I find it to be kind of a juggling act that forces me to put myself āin the other guyās shoesā. One advantage I may have there is from my engineering background, where I learned to write instructions and procedures that could be understood with a minimum of questions from those that it is intended for.
Also, I seek to avoid questions that would only appeal to a very few āin the knowā, as that can turn-off others very fast, as they would tend to feel that there was an exclusive clique running the forum.
Thatās one of the biggest challenges I face as an SAP Course developer and trainer. Itās very difficult to come up with good questions that adequately tests the students knowlege without being technical trivia questions.
Good stuff though gentlmen, weāve had some interesting topics come up.
Actually that is Naval victories for the F6F. The Army claims that the P-38 took out the most in the Pacific overall. So I guess it depends on whose bragging rights you feel like siding with. [swg]
In the E.T.O., The USAAFās top scorer was the P-51 Mustang.
As for other countries, I would guess the Zero for Japan, the Hurricane for the RAF (reputed to have destroyed more aircraft than any other type during WWII), for Russia I woud guess the Mig-3, for France the Dewtone, for Italy the Macchi-Castoldi MC-202 Folgore,and China the Curtiss Hawk III (as flown by famous aces such as Li Kwei-Tan). For various northeastern European countries such as Finland and Hungaria, the Bf-109 was their front-line fighter, so that one is aleady named. Polandās top aces went to Britain to soldier on and score high totals flying the Supermarine Spitfire.
I donāt know how specific I need to be, but Iām guessing that its first use was in WW1 from a fighter trying to shoot down an observation balloon, where the observer was equipped with a nice, brandy-new parachute?
(did I need to know names or even which country was shooting at which?)
As far as I am concerned, you got the next go alumini [tup]
Of course I was thinking of a Nieuport 11 armed with baloon-busting rockets. [;)]
As for exactly who did what first to whom, that is in the same rhelm as exactly who was first with the forward mounted machine gun that could fire through the propeller, who was the first fighter ace, or who really got the Red Baron.
In all of those cases, there are more then one claim, and even confusion within each claim. As examples, with Roland Garrosā first victories, it is disputed whether he was flying a Morane Saulnier parasol or mid-wing monoplane; the status of ace is disputed between Garros and Adolphe Pegoud, many dispute the validity of Garrosā armor plates (since the bullet strikes did bend a crankshaft now and then and was abandoned for the overwing mounted Lewis) citing Anthony Fokkerās invention of the interrupter gear, and nobody really knows what really happened to Baron Manfred von Richthofen since his machine was virtually destroyed by looters.
Iām still trying to come up with a decent aircraft question. That was a lucky guess on my part, and I didnāt consider the āhave to ask the next questionā aspect of the thread.
If need be Iāll post a relatively easy one later today - I just donāt want the thread to fall by the wayside.
OK, I came up withn something quicker than I expected. Itās a slight variation on the theme, though -
Where was the most expensive flight of a paper airplane conducted?
In other words, there was one particular paper airplane that was flown in a particular place. The place where it was flown makes it the most expensive paper airplane flight ever. Name that place.
Since a paper airplane can be flown anywhere, I would assume that this would pertain to the value of the real-estate involved.
I would guess that the worldās most expensive real-estate is in Tokyo, Japan.
On the other hand, if the expense is due to the cost of being a passenger, then this would involve the Space Shuttle program (either the shuttle itself or the space station), since I do believe the SST Concordeās tickets were cheaper then a space flight per person.
Am I getting close or was this a facitious question?
You got it, Tom. One of the shuttle astronauts conducted experiments (donāt know if they were official or not) with a paper airplane on the Discovery back in 1985, I think. Thereās footage of it here:
This aircraft is considered the first true fighter-bomber, and was the first operational turbo-charged interceptor.
Interestingly enough, it was initially developed as a twin-engined bomber-destroyer.
Other trivia:
The recognizable difference from the early marks and the later, most produced ones, was due to the fact that the first were literally hand-assembled since the initial order was for only 1000. For the later marks, the main modifications were made to facilitate mass-production.
Iām going to take a guess and say the De Havilland Mosquito, but for some reason Iāve got a large bi-plane in the back of my headā¦but turbo chargersā¦Iāll stick with the Mosquito.
This German built aircraft saw service in the Pacific region in World War II. Some were built under license, but some were built in Germany and shipped to the Pacific where they saw heavy service. The last of them being retired in 1944.
This plane also have the distinction of being the last World War II airplane produced. The last one taking to the air for the first time in 1983.