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4th May 13:13
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Posts: 1
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Ran across it while looking for something else:
http://tanks45.tripod.com/Jets45/His...1/Enforcer.htm Interesting... Rob |
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5
17th May 03:23
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[snip]
Not perchance the Ryan Fireball? IBM __________________________________________________ _____________________________ Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - Accounts Starting At $6.95 - http://www.uncensored-news.com <><><><><><><> The Worlds Uncensored News Source <><><><><><><><> |
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8
19th August 02:24
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Posts: 1
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In article <82fceefe.0310290902.7c109e7a@posting.google.com>,
p-stickney@worldnet.att.net (Peter Stickney) writes: Bet then again, you did identify in another post as a Fireball. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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10
21st August 08:25
External User
Posts: 1
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In article <9b35beb1.0310300832.3477e188@posting.google.com>,
teuton263@aol.com (robert arndt) writes: One Destroyer, and several Merchantmen. You can only sink what's out there, after all. It wasn't the Bat's fault that U.S. Navy Submarines, Land and Carrier based airplanes, and the B-29 mining campaign in the Inland Sea sank so many before they got there. Or, in teh words on Ensign George Righards, U.S.N,R. of Portsmouth, NH, who'd been keeping a Box Score in his 1942 _Jane's_Fighting_Ships_, "There's no use marking them all, they're all sunk." Yes, the Fritz-X and HS 293 had some notable successes on their inital use, but the guidance system was primitive at best, and was easily jammed. After the end of 1943, they were no longer effective weapons. The Germans were _not_, repeat _not_ able to field an effective autmatic guidance system for _anything_, let alone their ASMs. If they'd advanced so much, why were they trying to use the Fritz-X guidance system in the Wasserfall SAM? If using a marginal guidance system, and one known to be compromised at that, is Teutonic Ingenuity, then bring it on. AS a side note, it should be pointed out that the Allies wouldn't field sensor or guidance system unless they were sure that they would be able to handle any countermeasures. This included the SCR-720/AI.10 Airborne Radars, the APQ-13 bombing radar, the SCR-584 AAA Fire COntrol Radars, Oboe, and GEE. (The fact is, the Royal Canadian Air Force did more to hinder the Allied Radar effort than the Germans ever did - An RCAF Spitfire shot down the Beaufighter carrying the prototype AI.IX radar, and the designer adn chief engineer with it, stalling the project for months. These things happen in war.) What was Bat compared to the German effort? Part of a complrehensive series of weapons that would have achieved practical results in the field. This included the Lark, Bumblebee and Little Joe SAMS, when led to the Terrier/Talos/Tartar/Typhon family of Naval SAMS, the Gorgon AAM, the various Jet Bombs (One of which was, indeed, a restring of the Fiesler Fi 103, albeit with a more reliable launcher and a guidance system evolved from GEE/Loran, so that it could, at least, hit the proper Postal Code. Of course, it didn't hurt that each airpframe was enough like the others that they'd all fly the same, too) You have, by the way, completely misunderstood the magnitude of American production. It wasn't merely that we could produce great amounts of equipment, it was that we could produce great amounts of equipment to precise standards. The Germans, and to a lesser extent, the British, could do one, or the other. An excellent, but little known example is Naval Chronometers. Every U.S. oceangoing ship, be it a Naval Combatant or Auxiliarry, or from the Merchant Marine, carried a chronometer. (Mass produced by Waltham, Hamilton, and, I think, Gruen) This meant that all ships were capable of independant, precise navigation. Now, that may not sound like much, but the presicion needed to produce a clock capabel of keeping to the accuracy required over an extended period of time, in environmental conditions ranging from the Artic to the Sahara to New Guinea, was beyond anybody else. I won't bring up the fact that by 1944, the Germans had fallen bahind in jet engine development and weren't going to ever be able to catch up. The early German introduction of Wunderwaffen wasn't an example of better German technology, it was a symptom of greater German desparation. But then again, the idea that a last-second "hammer blow" is somehow going to pull their fat from the fire had been a German conceit throughout the first half of the 20th Century. Witness the foolish waste of the Kaiserschlact in 1918, or the various Last Stands of the Luftwaffe in late 1944. Perhaps it come sfrom listening to Wagner too much. And yes, I'll be around in 2005, and 2015, and 2025, and as long as I can be after. And I'll see exactly as many Nazi Flying Discs as I have in the last 45 years. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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