OT - WWII quiz

World in Flames is the computer version of Australian Design Group classic board game. World In Flames is a highly detailed game covering the both Europe and Pacific Theaters of Operations during World War II. If you want grand strategy this game is for you.

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marcuswatney
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by marcuswatney »

The tricolour on the tailplane is standard on all RAF aircraft. The roundels of the French airforce had the red-white-blue reversed. The roundels shown are definitely RAF style (or Dominion, of course), including the yellow which appears only on a fuselage.

I am going to deduce that this is an early-war aircraft of the Royal Canadian Airforce.
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Greyshaft
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Greyshaft »

Roundels and tail flash are certainly RAF but the RAF used a letter/number combination for all aircraft identification.
Froonp said "- Service with the RAF, no. ", but is he playing word games here? The aircraft may have been ordered and paid for by the RAF but served with an associated air force.

I'm thinking colonial air forces - Iraq etc
/Greyshaft
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Froonp
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Froonp »

ORIGINAL: marcuswatney
The tricolour on the tailplane is standard on all RAF aircraft. The roundels of the French airforce had the red-white-blue reversed. The roundels shown are definitely RAF style (or Dominion, of course), including the yellow which appears only on a fuselage.

I am going to deduce that this is an early-war aircraft of the Royal Canadian Airforce.

ORIGINAL: Greyshaft

Roundels and tail flash are certainly RAF but the RAF used a letter/number combination for all aircraft identification.
Froonp said "- Service with the RAF, no. ", but is he playing word games here? The aircraft may have been ordered and paid for by the RAF but served with an associated air force.

I'm thinking colonial air forces - Iraq etc
- Royal Air Force, definitely no, neither ordered nor paid nor operated by the RAF.
- Dominion, yes.
- Royal Canadian Air Force, no.
- Colonial air forces, not one issued from the RAF.
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warspite1
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: Froonp
ORIGINAL: marcuswatney
The tricolour on the tailplane is standard on all RAF aircraft. The roundels of the French airforce had the red-white-blue reversed. The roundels shown are definitely RAF style (or Dominion, of course), including the yellow which appears only on a fuselage.

I am going to deduce that this is an early-war aircraft of the Royal Canadian Airforce.

ORIGINAL: Greyshaft

Roundels and tail flash are certainly RAF but the RAF used a letter/number combination for all aircraft identification.
Froonp said "- Service with the RAF, no. ", but is he playing word games here? The aircraft may have been ordered and paid for by the RAF but served with an associated air force.

I'm thinking colonial air forces - Iraq etc
- Royal Air Force, definitely no, neither ordered nor paid nor operated by the RAF.
- Dominion, yes.
- Royal Canadian Air Force, no.
- Colonial air forces, not one issued from the RAF.
Warspite 1

I think you are going to need to give us some more clues...
Now Maitland, now's your time!

Duke of Wellington to 1st Guards Brigade - Waterloo 18 June 1815
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Froonp
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Froonp »

ORIGINAL: warspite1
ORIGINAL: Froonp
ORIGINAL: marcuswatney
The tricolour on the tailplane is standard on all RAF aircraft. The roundels of the French airforce had the red-white-blue reversed. The roundels shown are definitely RAF style (or Dominion, of course), including the yellow which appears only on a fuselage.

I am going to deduce that this is an early-war aircraft of the Royal Canadian Airforce.

ORIGINAL: Greyshaft

Roundels and tail flash are certainly RAF but the RAF used a letter/number combination for all aircraft identification.
Froonp said "- Service with the RAF, no. ", but is he playing word games here? The aircraft may have been ordered and paid for by the RAF but served with an associated air force.

I'm thinking colonial air forces - Iraq etc
- Royal Air Force, definitely no, neither ordered nor paid nor operated by the RAF.
- Dominion, yes.
- Royal Canadian Air Force, no.
- Colonial air forces, not one issued from the RAF.
Warspite 1

I think you are going to need to give us some more clues...
1 clue :
- German plane. Was in use by the Luftwaffe in 1939.
- Dominion, yes.
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warspite1
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: Froonp
ORIGINAL: warspite1
ORIGINAL: Froonp





- Royal Air Force, definitely no, neither ordered nor paid nor operated by the RAF.
- Dominion, yes.
- Royal Canadian Air Force, no.
- Colonial air forces, not one issued from the RAF.
Warspite 1

I think you are going to need to give us some more clues...
1 clue :
- German plane. Was in use by the Luftwaffe in 1939.
- Dominion, yes.
Warspite 1

Is it some kind of Heinkel He111 - They did not have glass noses during the Spanish civil war.
Now Maitland, now's your time!

Duke of Wellington to 1st Guards Brigade - Waterloo 18 June 1815
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Froonp
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Froonp »

ORIGINAL: Froonp

I though it would be time for a new Quiz :

What is this plane ? What model is it, which air force flew it, when and where.

Image
ORIGINAL: warspite1

ORIGINAL: Froonp
1 clue :
- German plane. Was in use by the Luftwaffe in 1939.
- Dominion, yes.
Warspite 1

Is it some kind of Heinkel He111 - They did not have glass noses during the Spanish civil war.
No kind of He111. Not even a Heinkel.

Early He111 look like that (He111B-2) :

Image
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He111B2S..1K88.jpg
He111B2S..1K88.jpg (21.95 KiB) Viewed 238 times
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Froonp
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Froonp »

WiF FE have a counter for that design, for the Germans.
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warspite1
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: Froonp

ORIGINAL: Froonp

I though it would be time for a new Quiz :

What is this plane ? What model is it, which air force flew it, when and where.

Image
ORIGINAL: warspite1

ORIGINAL: Froonp
1 clue :
- German plane. Was in use by the Luftwaffe in 1939.
- Dominion, yes.
Warspite 1

Is it some kind of Heinkel He111 - They did not have glass noses during the Spanish civil war.
No kind of He111. Not even a Heinkel.

Early He111 look like that (He111B-2) :

Image
Warspite1

Man...thats UUUUUUUUUGLY! - much better with the full glass front!
Now Maitland, now's your time!

Duke of Wellington to 1st Guards Brigade - Waterloo 18 June 1815
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TemKarl
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by TemKarl »

ORIGINAL: Froonp

I though it would be time for a new Quiz :

What is this plane ? What model is it, which air force flew it, when and where.

Image

Ju-86, possibly South Africa?
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Greyshaft
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Greyshaft »

Ju-86 did serve in South African Air forceand the tail fins match up but the nose is wrong...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bunde ... _Ju_86.jpg
/Greyshaft
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TemKarl
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by TemKarl »

The civilian version did not have the same nose : http://www.geocities.com/cwlam2000hk/ju86.jpg
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Greyshaft
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Greyshaft »

ORIGINAL: cwie
The civilian version did not have the same nose : http://www.geocities.com/cwlam2000hk/ju86.jpg

Then I think you are the winner
/Greyshaft
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Froonp
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Froonp »

ORIGINAL: Greyshaft

Ju-86 did serve in South African Air forceand the tail fins match up but the nose is wrong...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bunde ... _Ju_86.jpg
That's it. South African Ju86Z-7 IIRC (I'm in vacation in Crete right now)
I took it from http://wp.scn.ru/
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Greyshaft
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Greyshaft »

Then try this one ...

Image
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/Greyshaft
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lomyrin
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by lomyrin »

Sort of looks like the Italian made Swedish air force B18
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Greyshaft
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Greyshaft »

it does look like that, doesn't it...

SAAB 18B
Unit: Flygflottilj F14, Kungl Svenska Flygvapnet
Serial: 14/H
Sweden, 1945.
/Greyshaft
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Froonp
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Froonp »

No more WWII quiz ?
Extraneous
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by Extraneous »

Prior to the war it was a common notion that one nations battleships would be the world’s largest war ships.

Their standard displacement was to have been 59,150 tons (this would be larger than the Bismarck’s 50,000 tons) with a length of 260m, breadth of 38m and draft of 9.27m. With a nominal main engines capacity of 201,000 horsepower, the battleship could develop a speed of 28 knots. Her main battery was to have included ten 406mm (approximately 16 inch) weapons in three turrets. The main armor belt thickness reached 402mm. The battleships construction process took a very slow pace. Technical output plans were broken mainly due to constant delays in materials and equipment delivery.

Name the nation.


Image

Experimental 41cm (16.1417 inch) Howitzer
Introduced Year : -
Caliber : 410 mm
Barrel Length : 13.445 m
EL Angle of Fire : -5 to +75 Degrees
AZ Angle of Fire : 360 Degrees
Shell Weight : 1,000 Kg
Muzzle Velocity : 580 m/sec
Weight : 318 ton
Range : 20,000 m
Production Qty : 1

Name the nation.
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University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)
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warspite1
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RE: OT - WWII quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: Extraneous

Prior to the war it was a common notion that one nations battleships would be the world’s largest war ships.

Their standard displacement was to have been 59,150 tons (this would be larger than the Bismarck’s 50,000 tons) with a length of 260m, breadth of 38m and draft of 9.27m. With a nominal main engines capacity of 201,000 horsepower, the battleship could develop a speed of 28 knots. Her main battery was to have included ten 406mm (approximately 16 inch) weapons in three turrets. The main armor belt thickness reached 402mm. The battleships construction process took a very slow pace. Technical output plans were broken mainly due to constant delays in materials and equipment delivery.

Name the nation.
Warspite 1

This is I think to what you are referring, although they would not have been as big as the Yamatos.

[4478 Sovetskii Soyuz - by Robert Jenkins]
.B Engine(s) output: 231,000 hp
.B Top Speed: 28 knots
.B Main armament: 9 x 16-inch (406mm), 12 x 5.9-inch (150mm) guns
.B Displacement (full load): 65,150 tons
.B Thickest armour: 16.75-inch (belt)
.P This is a World In Flames "what if" counter that gives the Soviet player
the chance to build up to three battleships.
.P The Soviet Navy`s attempts at a modern replacement for the three remaining
Gangut-class battleships began in January 1938 when four battleships were
authorised to be built. These ships were of the Sovyetskiy Soyuz-class.
.P The design was influenced by the Italian shipbuilders Ansaldo, and indeed
would have used the same underwater protection system as employed by the Littorio
-class battleships.
.P These ships exceeded the limitations of the 1936 London Naval Agreement and as
a result, would have been powerful, well armed and very well armoured ships that
had a sensible anti-aircraft battery. In the absence of the H-class, they would
have put the German Navy at a disadvantage in the Baltic.
.P Only three of the four proposed ships were actually laid down and none were
even at the launch stage at the time of the German invasion in June 1941 as work
on these vessels had been halted at the end of the previous year.
.P The destinations of each ship is unknown but at least one would have served
with each of the Baltic and Black Sea Fleets.
Now Maitland, now's your time!

Duke of Wellington to 1st Guards Brigade - Waterloo 18 June 1815
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