THE FORESIGHT WAR (55 page)

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Authors: Anthony G Williams

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Vickers MG
                
standard medium machine gun throughout WW2

Vickers-Browning
     
British heavy machine gun: an adaptation of the Browning MG to take the Vickers .5 inch cartridge [curiously, the IJA did exactly that to produce the 12.7 mm Ho103 aircraft gun]

VT fuze
                       
"variable time" (proximity) fuze for AA shells

Washington

Naval Treaty
               
1922 agreement limiting the size of navies and the types of ships in them

 

Window
                      
code word for strips of aluminium foil dropped by aircraft in order to confuse enemy radar

British Weapon Calibres:

2 pdr
                           
tank/anti-tank gun
[modified to use Bofors 40mm ammunition]

6 pdr
                           
tank/anti-tank gun
[modified to use Bofors 57mm ammunition]

17 pdr
                         
tank/anti-tank gun, 76.2 mm calibre

25 pdr
                         
artillery field gun, 88 mm calibre

14 pdr
                         
tank gun using a cartridge based on the 6 pdr case necked out to 76.2 mm [equivalent to historical 75 mm, but with longer case designed for APDS]

35 pdr
                         
tank gun based on the 17 pdr case necked out to 102 mm calibre, designed for APDS

62 pdr
                         
medium artillery gun firing the same 4.7 inch/120 mm shells as naval guns [used instead of 4.5 and 5.5 inch guns]

.303 inch
                     
rifle and machine-gun cartridge (7.7x56R mm)

.5 inch Vickers
heavy machine gun cartridge (12.7x81mm)

3 inch
                         
AA gun, using the same ammunition as the 17 pdr tank/anti-tank gun [used instead of 3.7 inch gun]

4 inch
                          
naval dual-purpose gun

4.7 inch
                       
naval dual-purpose gun
[L/50 gun with 62 lb shells standardised instead of earlier 4.7 inch L/45 and later 4.5 inch guns]

7.5 inch
                       
[coast defence gun, taken from Cavendish class cruisers]

9.2 inch
                       
coast defence gun

15 inch
                        
naval gun; battleship main armament

16 inch
                        
naval gun; main armament of battleships
HMS Rodney
and
Nelson

9mm Mauser Export
    
pistol and submachine gun cartridge (9x25 mm)
[adopted for Solen SMG and Colt pistols]

40mm Bofors
              
army and naval AA gun
[adopted earlier and more widely used]

57mm Bofors
              
Swedish automatic anti-aircraft gun
[historically not developed until after 1945]

British Aircraft

Albemarle
                 
STOL/rough
field
 
tactical
transport designed by Armstrong Whitworth with two Hercules engines, capacious fuselage with rear
 
ramp between twin booms [historical
Albemarle
was an unsuccessful medium bomber]

Auster
                         
light observation aircraft

Beaufighter
               
British single-Hercules-engined single seat naval fighter-bomber built
by
 
Bristol
[the historical Beaufighter was a twin-engined strike fighter]

Beaufort
                    
British two/three seat single engined naval torpedo/dive bomber and anti-submarine/reconnaissance aircraft, built by
Bristol
[the historical Beaufort was a twin-engined torpedo bomber]

Brigand
                     
British fighter bomber designed by
Bristol
, a version of the Beaufighter without naval equipment but with extra armour [the historical Brigand was a postwar twin-engined light bomber]

Blenheim
                     
twin-engined light bomber and night-fighter designed by Bristol

Hampden
                   
British twin-Hercules-engined day and torpedo bomber built by Handley Page [the historical Hampden was a less powerful and versatile aircraft]

Hereford
                    
version of Hampden equipped for ground attack, with twin 40mm (Mk.1) or single 57mm (Mk.2) Bofors guns [historical
Hereford
was a version of the Hampden with different engines)

Horsa
                          
troop-carrying glider

Hurricane
                    
single engined single-seat fighter designed by Hawker
[replaced by Brigand after 1940]

Manchester
                
four-Merlin-engined high-altitude high-speed unarmed heavy bomber, designed by Avro [the historical aircraft was an unsuccessful twin-engined precursor to the
Lancaster
]

Mosquito
                     
high speed twin-engined bomber/night-fighter designed by de Havilland
[developed earlier and used more extensively]

Reaper
                       
twin-Merlin-engined single-seat long range fighter and reconnaissance aircraft, built by Gloster

Spitfire
                        
single engined single-seat fighter designed by Supermarine
[earlier improvements to engine power and armament]

Stringbag
                     
nickname for Swordfish

Sunderland
                  
four-engined maritime reconnaissance flying boat designed
        
by Short Bros of Belfast
[design modified to use
Bristol
Hercules engines, with a longer fuselage and wings]

Swordfish
                    
Obsolete naval single-engined biplane torpedo/ bomber/anti- submarine aircraft, designed by Fairey

Typhoon
                   
 
single-seat jet fighter [the historical Typhoon was a piston-engined fighter-bomber]

Warwick
                    
very long range, heavy maritime reconnaissance bomber with four Hercules engines [the historical
Warwick
had two Centaurus engines]

Wellington
                   
twin-engined medium bomber designed by Vickers

Whitley
                        
twin-engined medium bomber designed by Armstrong Whitworth

British & Commonwealth Ships

Anson
                        
battleship of the King George V class

Ark
Royal
                  
nameship of 25,000 ton aircraft carrier class [the historical class did not have angled decks]

Atherstone
                 
Hunt class corvette [the historical Atherstone was a Hunt class destroyer]

Australia
                      
Australian heavy cruiser

Barham
                       
battleship, Queen Elizabeth class

Berwick
                      
heavy cruiser

Canberra
                     
Australian heavy cruiser

Cornwall
                     
heavy cruiser

Courageous
                 
aircraft carrier, adapted from a WW1 battlecruiser

Dido
                           
4,000 ton frigate with eight 4.7 inch guns [the historical Dido was a 5,500 ton light cruiser with 5.25 inch guns]

Eagle
                           
aircraft carrier, adapted from an incomplete WWI battleship

Frobisher
                   
light aircraft carrier [converted from the historical heavy cruiser]

Furious
                        
aircraft carrier, adapted from a WW1 battlecruiser

Glasgow
                      
light cruiser

Hawkins
                    
light aircraft carrier [converted from the historical heavy cruiser]

Hood
                          
battlecruiser
[extensively modernised before WW2]

Illustrious
                  
aircraft carrier of the
Ark
Royal class [the historical
Illustrious
class differed from the
Ark
Royal in having an armoured deck and a smaller hangar capacity]

 
Inflexible
                  
aircraft carrier of the
Ark
Royal class

 
Invincible
                 
aircraft carrier of the
Ark
Royal class

Jervis
                           
destroyer

King George V
          
nameship of 35,000 ton battleship class (“KGVs”), built around four older 15 inch turrets [the historical ships had new 14 inch armament and were available later]

Kingston
                      
destroyer

Malaya
                        
battleship, Queen Elizabeth class

Manchester
                
10,000 ton light aircraft carrier based on cruiser hull [the historical
Manchester
was completed as a cruiser]

Nelson
                        
battleship, sistership to
Rodney

Newcastle
                   
light cruiser

Prince of Wales
         
battleship of the King George V class

Queen Elizabeth
           
battleship, WW1 vintage

Renown
                       
battlecruiser, sistership to
Repulse

Repulse
                       
battlecruiser, sistership to
Renown
[modernised before WW2]

Rodney
                       
battleship, sistership to
Nelson

Seawolf
                       
S class submarine

Sheffield
                      
cruiser

Talisman
                      
T-class submarine

Tribune
            
T-class submarine

Valiant
                         
battleship, Queen Elizabeth class

Vindictive
                  
light aircraft carrier [converted from the historical heavy cruiser]

Warspite
                     
battleship, Queen Elizabeth class

Queen Mary
                
British passenger liner

German Terms

Abwehr
                       
military intelligence and counter-intelligence organisation

Barbarossa
                  
code name for invasion of Soviet Union

Befehlshaber der
         
U-boats Commander (Admiral Dönitz’s title)

U-boote
                      

Blitzkrieg
                     
"lightning war"; the principle of a sudden, overwhelming
            
attack using mechanized forces in conjunction with air support

bodenständige
             
an adjective describing a fortress (stationary) army unit

Christbäume
                
Christmas tree; name given by Germans to RAF Target Indicator flare

Düppel
                        
term for Window (
q.v.
)

Einsatzgruppen
SS extermination squads

Elektroboot
                 
submarine with high underwater speed and endurance

Eloka
                          
Elektronische Kampfmassnahmen: electronic countermeasures

Enigma
            
Encoding machine

Ente
                            
Duck: fighter controllers’ slang for a target

Fall Gelb
                     
code name for the attack on France and the Benelux countries (“case yellow”)

Fallschirmjäger
paratroops

FAT
                            
pattern-running torpedo (Feder-Apparat Torpedo), aka G7a

Feldwebel
                   
Sergeant

FHQ
                           
Führerhauptquartier (
q.v.
)

Flak
                            
abbreviation (informally adopted by the British) of Fliegerabwehrkanone; anti-aircraft gun

Flak 38
                       
2cm automatic anti-aircraft cannon (also available in four-barrelled Flakvierling)

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