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cinders, both the 190D9 and the TA152 ran inline engines.
i love how the designers used the exhaust to disrupt the airflow to mate the round cowl (radial) to a slab sided body. very clever.
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05-25-2016 04:34 AM
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Bob,
I have just had the same dilemna. A friend who is an accomplished REME fitter has collected for many years WW2 vehicles which he has always marvelled at the simplicity of their reliable construction. One such vehicle I have put up on the site is his Type 82 1943 Kublewagen in Afrika Corps markings as it was. (With no photos)
It comes with everything original that would have been in the vehicle and its trailer which in itself is like "Rocking horse ****".
It comes with the obvious marking of the swastika on nearly everything and the usual red flag that draped over the bonnet. To counter that when the British
captured German
vehicles they draped the RAF roundel over the bonnet, it has that too.
Everything on the vehicle including ALL the DEAC weapons are authentic, and I would class this as a 100% Museum piece because of it.
So yes it is an issue that some people find offensive, but it is part of history and "We should never forget" and by so doing show it as it was IMHO!
Last edited by Gil Boyd; 05-25-2016 at 05:20 AM.
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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Here in Germany
, it is definitely verboten to apply any symbol designating National Socialism on anything that is on public display. So therefore, a vintage aircraft that is privately owned could display the Iron Cross, but not a swastika on the tail. The only exception is for items displayed in a museum depicting their historical relevance. Germans generally might find the US practise of openly displaying Nazi symbols amusing, but slightly naive. And definitely not to be tolerated locally. Personally, I´m not complaining ...
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Same problem right now in the US with the Confederate flag. Add to that the problem that people don't know which flag is the correct flag and assume they all are and all are bad. They are also removing monuments. It is erasing history and it's being done by a very vocal minority.
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It's in vogue these days to be seen as politically correct, and to be aware of what others perceive as politically correct. Not that it does any good...yes, that long nose 190 is stellar...you don't see those too often. Very nice, and a huge $ collection.
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Yes agreed, but I even see our Union Flag flying, sometimes on Government buildings upside down and that makes my blood boil grrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.
Saw a programme last night on the rise of the KK in the south and their fight to protect the Confederate flag very interesting stuff on how ex pilots after WW2 were recruited into the FBI by J.Edgar Hoover to infiltrate them.
So is it that sensitive that it is banned at reenactments of the famouis battle sites there then??
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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Originally Posted by
Aragorn243
Same problem right now in the US with the Confederate flag. Add to that the problem that people don't know which flag is the correct flag and assume they all are and all are bad. They are also removing monuments. It is erasing history and it's being done by a very vocal minority.
Not just erasing history but rewriting it as well. For example the US Civil War is a great example of a war which they have tried to change why they fought. Current history classes teach it was fought over slavery, which didn't really become a issue until later in the war as there were Northern states with slavery as well (even the Emancipation Proclamation didn't free all the slaves only those in rebellion with the North, so basically the slaves in the South were freed, well those in Northern states that still had slavery were still slaves).
The main cause for the South to secede was the complete and total exclusion of the South from the political process. They did vote but they felt there votes were worthless when Lincoln was elected without any support from the South. This caused the South to give up on being part of the Union feeling they had no say, and the opinions the North and South had were so far apart which resulted in the civil war.
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(M1 Garand/M14/M1A Rifles)

Originally Posted by
villiers
Here in
Germany
, it is definitely verboten to apply any symbol designating National Socialism on anything that is on public display. So therefore, a vintage aircraft that is privately owned could display the Iron Cross, but not a swastika on the tail. The only exception is for items displayed in a museum depicting their historical relevance. Germans generally might find the US practise of openly displaying Nazi symbols amusing, but slightly naive. And definitely not to be tolerated locally. Personally, I´m not complaining ...
You would be interested to know that several of the German planes that have been at the museum were restored at a specialty flugzeugwerk in Germany. They had to wait until they arrived in the U.S. before the the Hakenkreuz could be applied. Another little irony of history was that the name of the flugzeugwerk was Meier Motors. Remember the quote from Hermann Göring?

BF-109G-4
Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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Bob,
Yes wasn't it something along the lines............" Don't fly over England
again as we are getting our arses kicked, by a better plane the SPITFIRE".
All joking aside...........didn't he tell Hitler he would win the war in the air if he had a squadron of Spitfires............that took him off Hitlers Christmas card list instantly.
Bit rough about the badging as I know the guys fly the 109's at Duxford Airshows all marked up!
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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(M1 Garand/M14/M1A Rifles)

Originally Posted by
Gil Boyd
Bob,
Yes wasn't it something along the lines............" Don't fly over
England
again as we are getting our arses kicked, by a better plane the SPITFIRE".
All joking aside...........didn't he tell Hitler he would win the war in the air if he had a squadron of Spitfires............that took him off Hitlers Christmas card list instantly.

Bit rough about the badging as I know the guys fly the 109's at Duxford Airshows all marked up!
That was what then-Major Adolph Galland said to Reichmaschall Göring during the Battle of Britain.

Göring had just come to France
and had spend a nice long while royally chewing out his two primary fighter commanders (Galland, Gruppenkommandeur of Jagdgeschwader 26, and Major Werner Mölders, Gruppenkommandeur of Jagdgeschwader 51) because he felt the fighter pilots were being cowardly by not flying close escort to the bombers. Some objected that they didn't have the fuel to do so but Göring wouldn't hear of it and demanded close escort. Then Göring had one of his famous mercurial changes of temper and said, 'Come now, I've chastised you enough. What can I get for you.' Mölders kept his lip buttoned but Galland, blurted out, "A squadron of Spitfires!" That toasted Göring pretty well. The truth was that uder the best conditions the BF-109e that they were flying had only about ten minutes combat time once it reached the fighting areas in England so the locally-based British interceptors could engage them until they ran dry or used enough fuel that they had to ditch in the Channel on the way back. Formation flying ate up far more fuel than having bombers and fighters fly over at their most economical speed and do a rendezvous. That, and Galland knew that fighters lost the initiative if they were tied to formation flying with the bombers.
Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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