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Link Posted: 2/19/2021 2:58:28 PM EDT
[#1]
Link Posted: 2/19/2021 11:24:42 PM EDT
[#2]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By UtahShotgunner:


Probably not.  Bomb bay doors are open.
View Quote


It looks like to me - maybe they dropped, and are starting the turn around. That's some serious flak.
Link Posted: 2/19/2021 11:51:45 PM EDT
[Last Edit: birdbarian] [#3]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By 13starsinax:


It looks like to me - maybe they dropped, and are starting the turn around. That's some serious flak.
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Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By 13starsinax:
Originally Posted By UtahShotgunner:


Probably not.  Bomb bay doors are open.


It looks like to me - maybe they dropped, and are starting the turn around. That's some serious flak.


If you look at the bottom of that pic, it looks like they visited Kobe previously.

ETA so I'm not a freeloader again:

Tokyo:





Osaka:
Link Posted: 2/20/2021 10:30:35 AM EDT
[#4]
It's terrible to look at from our point of view so far removed, but they started it, and we finished it.
Link Posted: 2/20/2021 12:38:40 PM EDT
[#5]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By 13starsinax:


It looks like to me - maybe they dropped, and are starting the turn around. That's some serious flak.
View Quote View All Quotes
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Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By 13starsinax:
Originally Posted By UtahShotgunner:


Probably not.  Bomb bay doors are open.


It looks like to me - maybe they dropped, and are starting the turn around. That's some serious flak.



Back in the 70s I met someone that flew with my dad. He told me dad never said, "Bombs away!" He always said, "Get the hell out of here!"

Combat missions were divided into two parts, Uncle Sam's and theirs. The minute they toggled it became their half.
Link Posted: 2/20/2021 1:23:09 PM EDT
[#6]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By piccolo:



Back in the 70s I met someone that flew with my dad. He told me dad never said, "Bombs away!" He always said, "Get the hell out of here!"

Combat missions were divided into two parts, Uncle Sam's and theirs. The minute they toggled it became their half.
View Quote

Piccolo - your father was a bombadier?
Link Posted: 2/20/2021 3:03:12 PM EDT
[#7]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By armoredman:
It's terrible to look at from our point of view so far removed, but they started it, and we finished it.
View Quote



Tokyo (and really all of Japan) is a beautiful place.  I've been fortunate enough to visit many times.  Many of the pre-WWII historical structures were destroyed, including a large portion of the Imperial Palace Gardens.   One of the large wooden gates has a plaque that reads something like "This gate was reconstructed in 1947 to replace the original that was damaged by fire in 1945."
Link Posted: 2/20/2021 3:05:52 PM EDT
[Last Edit: piccolo] [#8]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By 4v50:

Piccolo - your father was a bombadier?
View Quote



Bombardier/navigator.

Like more than would admit, he was PISSED at being sent to war. In his words, "I joined the AAF because I didn't have the balls to be an infantryman and outright murder some poor bastard."

He flew, did his job and was most likely very resentful. The reason he wound up being in bombers is because during fighter school he got caught rat shack racing and buzzed a herd of cattle that stampeded and got he caught. Funny story on how he tried to escape getting nailed.

He got reassigned to bomber training. Sent to England he flew several missions and got sent home early to transition into B29s. I never found out how that came to be.

While raising me I know he didn't like government very much. Not just our government but governments in general. He considered them a necessary evil. It pissed him off that governments could arbitrarily send kids off to get killed.

He was a Warrant officer until his discharge and was actually offered a captaincy to teach at West Point! He refused and upon discharge his warrant was upgraded to 1LT.

He was NOT a happy camper when I joined the army.

His return to civilian life was a lot like the Dana Andrews character in 'The best years of our lives'.

ETA when I wasn't doing well in school he asked me if I wanted to learn how to navigate a B-29. For the entire school year ans well into the summer it was the kitchen table with a Big CHief tablet and a pencil a three or four hours five or sometimes six or seven nights a week.

My 'final exam' was a 21 hour long day at the kitchen table where we 'flew' a tabletop mission from Tinian to Osaka and back.

Now think about this. I had to solve the star shots and sun lines as nevigator. I would take the 3-5 stars he gave me and reduce them to get lines of position.

To give me the problems to solve he would have had to start at the position he wanted me at and work the entire thing out BACKWARDS to figure out where the star would be at what time to give me the problem to solve! When you think about it, it boggles the mind!
Link Posted: 2/21/2021 9:39:10 PM EDT
[#9]
XP-47H, Jug with a 2,500hp inline 16 cylinder instead of a radial, she's mean lookin':
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First flight at the Evansville, Indiana Republic plant, on color film:
Republic XP-47H and the Chrysler XI-2220 engine

Link Posted: 2/21/2021 9:54:27 PM EDT
[#10]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By piccolo:



Bombardier/navigator.

Like more than would admit, he was PISSED at being sent to war. In his words, "I joined the AAF because I didn't have the balls to be an infantryman and outright murder some poor bastard."

He flew, did his job and was most likely very resentful. The reason he wound up being in bombers is because during fighter school he got caught rat shack racing and buzzed a herd of cattle that stampeded and got he caught. Funny story on how he tried to escape getting nailed.

He got reassigned to bomber training. Sent to England he flew several missions and got sent home early to transition into B29s. I never found out how that came to be.

While raising me I know he didn't like government very much. Not just our government but governments in general. He considered them a necessary evil. It pissed him off that governments could arbitrarily send kids off to get killed.

He was a Warrant officer until his discharge and was actually offered a captaincy to teach at West Point! He refused and upon discharge his warrant was upgraded to 1LT.

He was NOT a happy camper when I joined the army.

His return to civilian life was a lot like the Dana Andrews character in 'The best years of our lives'.

ETA when I wasn't doing well in school he asked me if I wanted to learn how to navigate a B-29. For the entire school year ans well into the summer it was the kitchen table with a Big CHief tablet and a pencil a three or four hours five or sometimes six or seven nights a week.

My 'final exam' was a 21 hour long day at the kitchen table where we 'flew' a tabletop mission from Tinian to Osaka and back.

Now think about this. I had to solve the star shots and sun lines as nevigator. I would take the 3-5 stars he gave me and reduce them to get lines of position.

To give me the problems to solve he would have had to start at the position he wanted me at and work the entire thing out BACKWARDS to figure out where the star would be at what time to give me the problem to solve! When you think about it, it boggles the mind!

View Quote


I'm sure it wasn't fun at the time, but that's good experience.

I've used LORAN, Satnav, SINS, dead reckoning and early GPS to navigate out in the middle of freaking nowhere in the IO and Pacific, but we had computers to do all the math. I always thought being able to shoot stars with a sextant would be pretty kick ass. I need to add that to the list of stuff I need to learn.
Link Posted: 2/22/2021 6:45:11 PM EDT
[Last Edit: Mal_means_bad] [#11]
Yugoslavian partisan tank brigade, trained and equipped by the British, mostly M3 Stuarts.  Landed in Yugoslavia Sept 1944.  German operated tanks supporting their occupation forces were a mixed bag of captured vehicles from all over the place.
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Partisan jury rigged Pak 40
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Quad 20mm flak
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British AEC II
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French Somua S35 captured from the Germans and upgunned by partisans with a 6pdr from an AEC II
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Link Posted: 2/22/2021 8:43:26 PM EDT
[#12]
Link Posted: 2/23/2021 10:44:10 PM EDT
[#13]
A one-off Beach AT10 trainer with a V tail.
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Link Posted: 2/23/2021 10:52:48 PM EDT
[#14]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By birdbarian:


I'm sure it wasn't fun at the time, but that's good experience.

I've used LORAN, Satnav, SINS, dead reckoning and early GPS to navigate out in the middle of freaking nowhere in the IO and Pacific, but we had computers to do all the math. I always thought being able to shoot stars with a sextant would be pretty kick ass. I need to add that to the list of stuff I need to learn.
View Quote



That is a great story and goes to show how reliant we've become on technology.  While it makes our lives easier, I do wonder if it also means we're losing some critical skills that might come in handy in the future.

I am teaching my kids some basic dead reckon navigating with a compass and landmarks in the hope that, God forbid, their GPS and google maps ever fails they have at least enough to go on to find safety.
Link Posted: 2/24/2021 2:40:55 PM EDT
[#15]
Curtiss A-18 Shrike II ground attack aircraft
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Smoke generator under the wing?
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Only 13 built, deployed to the Canal Zone with other obsolete or oddball planes.  Last one scrapped 1943.
Link Posted: 2/24/2021 2:52:41 PM EDT
[#16]
The B-29 first flew in 1942 and four years later the first B-36.

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Link Posted: 2/25/2021 2:34:25 PM EDT
[#17]
Setting up point blank tank ambush, Holland.  Hopefully a fighter bomber took them out, or a spotter got off a warning.

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Link Posted: 2/25/2021 7:13:59 PM EDT
[#18]
Nakajima C6N Saiun (Iridescent Cloud); Allied reporting name: Myrt. Reconnaissance aircraft.

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Link Posted: 2/25/2021 9:48:30 PM EDT
[#19]
Can never get a photo to appear ?  How do you do that?   Thanks, Zorro
Link Posted: 2/26/2021 9:54:48 AM EDT
[#20]
British troops who have invaded Vichy Syria pass in the shadow of Al-Naurah al-Muhammadiyah, a water wheel built in 1361 to feed the aqueduct from the Orontes River.

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Link Posted: 2/26/2021 5:28:36 PM EDT
[Last Edit: johosjokers] [#21]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
View Quote

Wondering if the large craters are from the practice A bombs?
Freeloader edit. Painting represents said practice bomb.they called them pumpkin bombs.
Link Posted: 3/1/2021 11:08:28 PM EDT
[#22]
The Seattle Boeing plant was turning out 16 new B-17s a day in 1944.
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Link Posted: 3/2/2021 5:09:51 PM EDT
[#23]
Culver PQ-8 AAA battery target drone
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Link Posted: 3/2/2021 5:56:45 PM EDT
[#24]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By osprey21:
This thread had run a long time so I may have posted this previously.


The 6th Bomb Group, mission 47 - fire bombing of Kobe Japan, 4 June 1945.


https://i.pinimg.com/originals/5c/25/92/5c2592e2ea637021a15fd78edacce4c1.jpg

View Quote


What is so striking about that photo is Kobe, one of Japans most important & busy seaports, and there is nothing at those wharfs or jetties but a few fishing junks in the harbor.

Looks like most of the Marus were sent sleeping with the fishes...
Link Posted: 3/4/2021 5:11:06 PM EDT
[#25]
Link Posted: 3/4/2021 5:41:39 PM EDT
[#26]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History



Boar Hog grind!
Link Posted: 3/4/2021 6:18:56 PM EDT
[#27]
From Reddit:

US Paratrooper Harry Hudec (1922-2007) of the 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment 82nd Airborne Division. Ready for a combat jump, note he is wearing a captured German canvas MP40 machine pistol magazine pouch for use with his M1A1 Thompson magazines. c.1944

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Link Posted: 3/4/2021 7:13:23 PM EDT
[#28]
The best looking flying boat of WWII,too bad they only built one of them. The prewar styling but with the ERCO ball and blister turrets made a great looking plane.

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Link Posted: 3/4/2021 8:59:31 PM EDT
[#29]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By PFran42:
From Reddit:

US Paratrooper Harry Hudec (1922-2007) of the 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment 82nd Airborne Division. Ready for a combat jump, note he is wearing a captured German canvas MP40 machine pistol magazine pouch for use with his M1A1 Thompson magazines. c.1944

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/309598/dp9fxcnve2l61_jpg-1851479.JPG
View Quote



Today the Sergeant Major would go apeshit with him for needing a shave.
Link Posted: 3/5/2021 12:35:25 AM EDT
[#30]
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Destroyed Marder I on French Hotchkiss H35 chassis
Link Posted: 3/5/2021 12:23:32 PM EDT
[#31]
WWI era Schneider prime mover converted by the Germans into a tank destroyer with a 5cm gun in the bed, surrendered at the end of the siege of La Rochelle, May 8 1945.  These things were the size of a house and topped out at 5mph when brand new, empty, and before bolting improvised armor onto it.

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Link Posted: 3/5/2021 2:03:39 PM EDT
[#32]
Nazi narco tank.
Link Posted: 3/5/2021 2:10:41 PM EDT
[#33]


Amsterdam Street 1945
Link Posted: 3/5/2021 2:16:26 PM EDT
[#34]
Link Posted: 3/5/2021 4:29:37 PM EDT
[#35]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Great nose art.  Eagleston was one of our top aces.  Good reminder that it takes a village to kill a Focke Wulf.

Youtuber Military Aviation History is a German guy who does some original research in Luftwaffe documents, he pointed out in one video that during the scramble to redeploy fighters from behind the Calais area down to Normandy there were a lot of simultaneous fighter pilot and crew chief KIA's.  During an emergency relocation the crew chief would lay down in the cargo compartment in the fuselage behind the cockpit so that he could service the aircraft immediately after the plane arrived at the new base, while it might take the rest of the maintenance crews a week or more to arrive by truck.  Downside was that if the fighter got bounced along the way the pilot would have to dogfight with his crew chief bouncing around the rear fuselage and the Allied pilot might score a twofer.

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Link Posted: 3/5/2021 5:13:15 PM EDT
[#36]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By piccolo:



Today the Sergeant Major would go apeshit with him for needing a shave.
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By piccolo:
Originally Posted By PFran42:
From Reddit:

US Paratrooper Harry Hudec (1922-2007) of the 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment 82nd Airborne Division. Ready for a combat jump, note he is wearing a captured German canvas MP40 machine pistol magazine pouch for use with his M1A1 Thompson magazines. c.1944

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/309598/dp9fxcnve2l61_jpg-1851479.JPG



Today the Sergeant Major would go apeshit with him for needing a shave.

He doesn't look like he would care what anyone had to say.
Link Posted: 3/5/2021 5:43:04 PM EDT
[#37]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By Mal_means_bad:
Great nose art.  Eagleston was one of our top aces.  Good reminder that it takes a village to kill a Focke Wulf.

Youtuber Military Aviation History is a German guy who does some original research in Luftwaffe documents, he pointed out in one video that during the scramble to redeploy fighters from behind the Calais area down to Normandy there were a lot of simultaneous fighter pilot and crew chief KIA's.  During an emergency relocation the crew chief would lay down in the cargo compartment in the fuselage behind the cockpit so that he could service the aircraft immediately after the plane arrived at the new base, while it might take the rest of the maintenance crews a week or more to arrive by truck.  Downside was that if the fighter got bounced along the way the pilot would have to dogfight with his crew chief bouncing around the rear fuselage and the Allied pilot might score a twofer.

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/172926/upload_2018-1-17_10-41-50_png-1852706.JPG
https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/172926/Bf110_Dackle_build_319_jpg-1852707.JPG
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By Mal_means_bad:
Great nose art.  Eagleston was one of our top aces.  Good reminder that it takes a village to kill a Focke Wulf.

Youtuber Military Aviation History is a German guy who does some original research in Luftwaffe documents, he pointed out in one video that during the scramble to redeploy fighters from behind the Calais area down to Normandy there were a lot of simultaneous fighter pilot and crew chief KIA's.  During an emergency relocation the crew chief would lay down in the cargo compartment in the fuselage behind the cockpit so that he could service the aircraft immediately after the plane arrived at the new base, while it might take the rest of the maintenance crews a week or more to arrive by truck.  Downside was that if the fighter got bounced along the way the pilot would have to dogfight with his crew chief bouncing around the rear fuselage and the Allied pilot might score a twofer.

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/172926/upload_2018-1-17_10-41-50_png-1852706.JPG
https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/172926/Bf110_Dackle_build_319_jpg-1852707.JPG


The nose art was pretty spectacular -

Link Posted: 3/6/2021 2:04:17 PM EDT
[#38]
B-24 scrapyard somewhere in the Pacific. Interesting nose art on the aircraft in the foreground.

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Link Posted: 3/8/2021 9:37:43 AM EDT
[#39]
The US transferred 11 Bogue class escort carriers to the Royal Navy under Lend Lease, which redesignated them the Attacker class.  Attackers first did ASW patrols with Fairey Swordfish then replaced them with US built Avengers and Wildcats, fought in all theaters.  

HMS Tracker
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RN Avengers
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Avenger from Tracker going down, circumstances unknown:
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Operation Judgement, last British air raid of the European Theater on May 4th 1945.  Avenger strike on Kilbotn U-boat harbor from Attacker class Searcher and Ruler class Queen:
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Link Posted: 3/9/2021 5:32:18 AM EDT
[#40]


Tiger I vs Battleship Yamato turret

Link Posted: 3/9/2021 6:28:44 AM EDT
[#41]


1st Lt Harry Welsh returned to Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania and married Catherine Grogan on December 29, 1945. Kitty used Harry's reserved parachute as the fabric for her gown.
Link Posted: 3/9/2021 11:23:57 AM EDT
[#42]
"Scarecrow" appears amidst RAF daylight bomber formation:

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Lancaster pilot's log entry:
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RAF crews believed that the Germans occasionally used a monster flak shell they called a "scarecrow" that simulated a bomber exploding for psychological effect.  In fact post-war records uncovered that no such shell existed, they had probably observed bombers either exploding when hit by unseen fighters (often at night) or spontaneously exploding from faulty bomb fuses.  Neither likely explanation would make the crews any happier, so it seems RAF command chose not to discourage scarecrow speculation.
Link Posted: 3/9/2021 1:44:31 PM EDT
[Last Edit: 22caliberKIDD] [#43]
USS South Dakota Battleship damage after the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal...at least 26 hits taken.

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Detailed pictures and descriptions of each hit here...plus much more clear version of above photo...
https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/w/war-damage-reports/uss-south-dakota-bb57-war-damage-report-no57.html
Link Posted: 3/9/2021 5:36:35 PM EDT
[#44]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By 22caliberKIDD:
USS South Dakota Battleship damage after the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal...at least 26 hits taken.

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/321106/0323F6F3-3436-4318-AB22-9A21829B58CD_jpe-1858679.JPG

Detailed pictures and descriptions of each hit here...plus much more clear version of above photo...
https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/w/war-damage-reports/uss-south-dakota-bb57-war-damage-report-no57.html
View Quote

WOW! An amazing series of photographs, Thank You!
Link Posted: 3/10/2021 6:23:18 PM EDT
[Last Edit: Mal_means_bad] [#45]
Project Aphrodite BQ-7, worn out B-17 converted into a radio controlled bomb.  Pilots were required for takeoff so the cockpit was relocated to the roof of the aircraft and left open so they could parachute out more conveniently.  Failed project.  Several crews were killed by premature detonation, or by trouble bailing out, the mothership controlling the bomber was destroyed on one occasion by the blast, the bombers were easily shot down and usually missed the target.  One of the Kennedys was killed flying a B-24 version.

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Link Posted: 3/11/2021 11:06:26 AM EDT
[#46]
RAF Liberator 'V Victor' hit by two bombs when somebody got out of formation
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One struck an engine, the other hit the upper turret and passed through the fuselage.  Made it back home somehow, no serious injuries:
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Link Posted: 3/11/2021 12:46:43 PM EDT
[#47]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By Mal_means_bad:
Project Aphrodite BQ-7, worn out B-17 converted into a radio controlled bomb.  Pilots were required for takeoff so the cockpit was relocated to the roof of the aircraft and left open so they could parachute out more conveniently.  Failed project.  Several crews were killed by premature detonation, or by trouble bailing out, the mothership controlling the bomber was destroyed on one occasion by the blast, the bombers were easily shot down and usually missed the target.  One of the Kennedys was killed flying a B-24 version.

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/172926/HighFlight-Aphrodite3_jpg-1860162.JPG
https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/172926/1482244582_op_-aphrodite-9_jpg-1860163.JPG
https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/172926/1482244539_op_-aphrodite-1_jpg-1860164.JPG
View Quote



That was Joe Kennedy, USN.

Joe Sr cut a deal with the Navy that Joe was to take one of these infernal machines off and hit the silk once it gained altitude. There was to be a Navy Cross waiting for him when he hit the ground. Joe Sr wanted his oldest to be a war hero for political reasons. Joe Jr was being groomed to become POTUS.

Oops! Boom! Sucked to be him! So much for Plan A.

Enter Plan B.  Time to shift the grooming over to #2 son, Jack, who already was a legitimate war hero after he lost PT109.
Link Posted: 3/12/2021 3:57:43 PM EDT
[#48]
The Prudential building, tallest in Warsaw, hit by a 2 ton mortar shell during the Warsaw Uprising:
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Karl Gerat siege mortar:
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Polish resistance sappers defuse dud mortar shell:
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Link Posted: 3/15/2021 8:16:38 AM EDT
[Last Edit: Mal_means_bad] [#49]
One night during the invasion of Kwajalein the captain of the battleship Indiana radioed that he was turning left, but instead he turned right, into the path of the battleship Washington.  Washington attempted to evade but couldn't.  10 killed, both ships into drydock, Washington had to have her entire bow replaced.

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Temporary bow installed at Pearl Harbor to get Washington back to the US:
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Indiana:
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Link Posted: 3/15/2021 8:39:06 PM EDT
[#50]
That was a deadly oops
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