I was watching the History Channel and it was talking about the Japanese trying to build a Death Ray with Microwaves. I would like too know more about these kind of weird weapons by the Axis powers.:book:
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I was watching the History Channel and it was talking about the Japanese trying to build a Death Ray with Microwaves. I would like too know more about these kind of weird weapons by the Axis powers.:book:
I watched the begining of the same show where they were showing some weird German weapons. The Germans were trying to build some sort of aircraft that would fly into space, then drop a bomb on a country in the United States, which would be full of radioactive particles, ultimatly killing thousands. The plane would then fly from outerspace into the atmosphere into Germany.
:laugh4: :inquisitive:
Sanger Bomber it was to be called. They had lots of weird stuff. I think they even had a scheme to make tornados to take out planes......
One of the more sane, sort of, ideas wasto equip a Komet with lightsensitive cells on its wings and mortars at the base of the top of the wing. The Komet was to fly under a bomber. The plane's shadow would be detected by the cells, which would trigger the mortars to fire.
Everyone loves luft46
I just loved the sonic weapon the Germans produced - it was the size of a train and in the end after months of preparation and using massive resources it finally was able to kill someone - provided it was standing about 100 meters before it - no wonder they lost the war :laugh4:
And then there was that one absolutely humongous railway gun they actually built and even used (to shell Sevastopol a bit, I seem to recall). "Siegfried" or something. Made the infamous WW1 Pariskanone look sane and sensible. Certainly a credit to the abilities of German engineers, but in practice a massive waste of resources and effort.
Mind you, the Germans were also able to field-test crude ATGMs at the very end of the war so there was actually some wheat amongst all the chaff too.
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Originally Posted by Csar
The Brits tried that one to.
The leaders of state asked Sir Robert Watson-Watt if it was possible to build a microwave type of death ray.
When this seemed impossible Watson said something like ”This is impossible, but how do you feel about radar?”.:idea2:
The Germans invented a few amazing things.
They developed a SAM called the butterfly (I think they also had a rival version by another geroup of scientists)
They developed "Smart bombs" guided by remote control (Which sank a transport ship IIRC)
They also had air-air missiles (crude but would work well against bombers)
And that's just a few of the things they developed
The SAM was called 'Wat'erfall
'Wasserfall'
http://www.luft46.com/missile/wasserfl.html
What about those iceburg aircraft carries the brits thought about?
https://img528.imageshack.us/img528/6938/mrh1849gg.jpg
Lovely wouldn't it be?
Horten's Ho XVIIIb Amerika Bomber That particular image was made by Marek Rys.
It looks morbid. I mean, it reminds you of the struggle of the Germans....
Morbid.:skull:
One of the things I found scary about Sänger's proposed antipodal bomber was the weapon it was meant to carry. A 1000-5000 kg high explosive bomb wrapped with a covering of highly radioactive silica. It would explode in the atmosphere and then disperse the radioactive dust over a wide area. This bomb wasn't designed to destroy installations. It was designed to kill everyone within miles of the target, slowly and painfully. The first "dirty" bomb. Very scary stuff. England should be very glad that this stuff didn't make it out of the design stage before the war ended.
Another futuristic German system which almost made it to the battlefield was the Vampyr infrared system. Amazing stuff. It was a 20 years ahead of its time night vision system which could have been mounted on infantry weapons and tank sights and bomber sights.
More then a transport ship. Fritz X missiles alone destroyed one Italian Navy flagship as it was going to surrender, and seriously damaged another. They were also a huge menace to shipping around Malta. Only the Operation Husky stopped them.Quote:
Originally Posted by ShadesPanther
The Japanese did create a death ray that could fry rabbits and maybe humans the Japanese didnt record it but they said that they believe they probably did. But for the death ray too work you had to be a couple of meters away from it.:hanged:Quote:
Originally Posted by Upxl
Actually from what I heard the German ASM's were made obsolete by more extensive AA emplacements on ships. They were just too slow and easy to shoot down from what I read at the new Smithsonian hangar in DC. The newer ones that never reached production were a different story though I think...
That's Die Reich for you: the Red Army is already trying the handle on the front door, and they keep developing sci-fi weapons...
I sometimes wonder if that tendency to stubbornly stick to such peculiar distractions was in fact a way of escaping the increasingly bleak reality. And I was just reminded of that one weird-ass Japanese propaganda drawing, where an unbelievable ludicrous giant robot (it seemed to have at least one cannon projecting from the bottom of its right foot...) is going Godzilla on some city and the caption reads "The Science Warrior attacks New York".
Talk about denial.
Well, I've also read the... well, whatever the German naval HQ was called was busily making arrangements over the publication of a book on the history of the German navy - when Red Army was already almost on the front lawn.
People apparently get a bit funny under stress.
About the Red Army, the Soviets tried to find a way to control the weather in the Cold War, to slow down any allied advance by bogging their armour down with rain and snow.
I think that's called "ecological warfare" or something. Both sides actually put quite a bit of research into it, if only because it'd have made a pretty interesting sabotage weapon. I know the US also spent a lot on energy on psychic research (clairvoyants to locate Soviet subs and so on) and at least at one point on African witch doctors (although that may have had more to do with their social importance in the context of yet another ugly third-world war by proxy), and the Soviets had no shortage of similar kooky projects.
But hey, they were kind of deadlocked and scared to death of each other. Grasping at straws in such a situation is only natural.
The Soviets actually not only tried but claimed that they had in fact managed to perfect a number of psykokinesis warriors. Of course they never got further than bending spoons. Makes one wonder a bit.
The Soviets and the Americans also put alot of research into a Nuclear powered Plane.
Seems very strange now but to them Nuclear power was the next gen clean fuel source.
Saw a program on that...Quote:
Originally Posted by ShadesPanther
The Americans actually knew that it was not very healthy and tried to put up a lead devider, but that sort of ruined the idea, especially when tried tried to use the closed system approach (that doesn't pollute).
The Soviets on the other hand didn't care about either and actually made a nuclear plane fly once.
In the end the only practical solution was a pilotless selfpropelled nuclear bomb, sort of like a cruise missile. That was sort of cool as the reactor would at the same time be the warhead and the open system would also be polluting the approaches to the target. Nasty weapon... and happy it was never realized. But still sort of cool.
I even remember seeing that the Americans looked into developing a nuclear Anti tank missle - now that is a sledgehammer to crack a nut!!
And then there was the "Davy Crockett" nuke mortar. Must've been fun getting assigned to one of those...
I've incidentally read the Soviets were also quite willing to trade expediency for speed of deployement with their early nuke subs, with the funny side effect they had to set up special hospitals for the steady stream of irradiated sailors. But then, didn't the Americans also run "clinical tests" on fallout radiation effects by walking an infantry unit into a test-site Ground Zero right after the shockwave had passed ?
Oh yeah, and apparently major West German bridges were built with curious hollows in their bases. These were meant for nuclear mines, to give advancing WP tank colums a taste of a whole new degree of Scorched Earth...
Fun stuff. The more I read about it the creepier it gets.
Heard about that one... Got canned quite fast, didn't it? But interesting weapon nonetheless.Quote:
Originally Posted by Watchman
Don't know about the Americans, but I certainly know that the Soviets did it. They sent about an armoured divsion on maneuvers inside the nasty area just after a testblast (as a sort of extra bonus for the scientists I guess). They wanted to prove to themselves (and later the public) that the armed forces were not at risk from nuclear bombs... well the public would still be at risk, wouldn't they?:dizzy2:Quote:
But then, didn't the Americans also run "clinical tests" on fallout radiation effects by walking an infantry unit into a test-site Ground Zero right after the shockwave had passed ?
One word... GAH!Quote:
Oh yeah, and apparently major West German bridges were built with curious hollows in their bases. These were meant for nuclear mines, to give advancing WP tank colums a taste of a whole new degree of Scorched Earth...
Fun stuff. The more I read about it the creepier it gets.
NO! /big smileQuote:
Heard about that one... Got canned quite fast, didn't it? But interesting weapon nonetheless.
The system was deployed with U.S. Army from 1961 to 1971, and over 2,100 were produced.
https://img173.imageshack.us/img173/...montage6kg.jpg
Looks good doesn't it?
That should pretty much create the breach in the enemy lines shouldn't it...
Well, it isn't all that different from the various nuclear artillery shells. It isn't as if this is a portable weapon, which would have made it nasty.
Would have been cool with a Starship Troopers bazooka.:laugh4:
I believe its main purpose was to smash armored spearheads, not breach lines. And I believe it was actually most mobile, capable of being mounted on a special jeep.
Not that big of a warhead though, 'only' .18 KT. Too small I think to make a large enough hole in their lines. I think. Anyone here familiar with the damage caused by a nuclear blast, and how it increases/decrease with distance and yield?Quote:
The155 millimeter version, which became the standard issue, had a maximum range of 2.49 miles and could be fired from either a ground tripod mount or from a specially designed jeep mount.
180 tons isn't all that much, but the crew of the weapon would very much need to lie down not be unlucky and get hit by flying debris.
Would be a perfect weapon against an infantry division on the move.
[EDIT]Heh... just considered the fact that I just made a division a tactical unit by simply applying this weapon.
I read up about this a while ago and here are a few facts I remember. It is a recoilless rifle, so it could be fired from a jeep iirc. The radius of the harmful radiation is larger than its range, so the crew would have to not only hull down (in a trench or something and fire remote controlled I guess, this is from a pic I saw of one firing), but also deal with the radiation. That's all I remember, but I think there is a good wiki article on it if you want more.
Its purpose was solely to stop any massive Russian armored advance in Europe, much the same as our tactical nuke artillery batteries. Although the nuke mortar was eliminated; we still had manned nuke artillery units up until the 1980's, even. A buddy of mine from high school was an Army captain and took command of a nuke battery in Germany in the early 1980's. He used to joke about hoping that intel was good enough to catch any Russian move quick enough for them to deploy and fire before they got too close and the blast radius was bigger than than the target range.
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Originally Posted by Aenlic
A factual correction if you don't mind the weapons were in the arsenal and being trained on through the 1980's, and well into 1990. Sometime in 1990-91 timeframe was when they were removed from the active inventory. I am sure they are slowly being destroyed somewhere.
Now my favorite weapon actually comes from the British, (If I remember correctly that is) it was a rifle designed to shoot around corners without exposing the rifleman to enemy fire. A weird looking weapon.