Ultratwinkie said:
theparsonski said:
I have my History GCSE exam on Tuesday, and it's on Germany from 1918-1945. I'd like to sneak in some interesting facts that we haven't been taught in class, just to be a smartass. So, has anyone got any interesting facts about the Nazis (as you may be able to guess, they feature rather prominently under that heading). In fact, anything interesting about the topic at all would do for me. I'll soon see how quirky I can make my essay...
Germany invented the stealth fighter. Called the Horten Ho 229. It was made of wood with stealth paint. It was even better than the ME 292, their famous jet aircraft. Its main drawback was an unreliable engine that gave out randomly.
The Germans tried their hand at a super heavy tank called the MAUS. It was to act as a mobile bunker, but it was so heavy the engine had trouble actually moving it.
There was another. It was something that could have been used, but I forgot it. Sorry.
Was it not something they, not surprisingly, called Monster? It was a super self-propelled artillery platform fitted with their massive rail mounted Artillery gun (Schwerer Gustav). Of course, physics had some words with those engineers and it was scrapped before leaving the drawing board.
EDIT: Ha, I found the name. It was called the Landkreuzer P. 1500 Monster. Aptly named. As a size comparison, the MAUS weighed 200 tons... the Monster was to weight 1,500 tons.
I looked through google to see if anyone did an artists rendition of this never to be monstrosity. What I saw laughs in the face of what Warhammer 40k calls large in terms of tanks. I wonder if the limitations would still be present today? Of course a super sized artillery platform would only be a massive target for a tomohawk strike, but still... I want to live in a world where tanks are as big as city blocks.
EDIT EDIT:
Hilariously large is it not.
Final Edit: Looking at that image, I just noticed it has 2 cranes build onto the rear. Possibly meant for loading the huge shells this beast would fire (same as the Gustav).