Because the Vickers K guns were easier to obtain and had about twice the rate of fire.
Umm, thinking more along the lines of the SAS being able to requisition a greater variety of weapons and war materiel based on needs, not a 'mine is bigger' contest.
Of course they used the Vickers.
Is there any official info on the pic or was it an unofficial pic I wonder?
That looks like a greyhound armoured car with no turret and a .50 cal on a pintle mount.
Oh, it is an M20 armored utility car.
"A soldier from New Zealand takes aim with twin Bren guns in Libya, 1942"
and
"A New Zealand soldier part of Expeditionary Force "2NZEF" firing dual Bren's joined by an AA mount during Operation Crusader in North Africa "
Because the Vickers K guns were easier to obtain and had about twice the rate of fire.
Looks less at work than plinking? Wierd pose, no one else looking serious, and someones sporter rifle?
The scope mounts look pretty Teutonic. One wonders if it's a little something they "found".
Para helmet, or dispatch rider kit?
The scope mounts look pretty Teutonic. One wonders if it's a little something they "found".
Para helmet, or dispatch rider kit?
Looks less at work than plinking? Wierd pose, no one else looking serious, and someones sporter rifle?
Little Petula Clark
Young actress Petula Clark gets a last-minute check from her father, Lance Corporal Leslie Clark, before going on stage at the BBC's Empire birthday party, December 1942. The radio show celebrates the 10th anniversary of the BBC's Empire Service. (Photo by Fred Ramage/Keystone Features/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Clark grew up in Abercanaid, near Merthyr Tydfil in Wales,[5] in a house with no electricity or running water and a toilet in the garden. Her grandfather was a coal miner.[6] Her first ever live audience was at the Colliers' Arms in Abercanaid.[7] She also recalls living just outside London during the Blitz and watching the dogfights in the air and running to air-raid shelters with her sister. Later, when she was eight, she joined other children to record messages with the BBC to be broadcast to members of their families in the forces. The recording event was in the Criterion Theatre, an underground theatre that was safe. When the air-raid siren went off other children were upset and a call went out for someone to step forward and sing to calm them. Petula volunteered, and they liked her voice so much, in the control room they recorded her. Her song was "Mighty Like a Rose".
“I would like to wrap my arms around Nashville,” Clark wrote. “Give you all a hug.”
Wow, 14 freighters and a submarine.
Impressive
So are those two rear pointed 20mm canon?
As early as the end of 1939, Lieutenant Stahl, technical officer at KG 51, proposed repelling attacking fighters with flamethrowers installed in the rear of bombers and long-range reconnaissance aircraft. The attacking fighter was supposed to push into the emitted soot-oil cloud, so that his cabin windows suddenly became blind. In February 1940, corresponding tests with He 111 and Ju 88 took place at the Tarnewitz test site. The device was then used on a trial basis with KG 51 at the beginning of the Russian campaign, but does not seem to have caught on with the troops. The “Gero 11” A, Bund C flamethrowers were used as offensive weapons on the Fw 190 for low-level attacks.