Would have been deadly in the ground attack mode.
Not really. Virtually no protection, so lots of personnel in exposed position, limited range, low onboard ammunition capacity.
Would have been deadly in the ground attack mode.
....
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Not really. Virtually no protection, so lots of personnel in exposed position, limited range, low onboard ammunition capacity.
That's a neat picture showing the 105mm projectile going down range.
I don't remember the black smoke though !
So you dig the gun into a bunker or fortified position, a revetment.
That's a neat picture showing the 105mm projectile going down range.
I don't remember the black smoke though !
Bob's a smart lad.
[youtube]pzkoTulqA1U[/youtube]
Knew a guy who's dad worked in research at Suffield during the war. One of their jobs was to observe artillery projectiles in flight. Apparently those things pitch and jaw very considerably on their way to a target. After the war, 1964 , they piled up 500 tons of HE and let her blow.
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=suffield+non+nuclear+explosion&t=chromentp&atb=v200-5zk&ia=videos&iax=videos&iai=8BghIznDn5o
Grizz
Pitch and Yaw for the technically inclined.
Detecting Pitch and Yaw and In-flight Damping with Optical Chronographs
https://www.researchgate.net/public...d_In-flight_Damping_with_Optical_Chronographs
German version of the Hunley, built in 1850 and named Brandtaucher . The inventor and crew were luckier, they escaped with their lives. Wilhelm Bauer was honored by having the salvaged U 2540 named after him after it was similarly rescued from the Deep.
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U 2540
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Toured this one in Bremerhaven.
Grizz
For the past 40 years, Canadians across the land have listened to CBC Radio on Christmas eve to hear the same ghost story — a tradition that leaves them both haunted and fulfilled. The reading by Alan Maitland of Frederick Forsyth's classic short story The Shepherd will leave you with chills no matter how many times you listen. Click to read the story which includes a link to the recording:
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappen...ds-frederick-forsyth-s-the-shepherd-1.4458378
German version of the Hunley, built in 1850 and named Brandtaucher . The inventor and crew were luckier, they escaped with their lives. Wilhelm Bauer was honored by having the salvaged U 2540 named after him after it was similarly rescued from the Deep.
![]()
U 2540
![]()
Toured this one in Bremerhaven.
Grizz
The Brits sure liked the Polish contribution to the war effort but after WWII seemed to have considered themall to be an embarassing burden. Correct me if I am wrong. . .




























