WWII's V1 Revisited?
Thread Starter
WWII's V1 Revisited?
Article on Flight Global.
Why the US Air Force might use ‘deception’ and UAVs hidden in shipping containers to fight China
Click the link for the full article.
Why the US Air Force might use ‘deception’ and UAVs hidden in shipping containers to fight China
The US Air Force is rethinking the way it plans for war in the Pacific Ocean. It is eyeing a new class of unmanned air vehicle that could be hidden inside shipping containers and spread across small islands in the western Pacific. Should war ever come, the UAVs could be rocket launched within a matter of hours in massive volleys from dozens or even thousands of secret sites.
Click the link for the full article.
ermmm - and how long will it take them to get to their destination???
Was talking on Skype with my grandad, and got onto what it was like during the war. He said that the sound of the V1's was terrifying and no one knew where they were going to come down.
But he said once he had launched the first 50 he got a nice letter from the Fuhrer and a set of commemorative Nazi wine glasses.
But he said once he had launched the first 50 he got a nice letter from the Fuhrer and a set of commemorative Nazi wine glasses.
Was talking on Skype with my grandad, and got onto what it was like during the war. He said that the sound of the V1's was terrifying and no one knew where they were going to come down.
But he said once he had launched the first 50 he got a nice letter from the Fuhrer and a set of commemorative Nazi wine glasses.
But he said once he had launched the first 50 he got a nice letter from the Fuhrer and a set of commemorative Nazi wine glasses.
Israel has already developed missile from shipping container concept. Do people think US would be the only people doing this ?
My concern for adopting this idea and spreading things around like wildfire is that it becomes like a minefield where everybody loses track of what was where.
My concern for adopting this idea and spreading things around like wildfire is that it becomes like a minefield where everybody loses track of what was where.
Israel has already developed missile from shipping container concept. Do people think US would be the only people doing this ?
My concern for adopting this idea and spreading things around like wildfire is that it becomes like a minefield where everybody loses track of what was where.
My concern for adopting this idea and spreading things around like wildfire is that it becomes like a minefield where everybody loses track of what was where.
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Often in Jersey, but mainly in the past.
Age: 79
Posts: 7,819
Received 142 Likes
on
65 Posts
I’ve always been a subscriber to the concept of multiple, dispersed, concealed sources of trouble to ‘The Opposition’, whoever they might be.
I fully accept that C&C of such systems presents some problems,, although modern systems should be capable if overcoming that.
Fixed target sites, whether Land/Sea and indeed Air, simply present a retaliatory first-strike option.
I fully accept that C&C of such systems presents some problems,, although modern systems should be capable if overcoming that.
Fixed target sites, whether Land/Sea and indeed Air, simply present a retaliatory first-strike option.
It's not as if missiles and drones are the only candidates.
You don't need an ICBM to deliver a nuclear device or nerve agent into an enemy's seaports. Hapag Lloyd will do that for you quite happily.
You don't need an ICBM to deliver a nuclear device or nerve agent into an enemy's seaports. Hapag Lloyd will do that for you quite happily.
He said that the sound of the V1's was terrifying and no one knew where they were going to come down.
We were at school at lunch time and heard this racket which sounded very much like a motor mower with no silencer at full throttle. We saw the long flame coming from the motor. Height about 2500 ft speed about 200 knots+.
In the ensuing days more came over the Tonbridge area – you could hear them coming a long way away. As 12 year old school boys I can’t recall anyone being scared but we were certainly fascinated by the sight of these machines
I saw one being closely followed by a Hawker Tempest as it passed over Tonbridge railway marshalling yards. The Tempest fired its a guns from very close range and the Doodlebug blew up in mid-air in a huge gout of flame. A highly impressive sight as the Tempest flew through the explosion and emerged unscathed the other side.
The scary ones were the V2 rockets. The first we knew of those was a massive explosion followed a few seconds later by a rushing air noise. Naturally we never saw one but we sure saw the crater they made. We school kids would look for souvenirs and I picked up a small piece of shrapnel from a crater and took the shrapnel home. It was highly magnetic. I migrated to Australia three years later.
Years later circa 1955 I returned to England on holiday. I dropped in on the kind couple that looked after me in the same house at Deakin Leas, Tonbridge during the war years while my father was overseas in the British Army. They gave me the piece of magnetised shrapnel which they had discovered in their garage where I had left it all those years ago.
I still have it in my shed in Melbourne along with Japanese and American bullets I found on the battlefields of Guadalcanal and Tarawa while flying as a pilot with Air Nauru in the 1980’s.
Apologies for thread drift.
I’ve always been a subscriber to the concept of multiple, dispersed, concealed sources of trouble to ‘The Opposition’, whoever they might be.
I fully accept that C&C of such systems presents some problems,, although modern systems should be capable if overcoming that.
Fixed target sites, whether Land/Sea and indeed Air, simply present a retaliatory first-strike option.
I fully accept that C&C of such systems presents some problems,, although modern systems should be capable if overcoming that.
Fixed target sites, whether Land/Sea and indeed Air, simply present a retaliatory first-strike option.
Maintenance will be an issue I guess................... but as long as you keep moving stuff around then it makes it hard for the opposition to be SURE they can hit all the launchers at once
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Often in Jersey, but mainly in the past.
Age: 79
Posts: 7,819
Received 142 Likes
on
65 Posts
Using Lyneham Lad's proposal, the challenge would be determining WHICH of hundreds of thousands of shipping containers contain the prizes. And as many tens of thousands are regularly on the back of trailers, you add mobility to th complications. May I have an MBE, please?
Thread Starter
Using Lyneham Lad's the USAF planners' proposal, the challenge would be determining WHICH of hundreds of thousands of shipping containers contain the prizes. And as many tens of thousands are regularly on the back of trailers, you add mobility to th complications. May I have an MBE, please?
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Often in Jersey, but mainly in the past.
Age: 79
Posts: 7,819
Received 142 Likes
on
65 Posts
As long as the container is the right way round firing out the face of a vertical stack might be quite spectacular - or maybe ask Christo to take a few................