
Wars
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Historically educational posts covering all things war and more!
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“When gravity says fall faster, the C-17 says check this out.” The Boeing C-17 Globemaster III isn’t just a heavy transport aircraft—it’s a tactical powerhouse that defies conventional flight norms. One of the rare modern planes able to use reverse thrust in midair, it can execute steep tactical descents of up to 15,000 feet per minute, plunging at more than 170 mph to rapidly enter hostile or confined airspace. This capability lets the C-17 slow aggressively, drop fast, and land on short, rough runways while hauling enormous loads, from armored vehicles and helicopters to critical humanitarian supplies. In-flight reverse thrust isn’t a stunt—it’s a tool for survivability, precision, and operational dominance, setting the C-17 apart as one of the boldest and safest rule-breakers in military aviation.
Wars400,112 次观看 • 3 个月前

A Japanese kamikaze pilot survives an attack on a U.S. ship and is rescued afterward, 1945. In October 1944, with Japan facing imminent defeat in World War II, the Imperial Japanese Navy created the Kamikaze (“Divine Wind”) special attack units. Pilots in these units carried out missions by deliberately crashing bomb-laden planes into Allied warships. Often depicted as fanatical, most Kamikaze pilots were young volunteers, averaging 21 years old, motivated by a mix of nationalism, duty, and intense societal pressure. While only about 19% of missions struck their targets, they managed to sink 34 ships and kill over 7,000 Allied personnel. By the end of the war, roughly 3,800 Japanese pilots had given their lives in these desperate, last-ditch attacks.
Wars62,688 次观看 • 4 个月前

"Too low for radar. Too fast for torpedoes. The perfect Cold War phantom." The Ekranoplan Lun, often called the “Caspian Sea Monster,” stands as one of the Soviet Union’s most remarkable engineering feats. Developed in the 1980s, this ground-effect vehicle defied easy classification, operating somewhere between an aircraft and a ship as it skimmed just meters above the water. Measuring 74 meters in length and weighing more than 400 tons, the Lun was driven by six enormous turbojet engines and could reach speeds of up to 500 km/h. By flying at extremely low altitude, it exploited the ground effect—air compressed between its wings and the sea surface produced additional lift. Designed for military use, it carried six anti-ship missiles, allowing it to deliver rapid strikes across open waters.
Wars33,374 次观看 • 3 个月前