gregv wrote:
Earlier on gliders were towed to a certain point then expected to fly themselves into the drop zone, while later on they were dropped virtually on the drop zone?
Perfect. Most initial glider use (USSR, Germany, the UK) concepts postulated a silent, unexpected insertion of small numbers of coup de main troops, with the
glider equipped with a high aspect ratio wing able to glide a significant distance to the target. While this approach was only ever used occasionally, both at the start of the war (fort Eben-Emael) and at Pegasus Bridge in June 1944, the
design of gliders
universally changed to shorter, low-aspect ratio wings to support shorter glides with much greater loads.
It's a vague question, and I'd certainly agree other answers have merit, too; but the aspect ratio of designs changing is pretty universal element.
Enemy Ace wrote:
1. 20mm cannon.
We need details! Can you provide data to support that?
Enemy Ace wrote:
2. Douglas DC-2.
We need details... Who, ideally when & where too!
Enemy Ace wrote:
5. Mausers, Browning Hi-power clones, Sten guns, DC-3 clones, Bf-108, Storch, 109's, Various models of trucks, various engines that were very closely related (i.e. R2600- BMW 801).
All very interesting, but you might want to go and re-read the stuff around the question, again. Answer, data and argument - not just names, please. Oh, and
aircraft types, as clarified earlier for Mudge.
The queries over French production of German types and the nature of the DC-2 and -3 family production have been discussed - are you taking it further, or just joining the wagon?
The 109 was in production on opposing sides when & where?
Enemy Ace wrote:
Ever notice how when things get slow on WIX it's time for a quiz?
Can't speak for Mr Cook, the main WIX quizmeister, but for me, my quizzes are set when I've got one and feel like it.

There may be another along soon.
Regards,