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Welcome to Clash of Steel!


Featured battle : Znaim

Part of The French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars

Date : 10 July 1809 - 11 July 1809

The Austrians, under Archduke Charles, had halted and, as peace negotiations were under way, proposed a cease-fire. Marmont, although outnumbered, would not agree and committed his corps to battle. Massena had no option but to support him and brought his corps into action the following day. The Austrians were also reinforced on the 11th. Both sides fought hard and suffered similar casualties. Neither gained the ground and on his arrival Napoleon agreed a cease-fire. This was the last battle of the Danube campaign.

Featured image :

German WW2 Vehicles - Motorcycle/sidecar combo & VW-166 Schwimmwagen

German WW2 Vehicles - Motorcycle/sidecar combo & VW-166 Schwimmwagen

A pair of vehicles maintained by the 21st Panzer Division re-enactment group. The first is a representation of a KS750 Zundapp Motorbike and side car mounting an MG 34 light machine gun in the sidecar. Zundapp produced around 18,000 of these agile, powerful and effective machines during the war for the Wehrmacht. In practice, this example is probably a modified Cossack Ural M67. The second is the VolksWagen model 166 Schwimmwagen amphibious vehicle. It was based on the Kubelwagen and could reach 80km/h on-road but could also float and make its way through the water by means of a propeller unit lowered from the rear. Both are painted in North Africa colours.

Gallery updated : 2022-04-04 08:33:43

Featured review :

US Military Helicopters (Images of War series)

Green, Michael
A treat for anyone who, like me, has a passion for military helicopters, this book is very much what it appears to be, 220 pages full of useful pictures and information on the US Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps's rotor-based aircraft.

The book is split into 4 main chapters, covering early piston-engined helicopters, later gas-turbine workhorses (like the iconic UH-1 'Huey'), Gunships, and finally, well, everything else! Each chapter starts with a short, utilitarian description of the models covered in that chapter along with their capabilities, dates of service and developments. Then you're into the photos, at least three per double page along with captions that also contain plenty of useful detail. Some are images that you may recognise if you're familiar with the type or theatre of operations mentioned, but there are a good number I've never seen before and the coverage is good, from the earliest R-4B's, through Huey's, Piasecki's, Chinook's, UH-60's, Cobra's and Apaches, to even the V-22 Osprey (tilt-rotor) and the UH-72A Lakota. Reading cover to cover, or just dipping in, for recognition, modelling or simply interest, a great book to have to hand.
Pen & Sword Aviation, Barnsley, 2017

Reviewed : 2017-12-04 20:55:46