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How the feck did we win WWII?

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    #11
    Here's 2 inventions/innovations that helped to win WWII

    Spam

    Penicillin

    (ok so they both existed prior to the war)
    Speaking gibberish on internet talkboards since last Michaelmas. Plus here on Twitter

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      #12
      Originally posted by minestrone View Post
      They did not properly understand how metal sheared until all the liberty ships the US built for us to carry food for the UK snapped in half.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberty_ship
      And they then realised (after British shipbuilders told them) that holes in bulkheads and decks (I.e. cargo hatches) should not have right-angle corners but should be rounded to stop stress fractures
      Confusion is a natural state of being

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        #13
        Originally posted by Diver View Post
        And they then realised (after British shipbuilders told them) that holes in bulkheads and decks (I.e. cargo hatches) should not have right-angle corners but should be rounded to stop stress fractures
        But when the British built the de Havilland Comet 10 years later with square windows they had a tendency to blow up due to the shear stress razors at the edges. Boeing designed round windows and because of that we lost out on an aircraft industry. A smart person learns from the mistakes other people make.

        I thought I was in a metallurgy exam there again.

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          #14
          Originally posted by minestrone View Post
          We did not win WW2, we were just on the winning side, the yanks and the soviets were more interested in Europe than us, we were never a concern, just a location to locate troops in.
          Yep it was a team effort to win and without the yanks and the reds the Germans would probably have won. As many Brits landed at Normandy as Yanks and if I remember correctly our boys were stopped from taking Berlin for political reasons.
          WE did stand alone against the nazis for a year defending the whole of Europe against this formidable foe while the late starters got their arses into gear.
          We can be right proud of our role in WW2 and let no one minimise what we did, particularly those who were liberated.



          When I say WE I obviously do not mean me as I was not around.

          With due deference to the Poles, ANZACS and others.
          I am not qualified to give the above advice!

          The original point and click interface by
          Smith and Wesson.

          Step back, have a think and adjust my own own attitude from time to time

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            #15
            Don't forget the Pigeon Guided Missile:

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Pigeon

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by HairyArsedBloke View Post
              My mum told me stories of having V1 flying parallel to her on a train into London. Many people told me when I was young that as a weapon of terror the V1 was far more effective that the V2. ..
              Not that many V2s were launched, only a couple of dozen I think, whereas V1s were sent over in their thousands. Also, the public weren't told about them for some time even after the launches started - It was put about that the mysterious huge explosions that each took out a whole street, were caused by gas leaks!

              Curious though, I'd have thought the ever-present risk of bolt out of the blue (landing at 4000 MPH, so you couldn't hear them coming until after they'd struck) was more scary than a noisy bomb you could at least hear for miles, even if its engines suddenly cutting out must have been fairly unnerving.
              Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

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                #17
                Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
                Curious though, I'd have thought the ever-present risk of bolt out of the blue (landing at 4000 MPH, so you couldn't hear them coming until after they'd struck) was more scary than a noisy bomb you could at least hear for miles, even if its engines suddenly cutting out must have been fairly unnerving.
                I remember them saying the opposite. A sudden death without warning was almost a blessing at the time.
                How did this happen? Who's to blame? Well certainly there are those more responsible than others, and they will be held accountable, but again truth be told, if you're looking for the guilty, you need only look into a mirror.

                Follow me on Twitter - LinkedIn Profile - The HAB blog - New Blog: Mad Cameron
                Xeno points: +5 - Asperger rating: 36 - Paranoid Schizophrenic rating: 44%

                "We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to high office" - Aesop

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
                  Not that many V2s were launched, only a couple of dozen I think, whereas V1s were sent over in their thousands.
                  3,172 (or 264.3 dozen) according to Wikipedia (so it must be true). I remember my grandmother telling me of a V2 coming down at the end of the street and how she had to grab the baby (my uncle) and hide under the table.

                  I guess the V2 came along too late. The first was fired against Paris, and most were fired against Antwerp, which we'd liberated by then. It might have been a different story if the Nazis had had the V2 a couple of years earlier and could have used all of the coastline to launch rocket attacks on Britain.

                  "We" really won the war with one of these:

                  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Boy
                  Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

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                    #19
                    At the grave risk of sounding ungrateful - the war in Europe wasn't won by the UK or the US, it was the Soviet Union who gave of their all.

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                      #20
                      Originally posted by Menelaus View Post
                      At the grave risk of sounding ungrateful - the war in Europe wasn't won by the UK or the US, it was the Soviet Union who gave of their all.
                      The latter half of the war was not beating the Germans, it was beating the ruskies to Berlin. We should have nuked Stalin and troops in 45.

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