Post cool photo's of WW2 Machines/Engineering
Discussion
Simpo Two said:
Negative Creep said:
Callan.T89 said:
Another couple of Stuka Pics - my favourite plane ever, some real interesting and futuristic design ideas went into this plane and was the basis for the American A10 tank buster.
Erm are you sure about that? The Americans had plenty of dive bombers and ground attack aircraft of their ownTEKNOPUG said:
True but it was never designed to operate without complete air superiority. As an Air to Ground attack aircraft it was superb. Hans-Ulrich Rudel didn't think that they were overrated, in Stukas he flew some 2,530 combat missions (a world record), during which he destroyed almost 2,000 ground targets (among them 519 tanks, 70 assault craft/landing boats, 150 self-propelled guns, 4 armored trains, and 800 other vehicles; as well as 9 planes (2 Il-2's and 7 fighters). He also sank a battleship, two cruisers and a destroyer. He was never shot down by another pilot, only by anti-aircraft artillery.
Read the Article about Rudel on Wikipedia or "Stuka Ace" itself, unbelievable reading, the Russians were so pissed at him they put a bounty on his head (dead or alive). He was also the most decorated soldier of WW2 and the most decorated German solider ever I believe. And he only flew Stukas
Edited by Callan.T89 on Wednesday 31st December 15:00
I can't believe nobody has posted a pic' of these yet:

The Panzer VI Panther Tank, widely regarded as the best (although not most important) tank of WW2 and the basis for post war MBT's
May have been a copy of the T34 in respects but an absolutely devastating weapon far superior to all of it's contemporary's.



Also spawned the Jagdpanther



What a profile - function driving form.
Also if anyone is interested check out a website called "Lone Sentry" which has loads of decomissioned WW2 intelligence documents that you can read.

The Panzer VI Panther Tank, widely regarded as the best (although not most important) tank of WW2 and the basis for post war MBT's
May have been a copy of the T34 in respects but an absolutely devastating weapon far superior to all of it's contemporary's.



Also spawned the Jagdpanther



What a profile - function driving form.
Also if anyone is interested check out a website called "Lone Sentry" which has loads of decomissioned WW2 intelligence documents that you can read.
jollygreen said:
coanda said:
geek-mode/
Not got any pics of an mp-44 then?
Thats where the AK-47 started - as did all modern assault rifles!
/geek-mode
Actually, wasn't it called the STG then renamed the MP44?Not got any pics of an mp-44 then?


/geek-mode
I seem to recall reading that Mr K used a similar design to the trigger mechanism from an M1 too in his first prototype.
Steamer said:
Callan.T89 said:
Where is this one pictured Callan? I was almost tempted to say somewhere in north england... but I'm guessing it would be sporting ALOT more graffiti if it was on our side of the channel!!This is the Russian one, vandalised and still sporting wartime damage & ex-range target.

PS. Webshots isn't working, you have to paste that link above into a new window to view it.
Edited by FourWheelDrift on Wednesday 31st December 16:10
Following on from the sentiments on the pic of the Sten -

The 'Grease Gun'

- Composition B...kept armies going 'Boom' into the 90's

German 'S' Mine - aka the Bouncing Betty
and on the not-killing side


Just the scale of organising the feeding programme for a whole nation blows the mind.
and whilst the Chinese may have 'dibs' on this from 2 millenia previously

it was these devils that made it into a viable weapon of war.


The 'Grease Gun'
- Composition B...kept armies going 'Boom' into the 90's
German 'S' Mine - aka the Bouncing Betty
and on the not-killing side


Just the scale of organising the feeding programme for a whole nation blows the mind.
and whilst the Chinese may have 'dibs' on this from 2 millenia previously

it was these devils that made it into a viable weapon of war.

FourWheelDrift said:
Fezant Pluckah said:
The Japanese battleships Yamato & Musashi, largest battleships ever built and the only ones to ever have 18 inch guns.
Again we were first, the Battlecruiser HMS Furious was built with a single 18inch gun. It was fired, perhaps just the once and was renowned to cause more damage to the ship than to the target due to it's lightweight armoured construction. Furious was soon converted into an Aircraft carrier.[quote=Bushmaster
[/quote]
"Well that was the Bren Gun". Actually its an L4 LMG, which was a conversion of the WW2 .303 Brens to 7.62mm.
It was a 1920s design and was still in service into the 1990s. My unit took them to the first Gulf War and the following Kurdish relief operation. They were dated 1945 and were replaced by LSWs in 1992. Not a welcome issue, let me tell you.

[/quote]
"Well that was the Bren Gun". Actually its an L4 LMG, which was a conversion of the WW2 .303 Brens to 7.62mm.

Fezant Pluckah said:
FourWheelDrift said:
Fezant Pluckah said:
The Japanese battleships Yamato & Musashi, largest battleships ever built and the only ones to ever have 18 inch guns.
Again we were first, the Battlecruiser HMS Furious was built with a single 18inch gun. It was fired, perhaps just the once and was renowned to cause more damage to the ship than to the target due to it's lightweight armoured construction. Furious was soon converted into an Aircraft carrier.Super-heavy artillery - one of my pet subjects! 
The ammunition pictured is not for this gun but for the gun below.
Overall, these super-heavy guns were incredibly impressive feats of science and engineering, but a complete waste of valuable men and materials. But Uncle Adolf did always love a great big white elephant, didn't he?

TheEnd said:
This is the Paris gun from WW1. Made from a 38cm(15 inch) naval gun fitted with a 21cm (8.26 inch) liner. The shells were sequentially numbered and each was slightly larger than the next to compensate for the massive barrel wear. When the 21 cm barrel was shot out it was replaced by a 24 cm one, again with sequentially numbered and sized shells. This gun shelled Paris from a range of 70-80 miles. It was moved by rail, but fired from a static platform. Despite a massive hunt for it the French never found it and it is believed that the Germans destroyed it near the end of the war.TheEnd said:
This gun is a WW2 K5E 21 cm railway gun - the spiritual successor of the Paris gun. These could be fired from their rail mounting and first fired accross the channel on the UK in August 1940. Shells landed as far inland as Maidstone and Chatham.The ammunition pictured is not for this gun but for the gun below.
TheEnd said:
hot metal said:
Big Gustav I think,used during the seige of Sebastopol.
80cm railway gun, referred to as officially as Gustav but the German gunners preferred their guns to have female names, so they called it Dora. This has led some to believe that there were two guns built, but most accept that there was only one. There have been larger calibre guns, but none larger overerall. It needed four sets of railway tracks to fire from, which had to be built on site. It took six weeks to bring into action. The gun had a crew of 1320 men. It was used at the sieges of Leningrad and Sevastopol. Some reports say it was even used in the suppression of the Warsaw uprising. At one point the Germans planned to use it against the UK, but this was decided against as it could not be hidden in tunnels and cuttings like the other railway guns and would have been an easy - and very high priority - target for allied air attacks. Overall, these super-heavy guns were incredibly impressive feats of science and engineering, but a complete waste of valuable men and materials. But Uncle Adolf did always love a great big white elephant, didn't he?
BruceV8 said:
Bushmaster said:
"Well that was the Bren Gun". Actually its an L4 LMG, which was a conversion of the WW2 .303 Brens to 7.62mm. 
Interestingly, the Bren was based on a weapon of 7.92mm cal in the first place - the ZB.26, made in Czechoslovakia, then modified extensively into the .303 cal Bren, then back into 7.92mm...
The L4, pictured, was closer to the 7.92mm Brens (simply because they were designed to fire rimless cartridges) then it was to the .303, though the shorter 7.62mm round meant that some of the internals had to be stretched.
I can match your level of


Fruitcake said:
BruceV8 said:
Bushmaster said:
"Well that was the Bren Gun". Actually its an L4 LMG, which was a conversion of the WW2 .303 Brens to 7.62mm. 
Interestingly, the Bren was based on a weapon of 7.92mm cal in the first place - the ZB.26, made in Czechoslovakia, then modified extensively into the .303 cal Bren, then back into 7.92mm...
The L4, pictured, was closer to the 7.92mm Brens (simply because they were designed to fire rimless cartridges) then it was to the .303, though the shorter 7.62mm round meant that some of the internals had to be stretched.
I can match your level of




Fezant Pluckah said:
FourWheelDrift said:
Fezant Pluckah said:
The Japanese battleships Yamato & Musashi, largest battleships ever built and the only ones to ever have 18 inch guns.
Again we were first, the Battlecruiser HMS Furious was built with a single 18inch gun. It was fired, perhaps just the once and was renowned to cause more damage to the ship than to the target due to it's lightweight armoured construction. Furious was soon converted into an Aircraft carrier.The Japanese 18inch guns of the Yamato weren't very good really, they were fired maybe 6-7 times in practice gunnery during the entire war and very seldomly during any battle mainly because of the damage firing did to the guns/bores themselves.
The Yamto very rarely ventured out and most fire from the big guns late in the war when it did was of "beehive" AA shells. These are loaded up with thousands of small projectiles turning the big guns into giant shotguns to shoot at aircraft at long range. These were also damaging to the barrels as they were held together with copper bands which damaged the rifling of the barrels. To demonstrate the fragility of the guns Yamato's big guns (firing beehive rounds) only fired 27 times at Leyte Gulf compared to the Nagato's 84 rounds. IIRC they couldn't be re-lined and there were not replacements either.
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