 | Possible End of the ww2| Old Threads Discuss Possible End of the ww2 in the Old Stuff forums; I dont think the USA is due for its reign as the worlds most dominate country to end for a ... |
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04-02-2005, 11:26 PM
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#76 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: UK
Posts: 3,548
Country: | I dont think the USA is due for its reign as the worlds most dominate country to end for a while yet Adler. It will of coures one day as all empires do. I suspect it could be the Chinese to to be the next one how ever nothing is certain
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04-03-2005, 03:51 AM
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#77 | | Der Crewchief
Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Ansbach, Germany
Posts: 29,856
Country: | Quote: |
Originally Posted by trackend I dont think the USA is due for its reign as the worlds most dominate country to end for a while yet Adler. It will of coures one day as all empires do. I suspect it could be the Chinese to to be the next one how ever nothing is certain | Oh no, dont take me wrong. I dont expect it happen anytime soon. It is just with everythign that is going on, the US is spending more money than it can afford and the national debt is rising more and more to record highs. But then again when has it not been at a record high? I dont expect China to at all, atleast in the near future. I expect it at some point for the communist regieme there to fall just like it did in the Soviet Union and then it will take some time for a new government to get things going.
__________________ US Army Blackhawk Crewchief 2000-2006 Classic ww2aircraft.net quotes: fly boy said: "isn't that the first jet bomber? becasue i have flown one in a flight sim before and i know how it handles" "wait what ok who made the b-2 crash come on people that messed up its a b-2" "ah yes the mistel those things are so annoying is games and in real life" |
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04-05-2005, 03:02 PM
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#78 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Saco, MAINE!!!!
Posts: 894
Country: | Interesting thouht!
Question, what are your thoughts if the war had turned and Operation Barbarosa had worked?
I think that it would have been very different. All thoughs divisions would have been driven to the west. I think then that Operation Sealion would have also worked. 
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04-05-2005, 03:15 PM
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#79 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: UK
Posts: 3,548
Country: | I still doubt the success of Sealion MP. D-day required mastery of the air and the sea and if Rommel had been given a free hand and using his armour fought to hold the invading forces on the beaches as he had planned the success of the landings would have been in the balance but for Sealion the Germans would have had command of neither the air or the sea so my guess would be a disaster the same as Dieppe but on a much bigger scale.
__________________ "Only thoses who lose freedom know it's true worth" Unknown French woman interviewed June 1944 |
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04-06-2005, 03:56 AM
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#80 | | Master of Ewes
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 19,959
Country: | and just about every single person in the country that could fire a gun would be waiting for them on the beaches..........
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"Reminds me of the time I sank the Tirpitz" comments a Spitfire pilot, "One pass of course, old boy." |
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04-06-2005, 10:27 AM
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#81 | | Der Crewchief
Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Ansbach, Germany
Posts: 29,856
Country: | I too dont think it would work. The Germans would have required more Landing craft and good ones. Here are the Landing craft they did have and when they were made. The first type MFP would have been good eneogh for the job however it did not enter service fast eneogh. Marinefährprahm Quote:
The Naval Landing Crafts - called "Marinefährprahm" in German were the largest landing craft used by the Kriegsmarine. Although required for Operation Sealion (Invasion of England) in 1940, the first of this transport ships were delivered in 1941. The development of this ship went through several Types (A-D), whose size and armament grew from class to class.
They were mainly used for transport and supply duties and not for their initial invasion role and could transport 200 Soldiers or 140ts of equipment, including Tiger tanks.
Marinefährprahme were used in almost all Kriegsmarine operational areas, the British Channel, the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmari...mfp/index.html | Type A
Dimensions
Size (Max): 200 t
Length (Total): 47,04 m
Beam: 6,53 m
Draft: 1,45 m
Payload: 105 t
Crew: 17
Weapons
7,5 cm: 1
2 cm MG: 1 (3 in the Med. and Black Sea)
Engines
Shafts: 3
Engines: 3
Type: truck diesel
Performance
Total Performance: 390 shp
Speed: 10,5 kn
Range: 1075 miles at 7,5 kn
Type B
Dimensions
Size (Max): 220t
Length (Total): 47,04 m
Beam: 6,53 m
Draft: 1,45 m
Payload: 105 t
Crew: 17
Weapons
7,5 cm: 1
2 cm MG: 1 (3 in the Med. and Black Sea)
Engines
Shafts: 3
Engines: 3
Type: truck diesel
Performance
Total Performance: 390 shp
Speed: 10,5 kn
Range: 1075 miles at 7,5 kn
Type C
Dimensions
Size (Max): 220t
Length (Total): 47,04 m
Beam: 6,53 m
Draft: 1,45 m
Payload: 105 t
Crew: 17
Weapons
7,5 cm: 1
2 cm MG: 1 (3 in the Med. and Black Sea)
Engines
Shafts: 3
Engines: 3
Type: truck diesel
Performance
Total Performance: 390 shp
Speed: 10,5 kn
Range: 1075 miles at 7,5 kn
Type D
Dimensions
Size (Max): 239 t
Length (Total): 49,82 m
Beam: 6,59 m
Draft: 1,35 m
Payload: 140 t
Crew: 21
Weapons
8,8 cm: 1
2 cm MG: 2
8,6 cm RAG: 2
Engines
Shafts: 3
Engines: 3
Type: truck diesel
Performance
Total Performance: 371 shp
Speed: 10,3 kn
Range: 1066 miles at 7,3 kn Marine Nachschub Leichter Quote:
While the bigger Marinefährprahm was originally designed to transport heavy equipment like tanks over the British Channel, the smaller Naval Supply Lighter (Marine Nachschub Leichter - MNL) were constructed to the use in rivers, limiting their size.
Designed in 1943/44, their dimensions were to fit the rivers and channels in the southern part of France, since it was also planned to transfer them to the Mediterranean via those waterways and use those crafts there. But when they got operational, the Allied landings in Normandy and Italy prevented to do so and they operated at the German coastline and rivers http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmari...mnl/index.html | Dimensions
Size (Max): 216 t
Length (Total): 38 m
Beam: 5 m
Draft: 1,3 m
Payload: 90 t
Crew: 9-14
Weapons
3,7 cm: 1
2 cm MG: 4
Engines
Shafts: 2
Engines: 2
Type: truck diesel
Performance
Total Performance: 250 shp
Speed: 10 kn
Range: 560 miles at 10 kn Marine Artillerie Leichter Quote:
With a length of nearly 35 meters, the Marine Artillerie Leichter (MAL) were the smallest landing craft in Kriegsmarine services. Designed after the requirements of the German Army, those small vehicles should be used during Operation Barbarossa, the attack on the Soviet Union. Their projected operational area was the Caspian Sea where the MAL should be used to attack Soviet oil transports from Baku to Astrakhan. Therefore the MAL must have been able to be transported by land which was impossible with the bigger MNL or AFPs.
With the progress of the war, the Marine Nachschub Leichter operated in other areas like the Black Sea or the Mediterranean. http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmari...nal/index.html | Dimensions
Size (Max):
Length (Total): 34,60 m
Length (Waterline):
Beam: 8,60 m
Draft:
Crew:
Weapons
8,8 cm: 2
2 cm MG: 8
Engines
Shafts:
:
Type:
Performance
Total Performance:
Speed:
Range: Artilleriefährprahm Quote:
Based on the Marinefährprahm Type D, those Artillery Ferries were used for several different kind of operations. Although being first though as a provisional design, they took over the role of gunboats in various operational areas, including the British Channel, Mediterranean and the Black Sea.
Besides their use as escort vessels, they were also occasionally used for shore bombardments and mine laying, they proved to be very usable crafts.
The ferries had a light armor protection, 20 mm armor steel and up to 100 mm concrete armor at the superstructures and ammunition stores. http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmari...afp/index.html | Type A
Dimensions
Size (Max): 300 t
Length (Total): 47,04 m
Length (Waterline):
Beam: 6,55 m
Draft: 1,7 m
Crew: 48
Weapons
8,8 cm: 2
3,7 cm MG: 1
2 cm MG: 8
Engines
Shafts: 3
Engines: 3
Type: Truck diesel
Performance
Total Performance: 387 shp
Speed: 10,2 kn
Range: 412 miles at 8,7 kn
Type D
Dimensions
Size (Max): 255-381 t
Length (Total): 49,80m
Length (Waterline):
Beam: 6,61 m
Draft: 1,3-1,4 m
Crew: 57-65
Weapons
10,5 cm: 2 (or 8,8 cm)
2 cm MG: 8
15mm MG: 1
Engines
Shafts: 3
Engines: 3
Type: Truck diesel
Performance
Total Performance: 368 shp
Speed: 8 kn
Range: 1075 miles at 8 kn Siebel Fähre Quote:
During the preparation for Operation Seelöwe - the invasion of England - it soon got clear, that the Kriegsmarine needed a high number of landing crafts. Therefore all branches of the German Army made proposals for such a craft - the Luftwaffe proposal was is known as the Siebel-Fähre (Siebel Ferry) named after its inventor, Oberst Siebel.
The Siebel-Ferries were constructed from existing material, pioneer pontoon originally used ot build auxiliary pontoon bridges. Two of those pontoons were connected side-by-side, a propulsion unit with BMW aircraft engines was added in the back and a large platform mounted on top of the pontoons was used to carry the payload. Vehicles could enter or leave the craft over a ramp on the bow of the ferry.
There were multiple version of those crafts build, from transport crafts over artillery ferries to staff command ships or hospital ferries. The drawing shows one version of a transport ferry. http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmari...bel/index.html | Transport Hydrofoil VS 8 Quote:
Germany experimented with various hydrofoil designs since the late 1938, most of them being design studies for fast attack craft. One remarkable exception was the Fast Hydrofoil Transport VS8 and its sister ship, the VS9 .
Being able to transport one small or medium tank, (Type 38T or IV) which was stored on a special designed pontoon in the back of the ship, the VS8 was build as a prototype for experimenting with this kind of transport method. To load or unload the tank, the bay in the back of the ship was flooded and the pontoon, equipped with two 40 hp engines, could be removed or loaded on the ship. Experiments showed that loading the pontoon took less then two minutes, unloading less than one.
Besides its task as a fast transport, it was also discussed to use the ship as a fast mine layer, capable of laying 15-20 mines.
The VS8 was ordered in 1940 and commissioned on 01.03.1943. It got soon clear that the engines were not powerful enough to let the ship operate in moderate seas, it also was not able to archive its projected top speed. On September 1944 the ship beached after a total engine failure and broke into two pieces during rescue operations.
A second prototype, the VS9 , was ordered in 1941, but construction never started. http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmari...vs8/index.html | Dimensions
Size (Max):
Length (Total): 31,90 m
Length (Waterline):
Beam: 10,26 m
Draft: 2-4,25 m
Crew: 22
Weapons
15 mm MG: 4
Engines
Shafts: 2
Engines: 2
Type: Daimler Benz 20cyl MB 501 diesel
Performance
Total Performance: 3660 shp
Speed: 45 kn
Range: 200 miles at 45 kn
So as you can see only 2 landing craft existed for Operation Sealion and only one was avialable. They needed more and better designs.
__________________ US Army Blackhawk Crewchief 2000-2006 Classic ww2aircraft.net quotes: fly boy said: "isn't that the first jet bomber? becasue i have flown one in a flight sim before and i know how it handles" "wait what ok who made the b-2 crash come on people that messed up its a b-2" "ah yes the mistel those things are so annoying is games and in real life" |
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04-06-2005, 10:34 AM
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#82 | | Master of Ewes
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 19,959
Country: | wow they even had hydrofoils............
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"Reminds me of the time I sank the Tirpitz" comments a Spitfire pilot, "One pass of course, old boy." |
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04-07-2005, 03:50 PM
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#83 | | Der Crewchief
Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Ansbach, Germany
Posts: 29,856
Country: | But never reached full production or service.
__________________ US Army Blackhawk Crewchief 2000-2006 Classic ww2aircraft.net quotes: fly boy said: "isn't that the first jet bomber? becasue i have flown one in a flight sim before and i know how it handles" "wait what ok who made the b-2 crash come on people that messed up its a b-2" "ah yes the mistel those things are so annoying is games and in real life" |
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04-08-2005, 02:56 AM
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#84 | | Master of Ewes
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 19,959
Country: | oh
well the rest just look booring........
__________________ 
"Reminds me of the time I sank the Tirpitz" comments a Spitfire pilot, "One pass of course, old boy." |
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04-08-2005, 09:39 AM
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#85 | | Konfused with a 'K'
Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Turin, Italy
Posts: 20,412
Country: | 3rd from the bottom looks pretty good.
__________________ with my one last gaping breath id apologise for bleeding on your shirt... |
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04-08-2005, 12:11 PM
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#86 | | Master of Ewes
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 19,959
Country: | second from top looks better...........
__________________ 
"Reminds me of the time I sank the Tirpitz" comments a Spitfire pilot, "One pass of course, old boy." |
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04-08-2005, 02:01 PM
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#87 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Saco, MAINE!!!!
Posts: 894
Country: | Thanks all
After reading I would have to agree that Sealion would have been very difficult, but I still wonder if he would have stayed out of Russia and focused every thing on England?
As for Romel, he was a great planner and as said if he would have been turned loose as he planned, it would have been very bad for the lands. That and the poor weather that held up air cover, I think the landings might have gone bad. But Hitler never seemed to think for more then one battle at a time. 
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Seaplanes Are so nice |
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04-09-2005, 02:54 AM
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#88 | | Master of Ewes
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 19,959
Country: | well you all know of the reception the allies were expecting before the invasion of Japan?? well the british people had the same spirit as the japaneese, after nearly 1000 years of not being successfully invaded we don't like lightly to being invaded and like i said, everyone able to fire a gun would be on the cliffs waiting for the germans.........
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"Reminds me of the time I sank the Tirpitz" comments a Spitfire pilot, "One pass of course, old boy." |
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04-09-2005, 01:02 PM
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#89 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Saco, MAINE!!!!
Posts: 894
Country: | Yas Lanc, the Japanese would have been waiting with spears. I do not think the British would have been any less is fighting. but now think if the envsion would have happened how would it have efected the rest of the war? 
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Seaplanes Are so nice |
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04-09-2005, 01:05 PM
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#90 | | Master of Ewes
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 19,959
Country: | well there were plans in place for britian to carry on the war from Canada, so baisically we'd need lots of huge long range bombers, or operate out of russia or even north africa.........
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