Picture of the day

Good day Gunnutz :) New day new picture :)

WWII13_zps3ee8da4a.jpg


Cheers
Joe
 
That is a German V1 rocket propelled bomb. No worries as long as you could hear the engine running. When it stopped it was a glider and the engine thrust was designed to keep it flying level. When the fuel ran out it immediately nosed over in a straight down dive.
 
That is a German V1 rocket propelled bomb. No worries as long as you could hear the engine running. When it stopped it was a glider and the engine thrust was designed to keep it flying level. When the fuel ran out it immediately nosed over in a straight down dive.

THey used rocket assist launch to get them in the air...after that, as previously mentioned crude jet engines...
 
That's a lot of anti-tank rifles!

I believe they used to call them "Farewell Motherland!"

From the building in the background this might have been taken at a training facility. Probably late 41 or early 42, before the officer's got their shoulder boards back. There's even one guy in that peaked cap that looks like a Pickelhaube fifth back in the 2nd row from the left.
 
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Man, that poor, patient elephant.

Here's another use for the Argus pulsejet:

tornado.gif


Take two floats for a JU52, build a structure between 'em, install a very simple cabin, pack it with explosives, and then power the whole thing with a very loud and unsubtle engine, and you have the Tornado man-guided Sprengboot!

Schatton_05.jpg


Never used operationally. The poor slob driving was expected to point it at an enemy ship, then jump off and await rescue, which seems unlikely in the midst of an enemy fleet you've just attacked.
 
I belive that it was origionally called a Ramjet.

No, a Ramjet and a Pulse jet are two separate engine types. The Pulsejet has shutters on the front end that keeps the flame and thrust from going forward (back firing) out of the air intake. The Ramjet has no shutters and uses forward speed to keep the flame going out the back end. Crude description but basically that,s the difference.
 
My Mrs' stepdad's uncle (if you follow) was a mature Bavarian in early 1945. The local Polizei showed up at the house and told him "Ivan ist kommt. Pack your stuff and come with us. You're in the army, so pack light. If you don't want to do your sacred duty to defend the German Fatherland, we'll hang you. Choose now."

He went.

When the war was over, he walked home several hundred miles, caught some sort of infection/ailment/disease he was too exhausted to fight, and died, one more pointless casualty of the second world war.

My father's step-father was a 'Gebirgsjager' and also a Bavarian. He survived the war but had to walk home to southern Germany from Greece. They almost didn't recognize him when he showed up at home one evening. Super skinny, fithly ragged clothes. He became a police officer in Augsburg post war but died in the late '50's. Still much better than some of his mates fared, though.

:canadaFlag:
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NAA.
 
I've got to think that that nose gunner/bombadier station would be both fantastic (what a great view!) and incredibly awful (when being shot at). The sense of vulnerability would be profound.

Wasn't much better on other aircraft of the time:

B17:
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B25:
IMG_0126.jpg


The Lanc:
lanc5.jpg


No matter how you cut it, I guess aircrew was both a glamourous gig and the absolutely worst thing you'd ever do in your life, assuming you got to have one.
 
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