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originally posted by: beyondknowledge2
a reply to: Potlatch
Without Hitler, why would WWII ever occure.
You seem to have a lack of understanding of the butterfly affect.
originally posted by: Potlatch
A few years ago, I was told that Adolf Hitler almost drowned in a river in Austria in 1894 until a Catholic priest saved his life by pulling him out of the river. Of course, it may be paradoxical that even though the UK invented the jet engine, Nazi Germany built and flew the world's first jet aircraft in 1939, and when Hitler was rescued from the river by the priest in 1894, no one in Austria-Hungary or Germany ever expected him to become an anti-Semite and anti-Slav and hence ultimately a monstrous tyrant. Therefore, I am inviting you to express your take on what jet aircraft development in World War II would have been like if Hitler had drowned in the river in Austria in 1894:
- 1. If the Nazis didn't come to power, would Great Britain have developed jet bombers to attack Italian military positions in North Africa?
- 2. If Hitler had drowned in a river in 1894, would the US have developed a 12-engine jet bomber to bomb Japan directly from bases in the western US?
- 3. If the Nazis didn't come to power, would Germany have churned out fewer jet aircraft designs than it did in World War II?
- 4. Would the USSR have built American and British jet aircraft under license in World War II so that those aircraft could be used to bomb Japanese positions in China?
originally posted by: Blackfinger
Whats this to do with aircraft?
originally posted by: alldaylong
a reply to: Potlatch
The British had the first running Jet Engine.
We gave the technology to The US as part of " Lend Lease "
American engineer Nathan C. Price began work on a jet engine as early as 1938.
Sir Frank Whittle's jet aircraft engine was patented in 1932, and Power Jets, Ltd. formed in 1936. The Whittle Unit bench test engine first ran on April 12, 1937.
The first native American jet engines to be designed were the Westinghouse J30 and Lockheed J37, the latter envisaged for the Lockheed L-133 jet fighter project of 1939.