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Originally posted by MarkLuitzen
I don;t like the name of the topic , I for ones prefered the use of
aircraft of the german Luftwaffe.
They had great planes and great concepts like the horten flying wing the base of the b2 bomber
Originally posted by waynos
It was the British who used fake tanks to fool the Germans and defeat them in Africa, there was a special unit created specifically for the deception task and for a time they even had Douglas Fairbanks Jnr (Hollywood star) attached to them. This was one of Britains great wartime efforts and is often overlooked.
Rommel did not stop there, however. He instructed his troops to build hundreds of fake tanks made out of wood and cardboard to fool the British air reconnaissance. Some were mounted on ordinary trucks, others were stationary. Rommel's real Panzer tanks furthered the deception by spreading their tracks repeatedly over the desert sand in order to complete the illusion of a much larger force.
We have a very daring and skillful opponent against us, and, may I say across the havoc of war, a great General.
Originally posted by ANOK
Originally posted by MarkLuitzen
I don;t like the name of the topic , I for ones prefered the use of
aircraft of the german Luftwaffe.
They had great planes and great concepts like the horten flying wing the base of the b2 bomber
I agree, most Luftwaffe pilots were not Nazi's.
.
Oh, really? The Germans weren't nearly as fooled as the Brits.
Originally posted by waynos
.
Oh, really? The Germans weren't nearly as fooled as the Brits.
Really? Tell me which general led his army to victory in that campaign? Was it Rommel? Er, no, it was Montgomery and the Desert Rats who were victorious.
And if you think that the Germans didn't fall to British deceptions try reading up on the subject. Not just in Africa, it was a major part of the whole war effort and a very successful one.
Originally posted by W4rl0rD
Me-262 will own all the others,no matter how common jet fighters are found today,the allies would not have suceeded in building today's jet fighters if not for captured Me-262s.
Originally posted by waynos
.
Oh, really? The Germans weren't nearly as fooled as the Brits.
Really? Tell me which general led his army to victory in that campaign? Was it Rommel? Er, no, it was Montgomery and the Desert Rats who were victorious.
And if you think that the Germans didn't fall to British deceptions try reading up on the subject. Not just in Africa, it was a major part of the whole war effort and a very successful one.
Originally posted by waynos
I don't deny Rommels brilliance but there appeared, rightly or wrongly, an inference that the Germans were brilliant but the British (or Monty) were bumbling fools who got lucky. This is quite wrong and if such inference wasn't intended then fair enough.
Originally posted by waynos
The British engines were centrifugal not radial and they were the best engines available to anyone during the war as, although the German axial engines weere technically more advanced, the lack of specialist metals meant they had to be produced out of inferior materials which is why they only had a 10 hour life. Also the British were producing axial engines too during the war, not just Germany. The Metrovick F.2 was an axial engine that powered a prototype Meteor and, via the F.9 led to the successful Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire engine that was also produced in the US and powered several front line US aircraft so you see it didn't all come from Germany.
After the war and after the British had seen the Junkers-Jumo, Rolls Royce built their famous engine which was used by the British and found its way to the Soviets where a copy of that engine powered the Mig 15.
Originally posted by waynos
Forschung, you are so so wrong on this, let me elaborate.
I am perfectly aware of the Coanda and Leduc types so we will leave that alone if you want.
There are two main types of piston engine, the in-line liquid cooled as used to power the Spitfire, Bf 109 etc and the air cooled radial where the cylinders are arranged around the crankshaft and exposed to the airflow, as used in the Fw-190 for example.
No when it comes to jets there is the axial, which you are perfectly aware of, and the centrifugal which you describe as a radial. Except that you are wrong about the number of exhausts as the various chambers merge into a common exhaust (see Nene pic below) look at the Gloster E28/39 for proof with its single small exhaust at the rear of the aircraft.
and here is the proof for you
Now, about your claims that Britain only produced 'radial' (centrifugal) engines during the war, I already told you about the Metrovick F.2 Beryl powered Meteor, whats up don't you believe me? Google it, then you will see that this engine was under development in Britain completely independantly of Whittles work before the war.
The Metrovick F2 Beryl axial engine as flown in a Gloster Meteor testbed
You are also completely wrong with this passage;
After the war and after the British had seen the Junkers-Jumo, Rolls Royce built their famous engine which was used by the British and found its way to the Soviets where a copy of that engine powered the Mig 15.
The Russians acquired the Junkers Jumo 004 all by themselves and used it on several early jet types completely independantly of the UK or Rolls Royce, the engine that became the RD-45 of the MiG 15 that was supplied by Rolls Royce was the R-R Nene which was a centrifugal type based upon the Whittle engine.
Apart from the Russian RD-45 the engine was also produced in the USA as the Pratt & Whitney J-48 as well as being built in Australia and China, in which latter country it stayed in production until 1979!
R-R Nene, pattern for the RD-45 and J-48
Trust me, I do know this subject.
[edit on 31-5-2005 by waynos]
from 'Gloster since 1917'
This Meteor was the only aircraft designed to fly with the Metrovick Beryl axial flow jet
engine, probably the most advanced aero engine in the world at the time