(1969)
(1969)
General Adolf Galland with Werner Mölders in his Messerschmitt Bf 109-E4/N Stab JG26 WNr 5819, the only 109 equipped with a cigar lighter. Pas De Calais,France in 1940.
🎥 VIDEO: https://youtu.be/_QAN7WoPU_k
My meme again...
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No one:
Completly no one:
The Red Baron, just after someone tried to explain him that in the world there's really such food that tastes better without mustard:
"I admire your extraordinary imagination and a lot of authoirony, but this story is only a little bit convincing"
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Btw, if someone was curious, the template is from "Świat według Kiepskich" tv series (and tbh many Polish people know this series very well).
Everything I could pick up correctly from the "German" pilot that Cap let go
"Nein sie haben das völlig falsch verstanden, ich bin kein Deutscher, das ist ein Missverständnis"
"No you got that completely wrong, I'm not a German, this is a missunderstanding"
"oh gut....tschüß"
"oh great...bye"
I'm putting the German in quotation marks because either the gag was that he isn't German after all or the person reading the lines was not very good at it
i unfortunately don't have the book yet to check what was written but I have questions there as well.
who should NOT have a happy ending/life
Colonel MacKenzie
German Pilot
other (write in tags)
everyone deserves a happy life
Werner Voss
Werner Voss was a World War I German flying ace credited with 48 aerial victories. A dyer's son from Krefeld, he was a patriotic young man while still in school. He began his military career in November 1914 as a 17‑year‑old Hussar. After turning to aviation, he proved to be a natural pilot.
He was wounded in action with 6 Naval Squadron on 6 June 1917. Killed during a legendary dogfight with seven S.E.5as, Werner Voss drove two planes to the ground and damaged the rest before his silvery blue Fokker DR.I was shot down by Arthur Rhys Davids.
"Capt. J. McCudden, No. 56 Squadron ... saw a S.E.5a fighting a triplane, so with others dived at it, and for the next ten minutes the enemy triplane fought the five S.E.5s with great skill and determination. Eventually, however, it was destroyed by 2nd-Lieut. Rhys Davids of the same squadron, who had previously driven down a two-seater. . .The triplane was seen to crash in our lines by other pilots and the other occupant proved to be Lieut. Werner Voss, who was killed." Royal Flying Corps Communique
"I shall never forget my admiration for that German pilot, who single handed, fought seven of us for ten minutes . . . I saw him go into a fairly steep dive and so I continued to watch, and then saw the triplane hit the ground and disappear into a thousand fragments, for it seemed to me that it literally went into powder." James McCudden
"His flying was wonderful, his courage magnificent and in my opinion he is the bravest German airman whom it has been my privilege to see fight." James McCudden
"If I could only have brought him down alive..." Arthur Rhys Davids to James McCudden
Blake, no wach out!!
1247x1067 Cableando la calefacción de un traje de piloto alemán, ha 1918. I Guerra Mundial.