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Beer

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Posts posted by Beer

  1. Some reports claim that the Turkish observation post near Hish is already surrounded by SAA after an advance which is not yet marked on your map. For sure Anna news made a post with a selfie from the M5 south of Maarat al Numan. 

     

    Slightly mode up-to-date map from miladvisor but still not covering all the latest advance. 

    EPS-EYkWsAIH40R?format=jpg&name=medium

  2. 11 hours ago, Jeeps_Guns_Tanks said:

    Old-Navy-PicsII100-Idependence-east-coas

    And old Vigilante about to get a cat shot. I read somewhere these planes were all G limited and really old by this point. Wish I could remember the book. 

     

    Sorry for the question but wasn't the Vigilante actually a pretty modern aircraft by 1969? I always thought it was a very hi-tech plane for its time with FBW controls and a lot of fancy electronic stuff onboard. 

  3. It looks like SAA 25th Division (TF) cut the M5 highway north of Maarat al Numan. The city is about to fall soon. 

     

    This is the recent situation according to the militarymaps.info.

     

    Some small advances are reported also from Southern Aleppo front. On the other hand an SVBID hit the SAA posotions in the western Aleppo. 

  4. There is some gossip about Czech interest in K2 as well (nothing official at all at the moment). It would make a lot of sense if that was a common deal with the Poles. That could add the potential numbers. 

     

    The background of that is that Leopard II and most of the other tanks are considered way too heavy. Nothing was ever prepared for such heavy tank in our country (including bridges) and having such heavy tanks would bring a lot of additional investments. 

  5. 15 hours ago, AssaultPlazma said:

    I thought the Russian Military hated the T-80 because of its gas guzzling turbines? Didn't some high level official say something along the lines of "we'll never make/use turbine powered tanks ever again!" after the whole Grozney Fiasco (not that, that was the tanks fault....) 

     

    The turbines serve better in the arctic hence why the modernized T-80 are being supplied to the arctic units. 

  6. I am sure there are many very interesting stories to share about this topic. Let's start with couple of articles about the weird and sometimes downright crazy history of Czechoslovak assistance which helped Israel to survive its early days. It's true that Czechoslovakia asked a lot of money for bypassing the UN embargo but it doesn't change the fact that it helped in the critical time - before the change of course was ordered from Kremlin in 1949. It's also worth mentioning that the arms-smuggling to Israel brought up to 1/3 of all foreign currency income of Czechoslovakia at that time! It's all in Czech but well understandable with the google translate. 

     

    Here in short the story of the secret Czechoslovak operation DI - the military asistance to Israel from the website of the Czech Institute of the military history. The article contains rare historical photos from the covert military training for army specialists (pilots, tankers, mechanics and even an infantry brigade made of volunteers from the former Czechoslovak Army Corps in USSR). 

    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=cs&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.vhu.cz%2Fprubeh-a-podrobnosti-cs-vojenske-pomoci-izraeli-na-konci-40-let%2F

     

    If you really like the topic, you can learn many more details from these six chapters of this superlong article (sure worth studying for anyone interested in the topic).

    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.valka.cz%2F14222-Ceskoslovensko-a-jeho-vojenska-pomoc-statu-Izrael-v-prvnim-obdobi-jeho-samostatne-existence-I%3Futm_source%3Dvalka_cz%26utm_medium%3Darticle%26utm_campaign%3Dserial

    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.valka.cz%2F14223-Ceskoslovensko-a-jeho-vojenska-pomoc-statu-Izrael-v-prvnim-obdobi-jeho-samostatne-existence-II%3Futm_source%3Dvalka_cz%26utm_medium%3Darticle%26utm_campaign%3Dserial

    https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=&sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.valka.cz%2F14230-Ceskoslovensko-a-jeho-vojenska-pomoc-statu-Izrael-v-prvnim-obdobi-jeho-samostatne-existence-III

    https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=&sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.valka.cz%2F14236-Ceskoslovensko-a-jeho-vojenska-pomoc-statu-Izrael-v-prvnim-obdobi-jeho-samostatne-existence-IV%3Futm_source%3Dvalka_cz%26utm_medium%3Darticle%26utm_campaign%3Dserial

    https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=&sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.valka.cz%2F14242-Ceskoslovensko-a-jeho-vojenska-pomoc-statu-Izrael-v-prvnim-obdobi-jeho-samostatne-existence-V%3Futm_source%3Dvalka_cz%26utm_medium%3Darticle%26utm_campaign%3Dserial

    https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=&sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.valka.cz%2F14246-Ceskoslovensko-a-jeho-vojenska-pomoc-statu-Izrael-v-prvnim-obdobi-jeho-samostatne-existence-VI%3Futm_source%3Dvalka_cz%26utm_medium%3Darticle%26utm_campaign%3Dserial

     

    After that we have the totally crazy story of the Cairo bombing raid actually performed from the communist Czechoslovakia in 1948. Why don't we have yet any movie about three B-17s smuggled from USA, crewed by American-Jewish airmen, armed with former German machineguns and bombs and operating from an airfield located in then communist Czechoslovakia? If that doesn't deserve to be filmed than what does? 

    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.idnes.cz%2Fzpravy%2Fdomaci%2Fnalet-zatec-kahira-b-17-izrael.A130712_105045_domaci_jw

     

    Most of you likely know that the first combat aircraft of the Israeli airforce were Czechoslovak Avia S-199 fighters. This stillborn stop-gap modification of the leftover Bf-109G airframe was rather useless in fact (Czechoslovakia had loads of Bf-109 airframes but no spare DB-605 engines whose reliability was absurdly low due to bad late-war steel, so the engines were replaced with Jumo-211 bomber units - completely unsuitable but available) but nevertheless it helped to stop the Egyptian attack on Tel Aviv and brought a very important psychological advantage on the Israeli side. More about these planes here. 

    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.idnes.cz%2Ftechnet%2Fvojenstvi%2Fizrael-ceskoslovensko-vyroci-izraelske-letectvo.A180526_235424_vojenstvi_erp

    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=cs&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.idnes.cz%2Ftechnet%2Fvojenstvi%2Fceskoslovenske-letectvo-stihaci-letadlo-avia-s-199.A200116_174150_vojenstvi_erp 

     

    To add to the absurdity of that time... the man behind the support for the Israel was Czechoslovak FM Vladimír Clementis who was executed just few years later as a result of an intra-communist power struggle.  

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  7. I disagree.  The first missile detonated few seconds after the booster engine stopped after 18 seconds of flight. The second one detonated after 10 seconds of flight. The perception of different altitude is given by the fact that the plane was going towards the Tor position, i.e. the trajectory of the second missile logically had to be more steep to reach similar altitude. 

  8. Czech MOD signed a contract for two Vera NG passive tracking systems. 

    https://www.idnes.cz/zpravy/nato/vera-ng-sledovaci-system-radar-obrana-armada-nato-era-pardubice.A200114_190357_zpr_nato_inc

     

    About Vera NG

    https://www.era.aero/en/military-security/vera-ng

     

    Maybe this isn't the right thread to post it because the system can technically track whatever what emits something, not only aircraft. 

  9. 26 minutes ago, Sovngard said:

     

    I've also heard this rumor.

     

    But I'm still very sceptical about this story, knowing that the FV4211 Aluminium Chieftain showed no sign of structural weakness after having covered almost 20 000 km over a period of six months.

     

    Maybe the issue with the aluminium hull wear could be with the fact that aluminium alloys unlike steel don't have a fatique limit (a cyclic load which can be repeated infinitely without causing any cracks - this is a property of steel or titanium but not of aluminium), i.e. even a very small cyclic load can cause structural cracks in the long period of time.

     

    You can't say that when one design worked the other must work too. One design could have had some certain areas with concentration of forces where the cracks would appear much earlier than in the other. Those aren't easy to find and solve without having access to modern computation methods.

  10. 11 minutes ago, alanch90 said:

    I just wonder, i know next to nothing about air defense, at least on the paper the latest version of Pantsir is much better than the latest Tor (range of detection and interception of targets, for example). But if that´s indeed the case, what makes Tor preferable for SHORAD in various units of the Russian Army?

     

    Tor can follow mechanized formations and cover them on the move through various terrain. Pantsir can not. 

     

    Tor is used by the mobile army units while Pantsir is used by the airforce, mainly to protect long-range SAM sites. 

  11. Few photos from last weekend taken by my phone. It was all taken around the Orlík dam, which is the biggest in Czechia (by volume, the lake is rather narrow but 64 km long). Currently the water level is kept lowered by some ten meters or so. The castle has the same name Orlík. The road bridge called Žďákovský was finished in 1967 and in that time it had the longest arc of all the bridges of this type in the world. Now not anymore of course. The bridge became infamous in 90' when a gang of murders was throwing bodies of their victims sealed in barrels from the bridge. Anyway strange January... 

    nzqg1lk.jpg

    pnT0Jzk.jpg

    weKbpXI.jpg

    ZX6qJ4G.jpg

    owgcHUt.jpg

    rWbb5vW.jpg

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