If you want real control, get a HKMP5, then you wouldn't consider anything else.
"Thursday's no good. Got a thing. Potentially awkward. How's Tuesday for you?"I too went to look for pics. More interesting to discover was the fact that Germany also ran blockade runners. To Sweden. To get ball bearings. Wonder if they scheduled the pick ups on the nights the Brits weren't there?
Captured in Tunis May 1943 and now resides at Fort Benning after going back to Europe, then UK, then back to USA.A picture I picked up for my office showing Panzerkampfwagen VI Tiger Ausf. E #712. The picture appears to have been taken after it was captured and sent back to the US.
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Captured in Tunis May 1943 and now resides at Fort Benning after going back to Europe, then UK, then back to USA.
http://the.shadock.free.fr/Surviving_Tigers.pdf

Scroll down and you will see 712 in Tunis after its capture by the US Army. It also has a bit of a murky history when it traveled in Europe and the UK prior to coming back to the US.I was also sent this image showing the same Tiger at the same spot but from a different angle. War Loan Drive Parade in New York, 9 June 1944
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That's an amazing picture. What a trio of hard-eyed old bastards.![]()
Coldstream Guardsmen Joseph Nunn (Rgt. No. 3180), Joel Potter (Rgt. No. 3595), James Deal (Rgt. No. 2274), 1st Battalion, Coldstream Guards, 1856 All three men were awarded the Crimean War Medal with clasps for Alma, Inkerman, Balaklava and Sebastopol.




























