judasmachine
Diamond Member
Capturing that UFO at Roswell has helped quite a bit indeed.
I kid I kid... but ya never know.
I kid I kid... but ya never know.
Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: AndrewR
It's quite amazing when you take a step back and think about it. Just a few off the top of my head in no particular order:
1.) Body armor. You can get shot with a 7.62mm bullet in the chest and bounce back up and kill the guy who shot you. Ditto for the helmets, which weigh less and are MUCH more comfortable than those steel pots. You can't cook in them though!
2.) Aircraft. Biplanes were still in service in nearly every air force at the start of the war, and now we have supercruising, stealth fighter-bombers with extraordinary radar and the ability to drop a 250lb bomb on a pinpoint target. Only a select few fighters back then used radar, and the land-based radar was exceptionally crude compared to what they can do today. Boeing B29 bombers carried computer controlled machine guns that would calculate trajectory and track enemy aircraft on their own.
3.) Armored vehicles. Thin-skinned tanks that could only fire from a halt have progressed to 60+ mph beasts that can withstand multiple hits and kill anything within several kilometers while moving over rough terrain, day or night.
4.) Missiles. Didn't even exist at the start of the war, and they only saw very limited use by the end (not talking ballistic). Germans had a rudimentary air-to-air and an anti-ship missile that were barely used. Now, we have AAMs that can kill at incredible distances and guide themselves to target. Or, there are infrared guided ones that can lock on at insane distances and outmanuever anything that flies. Sensor technology is just unbelieveable.
5.) Naval ships. Today's US carriers displace over FIVE TIMES what some of the "big tops" did in WWII (USS Intrepid, for instance). Submarines are now quieter than a mouse fart, and they can launch all manner of different weapons or even deploy special operations forces without even surfacing.
6.) Helicopters. Didn't exist at the start, saw VERY limited use, and are now indispensable and everywhere. Heck, now we have tiltrotors!
And the list goes on. Quite incredible, actually.
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- Body Armor has been around for centuries and is nothing new. During WWI soldiers would stick iron plates under their shirts to protect them from flying metal. When WWII came around Pilots were known to sew metal plates on to their clothing.
- Stealth Technology was around in during World War II. The German Luftwaffe had the Horton HO-229 flying wing that was invisible to radar. When Lockheed Engineers in the 1980's decided to design a stealth bomber the fist thing they did was visit the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum to get their inspiration.
http://www.militaryfactory.com/aircraft/detail.asp?aircraft_id=105
An Airborne HO-229
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horten_Ho_229
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stealth_aircraft
- Both German and Russian Tanks could take dozens of hits and keep going. There are many reports of US soldiers shooting 30 bazooka rounds at a Tiger Panzer with no effect. Many US Sherman tanks could not destroy a Tiger, for them it was like trying to shoot through a brick wall using a BB gun. When Russians and Germans faced against each other (Tigers or King Tigers) they would often get caught rammng in to oneanother becase their guns had little effect on the opponents armour. Sadly the US tanks were think skinned and were easily destroid when hit. They advantage US tanks had over axis armour was speed and numbers.
- Missiles did exist during WWII and dated back to the 1920's, the only problem was the Allies did not have them. 🙁
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-1_flying_bomb
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-2_rocket
Some American aircraft (p38, p51, and others) were (or could be) equiped with air to air missiles and some German fighters had wire guided missiles that were guided by the pilot or co-pilot.
- The Japaneese Navy had some ships that easly rival the size of many of todays warships. (iI cant think of the name of the Giant Japaneese Battleship that scared our navy but we manged to sink anyways)
- The first Heliocopter made its first untethered flight on May 13, 1940. Before May 13, other flighs had been attempted but the pilot and his 'chopper were tied to the ground.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor_Sikorsky
Thread PWNED.
Originally posted by: judasmachine
Capturing that UFO at Roswell has helped quite a bit indeed.
I kid I kid... but ya never know.
Originally posted by: jpeyton
All I see is a giant sinkhole. Our most recent annual military budget was roughly $445 billion.
NASA receives roughly $16 billion per year. If NASA even received one-quarter of the budget consideration our military does, we would easily have a human presence on Mars (and the wealth of scientific knowledge that would bring).
Worse still is the fact that all we can seem to do with our mighty military is start losing conflicts in countries we shouldn't be in. Or sink billions more into shoddy weapons systems and antiquated technology that only a pork-barrel government could procure. Opening up military contracts to more than just a select group of contractors would easily earn the American people more for their defense dollar.
Originally posted by: AndrewR
5) You're thinking about the Yamato, which was sunk attempting to attack the US invasion fleet off of Okinawa in 1945. Guess what? The WWI technology of the super battleship was destroyed with the WWII technology of naval aviation -- quite easily, in fact. Ditto for the Bismarck, which was doomed by a single torpedo to the rudder. The range of Naval firepower (non-aviation) was limited to under 20 miles, yet modern warships can touch far greater distances with cruise missiles. What would have happened if the Yamato had an AEGIS-equipped ship next to it? All those attackers would have been destroyed, and the Yamato would have happily wreaked havoc in the invasion fleet (ok, so the AEGIS ship would have run out of missiles before it destroyed all the planes -- that's immaterial). Again, you're clueless about modern naval warships. Read a book.
Originally posted by: cubby1223
But if you consider from 1900 fighting with calvary on horseback, to 1945 with tanks, fighter planes, machine guns, rockets, nukes, I think I'd have to agree with the original comment.Originally posted by: AndrewR
Originally posted by: Scouzer
i'd say the difference between 1910 and 1945 (Counting the first nuke here) was more consequential than 1945 to 2006.
When you consider the progress in electronic warfare and space systems, you're talking about a lot of things that just didn't exist. Nukes are impressive, of course, but the delivery systems now (and the explosive force relative to the first ones) are amazingly better. Dropping from a bomber to launching from a submerged submarine?
Originally posted by: judasmachine
Capturing that UFO at Roswell has helped quite a bit indeed.
I kid I kid... but ya never know.
Originally posted by: ballmode
after WW3, we will be cavemen
Originally posted by: ballmode
after WW3, we will be cavemen