Huttosaurus
Scholar
Lovely work
Excellent models and photos - quite takes me back, the Lysander was one of the first models I built when I was a nipper!
Yuri
Thanks you both
Lovely work
Excellent models and photos - quite takes me back, the Lysander was one of the first models I built when I was a nipper!
Yuri
And it's worth noting that subject selection and quality have never been better.
I wouldn't live long enough (and I'm not old) to finish just the goodies I've seen in the last five years. 1/32 scale has taken right off, with all sorts of unusual subjects. 1/350 scale ships are booming. Even 1/35 armor, which finally features multiple Neubaufahrzeug tanks.
The days of the model section in mass retail seem to be at an end, but I've never seen such lush gardens of kits.
There was even a 1/48 Ju-87 "A" a little while ago! An "A"! I never thought I'd get to see a big-trousered styrene Stuka in any scale.
Were those the Buchons that they used in "The Battle of Britain"?
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The Allied plane designers went to those same extremes, but most never got beyond the paper stage, and remain unknown in their archives.
One blue-sky design that made it was the Lockheed L-133... a seriously state-of-the-art pusher, which lost something in translating into metal, but was sure a fanciful and unlike most of those late war German designs, almost practical.
And the motor for it would have been a quantum leap in jet motors.
.I suspect that towards the end, the Germans more or less skipped the paper step and threw planes together from available bits and pieces. You can certainly argue that one thing that won the air war for the Allies was not that they could build great planes (because the Germans could do that too), but that they could build enough of them.
Very pretty. I suspect it was genuinely ahead of its time, that is, the technology was not available to build the engine (it was barely adequate to build what jet engines they had; the reliability was appaling), and the canard configuration would have needed a control computer that could not yet be built.
Hans
Interesting. I thought pre-war governments were concerned about German military build ups, so I wonder how that came about? (Perhaps the then British governments were in reality as happy for their technology companies to sell to whoever, as the current one seems to be)
Were those the Buchons that they used in "The Battle of Britain"?
I suspect that towards the end, the Germans more or less skipped the paper step and threw planes together from available bits and pieces. You can certainly argue that one thing that won the air war for the Allies was not that they could build great planes (because the Germans could do that too), but that they could build enough of them.
Despite Allied bombing of factories, German production of aircraft was at it's highest in 1944. Not as high as the U.S., but still quite high.
It wasn't the lack of aircraft that plagued the Luftwaffe, but a lack of adequately trained pilots.
Despite Allied bombing of factories, German production of aircraft was at it's highest in 1944. Not as high as the U.S., but still quite high. It wasn't the lack of aircraft that plagued the Luftwaffe, but a lack of adequately trained pilots. The Japanese suffered from the same problem as the war went on. The shortage of pilots meant that replacements had to be rushed into combat and were much less likely to survive their first few missions. Plus, they couldn't afford to remove experienced pilots from the front lines in order to have them train new pilots, which is what many experienced U.S. pilots did after the end of their tour.
.Well, my point is that they could not produce all the 'genial' designs they made. The mainstay of the German fighter arm remained the ME109 almost to the end. Initially an excellent plane, but it was outdated by 1944.
The FW190 was made in considerable numbers as well, but it could not match the onslaught of P47, P51, late marks of Spitfire, and Tempests and Typhoons.*) ... And then the Germans were even mostly spared the Vought Crusaders.
Of course pilots were also a grave problem.
One might say that the Germans learned one basic lesson of war: Ultimately, the side with superior ressources wins.
Not to mention the P38 "gabelswantz teufel", hehe.
Hans
I was recently reading about Operation Aphrodite. <snip>
As I recall, they traded a handful of Kestrels for a Heinkel He 70 to test engines with.
And some clearly didn't learn their lesson with the Kestrel/109, since the UK happily supplied the USSR with Rolls Royce Nene turbojets after the war had ended. The reverse engineered Nene became the Klimov VK-1, powering the MiG-15 and Il-28.
Oh well, not the first time I've been wrong (today).There's a History Channel (ugh) video here that shows the camera and viewing device.
The P-38 Lightning was a cool looking plane.
I'm a little late to the party, but yeah, the Lightning has got to be my favorite WWII era plane. The Mustang and F4U are a close second.
There's a group of old-timers at a local airfield that own and operate a B-25 Marauder. It amazes me how loud that thing is when it takes off, but it's beautiful to watch.![]()
WNot to mention the P38 "gabelswantz teufel", hehe.
There's a group of old-timers at a local airfield that own and operate a B-25 Marauder.
[pedantic] B-25 Mitchell. B-26 Marauder. [/pedantic]