Jump to content

Hasse Wind

MODERATOR
  • Content count

    2,440
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Everything posted by Hasse Wind

  1. It must have something to do with the fact that old and overweight men make poor pilots, no matter their other abilities. Besides, you had to be pretty young and stupid to go into battle with those early flying contraptions!
  2. French Combat Tactics

    At least if you're a scout pilot. My Fee gunner disagrees with vrilles and stuff! I've sometimes wondered just how many more British pilots would have survived the war if the RFC leadership had decided to imitate the French and spend some extra resources for improving pilot training. The Americans were definitely wise to adopt the French system as a basis for their own pilot training.
  3. The balance of the bicycle must be affected by all that weight in the front.
  4. Fifa Ban Poppies

    Thanks for the explanation. Doesn't sound like anything political at all.
  5. OT: Attention Fantasy RPG Fans

    Skyrim, like all the Elder Scrolls games, is typically played from first person view, just like shooters. So it's very different from Dragon Age.
  6. Fifa Ban Poppies

    I'm not very familiar with that poppy wearing tradition. Is it done only in the UK, or also elsewhere? Regarding FIFA, well, it's a strange organisation.
  7. Yeah, one lifetime is not enough to learn the history of every corner of our world. However, I think it's unfortunate that the events of the Eastern front of WW1, the collapse of the Russian empire and the birth of the Soviet Union are so poorly known and understood these days. Those were extremely important events, shaping the history of the 20th century, and consequently also our current century. If you read a book about the history of WW1, it's very likely that the Western Front receives a lion's share of the author's attention.
  8. I say it looks great. You're getting better with every new skin, it seems. I like the zigzag pattern.
  9. I don't know of any such tales, but I'm absolutely sure it must have happened sometimes.
  10. Maybe he kneels down? Not all gunners in WW1 two-seaters even had seats, it seems. They just stood in the pit or kneeled against something.
  11. OT: Attention Fantasy RPG Fans

    Yeah, that looks slightly better than old Dungeon Master.
  12. You weren't the only one with that misconception, Flyby. That's why the Finnish Air Force decided to abandon the swastika emblem in 1945. Using it was bad PR, because Hitler's regime had completely tarnished the swastika as a symbol. However, the symbol is still used in Finland in some things, for example in medals and decorations, and some flags, and of course traditional art. I have a day off and I'm feeling somewhat bored, so I decided to correct some mistakes regarding Finnish history that can be found from the text in the link. Don't read, if you aren't interested. "Like the Poles, Latvians and Czechs had had their own Legions in the Russian and, in the case of the Czechs, the Austrian armies. Czechs had also served with the French in the West. Estonians, Finns, Lithuanians, and Cossacks held prominent positions in the Imperial Russian forces, while Cossacks, Finns, and Ukrainians served the Germans and/or Austrians. As the Russian, Austrian, and German armies came apart in the last days of World War 1, these small, ethnically based units often emerged as the only coherent, disciplined military forces operating in vast stretches of suddenly lawless and rebellious territory. A few Latvian battalions secured Lenin's position in the crucial, coup-wracked days of 1918. The 60,000-man Russian Czech Legion was able to fight its way across Asia and Russia to Vladivostok and back in hijacked, hastily armored trains. Count von Mannerheim used Finnish veterans of the German and Czarist forces to crush less well-organized, less well-equipped Red Finns in a bitter civil war, while harassing the flanks of the Allied intervention force at Archangel." Finns were not required by law to serve in the Russian military. It was possible for volunteers to join the army or navy, and many Finns did this to pursue a military career in the service of the Czar. General Mannerheim became the most well-known of them. But their numbers were never big. And because Finland was a part of the Russian Empire (an autonomous Grand Duchy), it goes without saying that Finns were not serving in the armies of the Central Powers. That was obviously illegal during the war. However, a relatively small group of nationalist Finns left Finland to receive military training from the Germans. The idea was that they could later help Finland achieve independence from Russia, which did in fact happen. There were under 2000 men who received training in Germany and fought in the Eastern Front against Russia. "Finland's air force was shaped by strong German influence and by an aggressive anti-bolshevism born in the bloody civil war that followed independence. Finland's parliament declared independence of Russia in December 1917, and fighting broke almost immediately. The Finnish Communists favored a continued, close relationship with Moscow, much like the old Imperial system, only with socialists at the helm. The Whites identified with Prussia and with Finland's old Swedish aristocracy. Finland was the established port of entry linking Russia and Germany (Lenin took this route when the Germans returned him to Russia in 1917). By raising the spectre of a Red Terror among conservative Finns, the military government in Berlin no doubt hoped to shut the door between the Soviet masses and their own, restive, increasingly radicalized proletariat." Civil war in Finland started in late January 1918, not immediately after the declaration of independence (6 December). The writer makes it sound like the Finnish independence movement was a German idea, designed to harm Russia. This is not true. It was very much a native phenomenon in Finland, and Germany didn't actively support Finland until later when the government forces requested help from the Germans in their fight against the Red rebels. "Be that as it may, fighting broke out almost immediately in 1917. The Finnish Red Guard had the aid of some 40,000 irregulars from Soviet Russia, though, given the composition of the pre-1917 Russian army, many of these might have been ethnic Finns themselves. The White Guard depended heavily on German regulars, who served in large numbers in Finland, and on German arms and supplies. The capable generalissimo of the White faction, Marshall von Mannerheim, soon crushed the Reds in a brutal, bloody campaign that left a lasting undercurrent of political extremism in Finland for many years after. The Communist Party was proscribed, and Mannerheim and his military cronies ruled by decree for a few years. Prompted by their German allies, Finnish saboteurs and snipers made themselves a major annoyance along the flanks of the Allied intervention in north Russia. Happily, the German military collapse at home and on the Western Front cut short this unwholesome union. The Inter-Allied Control Commission forced Germany to withdraw its forces from Finland and left the Finns to settle their own affairs, through land reform and a return to liberal, democratic government." Like I mentioned above, Finns were not required to serve in the Russian military. The Russian forces that were stationed in Finland when the civil war began were not ethnic Finns. And they were no irregulars either, but regular soldiers. When the war began in January 1918, there were about 60,000 - 80,000 Russians soldiers in Finland. Most of them withdrew in the following months, and only about 4000 Russians actively participated in the fighting on the side of the Reds. Where the author got that number of "40,000 irregulars" is a mystery. The Whites did receive men and material from Germany, but there was only one infantry division and one independent brigade of German troops fighting against the Reds, not large numbers of regulars as the author claims. In total, there were 13,000 German soldiers in Finland during the war. What comes next is absurd. General Mannerheim (he didn't become a marshal until 1937) "and his military cronies" (I wonder who those were?) never ruled the country. The president, the government and the parliament did. There has never been a military dictatorship in Finland. In fact Mannerheim retired from public life for many years after the war. And Finland didn't oppose the Allied forces sent to fight Bolsheviks in Russia. The government wasn't particularly happy about having to live next to an aggressive Bolshevik country! From Finland's point of view, there was nothing "unwholesome" about the relationship with Germany. If Germany had triumphed, Finland would have been her ally in the post-war world. Finally, this one: "This insignia became the Finnish national marking until 1944, when Finland turned against Germany." The swastika was kept in use until 1945, and in some forms is still used.
  13. The skins are interesting, but the text is full of mistakes. Especially the part describing events in Finland in 1917 - 1918 and later is quite inaccurate.
  14. I wonder who wrote the instructions for assembling all the parts? And did they often have those annoying extra parts that don't seem to fit anywhere but are crucial for the whole structure, like in IKEA furniture?
  15. Rear Gunner Questions

    I hope you can make the AI weight mod work. It would be great to have this feature already in P3. After all, who knows long we'll have to wait for P4! It has always bothered me the AI planes can fly faster and do things that I can't. It's not much of an issue when I'm flying a slow two-seater like the Fee, but when the AI outdives my SPAD, it definitely feels wrong.
  16. OT: Attention Fantasy RPG Fans

    Games, and computer role-playing games in particular, seem to be getting easier every year. I guess people really are afraid of challenges, or don't want to feel any frustration at all when playing. I can understand it, but it can't be denied that something of the old magic has been lost with level scaling and things like that. And if everything is too easy, where's the feeling of achieving something? Fortunately there are still crazy (I mean this in a positive way) indie developers and modders for the big titles. Oblivion for example is quite mediocre without mods, and it has one of the worst level scaling systems ever designed. I expect Skyrim will have its fair share of problems, but the good thing is, they can be fixed by modders, at least for the most part. If you have the PC version, that is.
  17. OT: Attention Fantasy RPG Fans

    You make some excellent points, Von Paulus. Hype is hype, and the marketing people are there to make it sound like everything is better than ever before. Only rarely does it happen in reality. There are exceptions, of course. I think I'll wait a year or so before giving Skyrim a try. Then I'll benefit from the testing done by all of the early adopters, and the game will cost much less. Or maybe I'll wait for the GOTY edition. I have my hands full with flight sims in any case, so I can wait.
  18. Albatros production line

    Great stuff, thanks for sharing.
  19. Soon somebody will open a thread and ask "Will P4 bring peace to the world?" and Winder will post a short reply, "Yes."
  20. P4 DEVELOPMENT SCREENSHOTS

    Ah, finally an Aviatik! Looking forward to flying that one in career mode.
  21. Rear Gunner Questions

    Looking forward to the new DM mod / ArcMod combination.
  22. Rear Gunner Questions

    You totally lost me with all those xdp's and bdp's, so I'll just say that a combined HPW DM mod and Arcmod sounds like a great idea.
  23. Rear Gunner Questions

    Thanks. Unfortunately it seems that there is a conflict between Arcmod and HPW UltimateDM 1.1. The mod manager gives a warning when I try to activate Arcmod.
  24. Rear Gunner Questions

    I'm very interested to try this mod, but first I'd like to know if it works with Herr Prop-Wasche's FM and DM mods?
  25. WW1 air war boardgame

    Looks like a very interesting game. I'll have to keep an eye on it.
×

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, and We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue..