• #8 is bogus. Me-264 didn’t have the range unless it was a one way trip.


  • IL lol,  :lol: it deffinetly was not worth the effort then.  :|


  • I had no idea about # 10. I guess I should read a D-Day book some day. The Germans did have a bomber capable of a one way trip to New York. I have forgotten which one I guess the Me 264 would have been it.


  • They had a number of competing projects from Heinkel, Messerschmidt, Junkers, and Focke-Wulf . The only tangible thing was supporting long range recon bombers to point out where the U-boats could be sent too but Goering shot that idea down because it would prove a tugging influence against control of the air force. Other ideas consisted of either mid Atlantic refueling of planes by submarines or dumping the plane and pickup by U-boat and/or installing floats for the bombers so they can land on the ocean and be salvaged, but again Goering would have none of this. No cooperation from air and sea forces was critical to deny the success of these programs.

    Then last idea was considered was direct occupation of Azores but events in Russia and parachute losses at Crete sealed the fate of this idea as well.


  • The  Me-264 could reach New York City.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messerschmitt_Me_264

    The Me-264 had a range of 9,500 miles.

    I used google earth to map the distance from the following:

    Quimper, France: 3,376 miles
    Brest, France: 3,350 miles

    I don’t know if they could carry a payload and make it that far or not.

    I also don’t know if the two above cities in France even have an air field.  I figure that was minor they are easy enough to build. I just picked those places b/c they seem to be larger cities that were “close.”

    LT

  • '19 Moderator

    well considering the fact that only 1 prototype ever made it into the air it’s kind of a moot point.  That prototype was destroyed in 1944 on the ground just like the first two(before they flew).

    So technicaly they didn’t have a bomber that could reach NY… :wink:


  • Well, yes they were destroyed.  I wonder if they could have made a trans-Atlantic with or without a payload.

    LT


  • CINCUS Commander in Chief, United States (obsolete form for Commander in Chief United States Naval Forces)

    LT


  • @LT04:

    I read D-Day but it felt like I was drinking off of a fire hose with all that information thrown at me.  But I was 15 the first time I read it so I should read it again.

    LT

    I know what you mean.  Too many POVs going back and forth, and lots of stuff in between.  Still a good read for all the WTF? moments.

    Talking about the Me-264 is bringing back memories playing Secret Weapons Over Normandy. :)


  • Looks like someone’s been hanging around the making history site  :-D


  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakajima_G10N

    this is kinda crazy… Japan really had some plans as well.


  • If i remember correctly they were also experimenting with bubonic plague as a biological weapon and nearly made an attack on san fransisco with it but disagreement from the navy prevented it.


  • Yea and those stupid ballons… at least this bomber looks like something decent It looks like a B-52


  • How many engins does the Nakajima G10N have?  In some pictures I see 4 and others I see 6.  Are they diffrent variations?

    LT

  • '19 Moderator

  • '19 Moderator

    The G8N was a four engine bomber, it was actualy built, though I don’t think it made it to production.


  • I enjoyed the post.


  • @Petrucci08:

    If i remember correctly they were also experimenting with bubonic plague as a biological weapon and nearly made an attack on san fransisco with it but disagreement from the navy prevented it.

    They did some experimenting alright. The sick pecker heads had a facility in Manchuria where they infected people then cut them open to see how the illness effected living tissue. No anesthesia just your numbers up and you get filleted alive. The victims were refered to as “logs” because their dead bodies would be stacked like firewood before incineration. Too bad the political climate after the war kept this kind of information out of the limelight.


  • @11HP20:

    @Petrucci08:

    If i remember correctly they were also experimenting with bubonic plague as a biological weapon and nearly made an attack on san fransisco with it but disagreement from the navy prevented it.

    They did some experimenting alright. The sick pecker heads had a facility in Manchuria where they infected people then cut them open to see how the illness effected living tissue. No anesthesia just your numbers up and you get filleted alive. The victims were refered to as “logs” because their dead bodies would be stacked like firewood before incineration. Too bad the political climate after the war kept this kind of information out of the limelight.

    Unit 731 is the most notorious.  Why we held war crime trials for the Nazis but granted immunity to the Unit 731 crew for their research, I’ll never know…


  • Anybody here watch “Seoul 1945” its a great show on Korean television  ( has subtitles) about Korea before and during world war two… excellent acting and a few episodes where they use hundreds of Japanese soldiers attacking or being attacked. I never miss an episode and the theme music is incredible.

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