I used to work with a guy who's father flew Stukas in Spain, at the time they were a technological break through, less than 20 years later they were pretty much obsolete.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2779157/Found-70-years-rare-German-dive-bomber-shot-World-War-Two-discovered-preserved-coast-Croatia.html
Anyone else want to see this bird back up and flying again or just me?
I used to work with a guy who's father flew Stukas in Spain, at the time they were a technological break through, less than 20 years later they were pretty much obsolete.
The thing museums like doing now is display as recovered. If it stays where it is it will slowly get picked over for souvenirs.I would love to see a flying stuka
The Luftwaffe learned the hard way during the Battle of Britain that the Stuka had a lot of faults. They didn't use them for long once they were easily shot out of the skies. Hadn't had much opposition prior to that.
The Luftwaffe learned the hard way during the Battle of Britain that the Stuka had a lot of faults. They didn't use them for long once they were easily shot out of the skies. Hadn't had much opposition prior to that.
I would love to dive this I have dove some ww2 era planes but never a Stuka
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Italians has Stukas. They lost a lot of pilots because the manuals were in German. The pilot sits inside the cockpit, which wasn't obvious at the time.
Just saw the one in Chicago a couple weeks ago. Great to see in person




























