Tirpitz? I knew a Dam Buster who explained how they did the attack on it, with Lancasters through Russia. One of the most interesting presentations I ever sat through. He was a member of our pistol club.
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http://www.vg.no/nyheter/innenriks/her-ligger-tirpitz-70-aar-etter/a/10105091/
An ignoble end.
I remember using the slide rule. It's demise was the pocket calculator.
Contact mines in general were prone to premature detonation, though fortunately it usually occurred after the mine was laid. Some WWI era British mines actually used pellets that dissolved in sal####er as their delayed arming mechanism. Imagine operating aboard a minelayer - in a constant marine environment with potentially hundreds of mines aboard - where the only thing staving off oblivion was keeping the mines dry before laying them.
So 70 years after the fact they are using bits of Tirpitz as metal covers for utility excavations? I bet they'd get more bang for their buck selling them on e-bay.
Neat Tirpitz photos. When I was last in Bergen I visited the Bruno submarine bunker, which is still in use today. It's difficult to convey how over0built that thing is. It's massive with re-inforced concrete walls several meters thick in layers with voids between them designed to dissipate blasts. They still have a lot of the WW2 signage up inside for historical preservation reasons.
Wartime:
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Today:
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The Russians tried to blow up the bunker. After a year, they managed to collapse only 2 pens then gave up and turned it over to Norway for their use.
Interesting place Bergen. My hotel had a re-purposed bomb shelter for storing luggage and everywhere you look are remnants of the war, including an overgrown giant concrete flak tower just outside the tourist district.
He did. In 1944 he and Samuel Goldwyn sought his early release so he might star in a wartime movie planned by Goldwyn. Niven was released from service in November 1945 and, of course, resumed his successful movie career. Niven served in France and Germany. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1411404/Niven-tried-to-leave-Army-at-height-of-war.htmlLooks like he made the rank od Lt Colonel.