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IL-2 Sturmovik The famous combat flight simulator. |
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#1
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Hi Sutts,
I can only talk from an Australian Point of View, but there were a range of horse drawn mechanical harvester available from the turn of the centrury. As a lad in Western Australia, it seemed like every farm had it's mechanical graveyard with at least one old horse drawn Sunshine harvester. http://museumvictoria.com.au/sunshin....asp?iid=10479 ![]() Now I'm not sure how that translates to 1940's England with the smaller acreages, traditional farming practices and a larger labour force (In Australia at the time (as now), if you were not an efficient farmer your not a farmer!), And I have no idea how common it would be in England at the time. This style of equipment produces a more regular patterns after the harvesting process. It's amazing where these discussions will lead. ![]() Cheers Quote:
Last edited by Skoshi Tiger; 03-20-2010 at 12:46 AM. |
#2
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There are a couple of things I notice that I really like one is nothing really but on the Ju-88 it's nice to see round cowlings and not the 16 sided ones we have in IL-2. Those look great. The other is the glass I like the look of it very much. Someone mentioned a Seagull before, I have a pic of a SOW Seagull somewhere, I'll try to dig it up.
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#3
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![]() I don't know about the war, I don't remember it ![]() ![]() I was born in 1954 and lived in the country as a child. By the time I was taking notice (probably 1957 at the earliest) it was all combine harvesters, tractors, and mechanical balers. There was ploughing using horses, as a sport, but the real thing was always done using tractors by that time (a team of horses could pull one plough, a tractor could pull four at once). There is a tractor in the Airfix kit of the Stirling that looks a lot like the farm tractors in my day, as the current tractors do (except front wheels seem bigger now), I presume the engine capacities and power have increased. Bales in those days were rectangular, now they're round, that's quite a recent change, in the 1980s or 1990s in Britain? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baler Wikipedia says 1937 for small "square" bales, so they may have begun to be used in the war, or maybe they were available in the USA only? |
#4
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The 'Women's Land Army' at work, presumably in WWII:
![]() Looks like a mechanical baler to me... |
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