
When Were the First Military Drones Developed and What Role Did They Serve?
In 1917, a full sized monoplane responded to commands issued to it by a radio on the ground. The plane was unmanned; the world’s first military...

I watched that show as well. It was rather interesting. I never knew those existed.I was watching a show the other night where they had metal detectors trying to find parts from the A U.S. Army Air Force Waco CG-4A-WO gliders that carried troops. They only flew in never to be used again. It was pretty interesting. World war II gliders.
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Did you mean this show? It was excellent. What a frickin’ death trap unless everything went perfectly. You had one shot at landing......often in the dark, in a field you’ve never been before, that might have anti-glider polls, or be flooded...I was watching a show the other night where they had metal detectors trying to find parts from the A U.S. Army Air Force Waco CG-4A-WO gliders that carried troops. They only flew in never to be used again. It was pretty interesting. World war II gliders.
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The one I watched was this one.Did you mean this show? It was excellent. What a frickin’ death trap unless everything went perfectly. You had one shot at landing......often in the dark, in a field you’ve never been before, that might have anti-glider polls, or be flooded...
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Silent Wings: The American Glider Pilots of World War II (2007) ⭐ 7.9 | Documentary, History, War
1h 53m | Not Ratedwww.imdb.com
I saw that one too, very good...The one I watched was this one.
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"Expedition Unknown" Digging Into D-Day (TV Episode 2020) ⭐ 8.2 | Adventure, Mystery, Reality-TV
1h 35m | TV-PGwww.imdb.com
That is the one I watched also, Josh is a good presenter of facts and intertaining.The one I watched was this one.
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"Expedition Unknown" Digging Into D-Day (TV Episode 2020) ⭐ 8.2 | Adventure, Mystery, Reality-TV
1h 35m | TV-PGwww.imdb.com
Yes they did. The Luftwaffe was heavily restricted after WWI, so Germany got around the Versailles Treaty by training 1000's of young pilots using gliders in the 30's -- until they decided to ignore the Treaty and build 1000's of planes... They once did try using Bf-109's to ram bombers in 1945 -- the pilots were supposed to bail-out right before the hit. Your timing had to be perfect...The Germans were using gliders a long time before WW2 and were the first to use them in the war. I think they even had a glider they used to kamikaze into Allied bombers.
Yoy are right Hilo. I did a little research on this and it is little known. Guess the German pilots weren't as nutts as the Japs.Yes they did. The Luftwaffe was heavily restricted after WWI, so Germany got around the Versailles Treaty by training 1000's of young pilots using gliders in the 30's -- until they decided to ignore the Treaty and build 1000's of planes... They once did try using Bf-109's to ram bombers in 1945 -- the pilots were supposed to bail-out right before the hit. Your timing had to be perfect...
Look up the Neger and Marder submarine.Yoy are right Hilo. I did a little research on this and it is little known. Guess the German pilots weren't as nutts as the Japs.
Towards the end of World War II, the German Luftwaffe airforce resorted to a series of deadly suicide missions. Die Welt journalist and historian Sven Felix Kellerhoff examines a little documented chapter in Germany's military history.
Sven Felix Kellerhoff
DIE WELT
2011-03-29
English edition • WORLDCRUNCH
There was no limit to what those guys would and did do. My father in-law operated a landing craft in South Pacific island hopping.My father in-law flew on on d- day. 1 way ticket to hell. If you land safely you had to fight your way out. Crashing meant cargo would crush you. They carrried a Jeep & a few troops. Germans shot through wood floors and troops arrived would arrive wounded or worse.
crazy what teens would do for their country then!
These gliders could also be snatched by other aircraft and towed out and then land somewhere else. It was a rare procedure but it was done several times. Here's actual film of such a snatch in a famous case of several crash survivors being stranded for weeks and no other way out. A couple gliders were able to land in a very small clearing (not large enough for powered aircraft to land or take off). Then the gliders were loaded with the survivors, snatch wires set up on poles then the rescue planes flew low overhead to snatch the wire and tow the glider out. Big rescue. Go to 10:00 if you just want to watch the snatch. By the way...the book about this rescue is excellent. "Lost in Shangri La". You can get it on Amazon and is a New York Times best seller. I couldn't put it down.I was watching a show the other night where they had metal detectors trying to find parts from the A U.S. Army Air Force Waco CG-4A-WO gliders that carried troops. They only flew in never to be used again. It was pretty interesting. World war II gliders.
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Love this, read the book years ago. In the video, picking up the chute on take off almost spelled disaster though.These gliders could also be snatched by other aircraft and towed out and then land somewhere else. It was a rare procedure but it was done several times. Here's actual film of such a snatch in a famous case of several crash survivors being stranded for weeks and no other way out. A couple gliders were able to land in a very small clearing (not large enough for powered aircraft to land or take off). Then the gliders were loaded with the survivors, snatch wires set up on poles then the rescue planes flew low overhead to snatch the wire and tow the glider out. Big rescue. Go to 10:00 if you just want to watch the snatch. By the way...the book about this rescue is excellent. "Lost in Shangri La". You can get it on Amazon and is a New York Times best seller. I couldn't put it down.
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