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All About Guns

The Very Rare 1917 DWM Artillery Luger of WWI

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All About Guns

A Bersa THUNDER, COMES W/ FACTORY BOX & KEY, CHAMBERED IN .380 ACP

Bersa THUNDER, COMES W/ FACTORY BOX & KEY, CHAMBERED IN .380 ACP - Picture 2
Bersa THUNDER, COMES W/ FACTORY BOX & KEY, CHAMBERED IN .380 ACP - Picture 3
Bersa THUNDER, COMES W/ FACTORY BOX & KEY, CHAMBERED IN .380 ACP - Picture 4
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Soldiering

The Different British Army Uniforms of the American Revolution (1775)

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All About Guns

Remington Model 10 Demonstration

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All About Guns Tips about Gunsmithing

French Military Rifle Restoration (1874)

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All About Guns

Minute of Mae: Greek Mannlicher-Schönauer 1903/14

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Fieldcraft If I was in Charge Interesting stuff Leadership of the highest kind Soldiering Some Red Hot Gospel there! War

Defense of Duffer’s Drift – A great primer for how to set up a defensive platoon size defence

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War

How were German tanks different from U.S. tanks during WWII?

US tanks were considerably cheaper compared to German tanks!! To understand this, we would need to understand the manufacturing process.

The US entered World War II as an industrial giant with many developed automotive factories and skillful workers. The US also had the most money and resources, that’s why it could mass-produced huge number of tanks using fully established assembly lines – the same way they had been producing cars for years.

Let’s take a look at some US tank factories:

Massive assembly lines, huge cranes overhead to move tanks along ….

… this room is simply huge, tanks lining up as far back as the eyes can see.

Isn’t this how everybody produced tanks? Err … No. The Germans didn’t produce tank this way. Let’s look at a German tank factory:

No great assembly line. And notice the ladder on the side of the Tiger tank? The ladder’s there because the tank would stay in the exact same spot for a really long time, workers would have to climb up and down the tank again and again …

See those the little white numbers? German workers had to scribble all over the tank to remind themselves of the manufacturing process: what had been done already, what still needed to be done, how big this hole was, what the distance between the holes …. You would never see things like theses in a automotive style mass-manufacturing factory.

Again, much work had to be done by hand:

While the Shermans were being mass-produced using automotive assembly lines, the Tiger tanks were *literally* hand-made. No wonder they were so darn expensive and there were so few of them!

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Allies War You have to be kidding, right!?!

Winston Churchill – Nearly Killed by the Germans in 1945

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N.S.F.W.

Today is my Birthday, so here is a gift to my Grand Readers! Enjoy as it is NSFW