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- 8. 8 cm Flak 18 36 37 41 - Wikipedia
The 8 8 cm Flak 18 36 37 41 is a German 88 mm anti-aircraft and anti-tank artillery gun, developed in the 1930s It was widely used by Nazi Germany throughout World War II and is one of the most recognized German weapons of the conflict
- ELI5: How does flak ammo work and why is it only used against . . . - Reddit
Flak is basically a cannon that launches a shell up in the air, in the path of the airplane, and the shell explodes when it gets up there, sending pellets in all directions, hopefully hitting the airplane nearby, like in that graphic
- What Is Flak in War and How Did It Work? - ExplainThat
Flak refers to an anti-aircraft weapon system and the resulting explosive fire directed at airborne targets It involves firing artillery shells into the air to create a deadly cloud of shrapnel in the aircraft’s path
- FLAK Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of FLAK is antiaircraft guns How to use flak in a sentence
- What happened to all the flak fired at aircraft during World War II
Flak is one the reasons that flying in a bomber aircraft was one of the most dangerous and deadliest jobs during World War II The RAF Bomber Command estimated its death rate at 44%, with more than 8,300 wounded in action and another 9,800 captured at prisoners of war
- Flak 36 88mm Multipurpose Gun - National Museum of the USAF
The versatile 88mm cannon was Germany’s main heavy antiaircraft—or “flak”—gun during World War II When an 88mm projectile exploded at altitude, it sent out jagged metal fragments that tore through nearby aircraft
- War of Words – ‘Flak’ - Military History Matters
By cobbling together the first letters of each element of the longer compound word, this was typically shortened to ‘FlaK’ The word soon entered English, first seen in Jane’s Fighting Ships in 1938, when the annual described the anti-aircraft armament of a German warship
- Flak: myth versus reality with Donald Nijboer - Hush-Kit
Much feared by military aircrew, flak blew thousands of aeroplanes from the sky across the 20th century We grilled Donald Nijboer author of Flak in World War II, about the dreaded flak
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