been vastly better off without him.
Metz was another bad Patton set of decisions and a degree of ego if not a lot of ego. But, look at his Army. Well run, highly capable, fought over far worse terrain than Montgomery and they kept moving. He had built an incredible staff, Battle of the Bulge where he stopped, pivoted and then marched (90 miles?). He gave the orders, but he also put the staff together that got it done. But Patton had courage. I can respect that.
Bradly who was the soldiers soldier had his own PR machine and he had some huge blunders. Failure in Normandy at Falaise was one and the Battle of the Bulge was another. But he mostly had competent people.
You don't get to general without ego and arrogance. Everyone has their bad decisions. Its the weave of the whole fabric.