Picture of the day

I wish there was more info...but I find this pretty interesting about the Jumo 210.

Would have been a great picture!!
me-262-v1.jpg

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https://www.nevingtonwarmuseum.com/me-262-and-variants.html

Me_262_V1_PC_UA.jpg
 
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Interesting drawing of the 262 without the jet engines fitted
I wonder what sort of aerodynamic properties the airframe would have had in that configuration & how it would have handled flying on prop alone
Would the handling have been any better than a 109, or worse
Any guesses
 
Rolls-Royce pulled a lot of sub aircraft out of the gutter....
Read up on the P-51. wasn't much good with the first Allison engine.

What did in the P51 was how susceptible it was to ground fire. Korean war and having to do ground attack and suffer horrendous loss rates killed it off the Air force plans for future use. Likely why it wanted fast jets for Vietnam ground support.
 
Ireland 1916, british troops improvised APC with a locomotive boiler shell put on a truck.









for more details and pics
https ://ansionnachfionn.com/2016/03/23/improvised-armour-from-the-british-army-1916-to-the-islamic-state-2016/
 
If 3 wings are good, 5 must be even better!
This is the Fokker V8 'quintuplane' of 1917. Designer Reinhold Platz was convinced enough to build this prototype, but owner Anthony Fokker was sceptical. Fokker was correct and Platz was embarrassed, he wouldn't mention it, post war!

EUmy-v6XkAcZ90i
 
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I guess that was the standard tripod for the Bren gun? No wonder it left the BAR in the dust.
11177854-6825689-Gabriella_pictured_said_I_ran_after_the_officer_and_pleaded_with-a-4_1553046506963.jpg


Gabriella Ezra. She used her German language skills to save 37 lives in her village.

War hero Gabriella Ezra, 91, has been awarded the prestigious Star of Italy award 74 years after she saved her village from being killed by the Nazis
 
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Rolls-Royce pulled a lot of sub aircraft out of the gutter....
Read up on the P-51. wasn't much good with the first Allison engine.

Feel free to read up on how the USAAF/US Government repaid the Brits in the early days of the Lend-Lease agreement, in the post-Allison P-51 days.

That's right, the US sent the Brits a batch of Allison engined P-51s as thanks for giving Packard the rights to build Merlins. Nice move.
 
The first of nearly 34,000. BF 109 V1. D-IABI:

NASM-SI-89-13764.jpg


Poor thing had a bad case of Stuka Face.

Junkers-Ju-87A-Stuka-Jagdfliegervorschule-1-Germany-01.jpg


Not surprising - the 109 V.1 and the JU87 A were both powered by the Junkers Jumo 210

I'm currently re-reading "Stuka Pilot" by Ernst Rudel from my Covid 19 KOBO library. I'm not as impressed as I was when I was teenager. Not only do his exploits sound more than fantastic, they border on the impossible.

I had also forgotten was a dyed-in-the-wool believer he was in the Nazi cause.
 
Interesting drawing of the 262 without the jet engines fitted
I wonder what sort of aerodynamic properties the airframe would have had in that configuration & how it would have handled flying on prop alone
Would the handling have been any better than a 109, or worse
Any guesses

Considering something like 1/3 of Bf-109 were lost in ground accidents I'd say any ting would have better?
 
Curtiss A-8 Shrike flew few years before Ju-87 yet you can see some resemblance.Both made for the similar role yet only Junkers was adopted.

USAAF opted for twin engine tactical bombers but it wasn't long before every single US made fighter had provisions for good bomb load.

1024px-Curtiss_A-8_No.60.jpg
 
Curtiss A-8 Shrike flew few years before Ju-87 yet you can see some resemblance.Both made for the similar role yet only Junkers was adopted.

USAAF opted for twin engine tactical bombers but it wasn't long before every single US made fighter had provisions for good bomb load.

1024px-Curtiss_A-8_No.60.jpg

Those are some wild wheel pants, even on the tail wheel
 
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