WW2 Weapons

The World Wars 1914-18 and 1939-45.

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Recent Reports:

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German 21-cm (8in) howitzer
World War One Diary for Sunday, June 9, 1918: Western Front (FOURTH) GERMAN GNEISENAU OFFENSIVE VS FRENCH ON RIVER MATZ Read more
Japanese battleship Mutsu.
WW2 War Diary for Tuesday, June 8, 1943: Sea War Pacific: Battleship Mutsu destroyed by magazine explosion in Hiroshima Bay. Read more
Aircraft carrier HMS Eagle
World War One Diary for Saturday, June 8, 1918: Sea War Britain: US Ambassador's wife launches 26,000t carrier HMS Eagle Read more
German U-boat shortly before sunk by plane of RAF Coastal Command.
WW2 War Diary for Monday, June 7, 1943: Sea War Atlantic: 8 U-boats simulate much larger 'wolf-pack' by transmitting frequent Read more
Armored train of the Czech Legion
World War One Diary for Friday, June 7, 1918: Eastern Front USSR: First Congress of Red Military Commissars. Northern Russia: Read more
Leg amputee former German soldiers
WW2 War Diary for Sunday, June 6, 1943: Neutrals Spain: Government proposes the establishment of 'non-bombing zones'. Read more
US soldiers in battle
World War One Diary for Thursday, June 6, 1918: Western Front Marne - Battle of Belleau Wood (until June 25): Read more
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto
WW2 War Diary for Saturday, June 5, 1943: Home Fronts Japan: State funeral for Amiral Yamamoto in Tokyo. Sea War Read more
Handley Page bomber
World War One Diary for Wednesday, June 5, 1918: Air War France: Independent Force formed (officially on June 6) under Read more
Junkers Ju 88 engaged in night operations over Russia
WW2 War Diary for Friday, June 4, 1943: Air War Eastern Front - First of series of Luftwaffe raids on Read more
'Tiger' Clemenceau
World War One Diary for Tuesday, June 4, 1918: Home Fronts France: Clemenceau to Chamber 'I shall fight before Paris Read more
supplied with material from the Allies
WW2 War Diary for Thursday, June 3, 1943: Occupied Territories France: De Gaulle and Giraud reorganize French Committee of National Read more
soldiers rush ammunition supplies to the front
World War One Diary for Monday, June 3, 1918: Western Front Churchill visits BEF GHQ, Paris and Front until June Read more
Painting the Red Star on a RAF Supermarine Spitfire at Abadan, Iran
WW2 War Diary for Wednesday, June 2, 1943: Air War Eastern Front: Big air battle over Kursk; Russians claim 162 Read more
Hermann Goering with the Pour le Merite
World War One Diary for Sunday, June 2, 1918: Air War Western Front: Oberleutnant Goering awarded Pour le Merite. Germans Read more
Junkers Ju88C heavy long-range fighters
WW2 War Diary for Tuesday, June 1, 1943: Secret War Western Europe: Ju 88C long-range fighters shoot down Dutch airliner Read more
US troops march through a French village
World War One Diary for Saturday, June 1, 1918: Western Front Marne: Germans held between the Oise and Marne (US Read more
U-boat at Brest
WW2 War Diary for Monday, May 31, 1943: Sea War Merchant shipping losses in May 1943: 41 Allied ships with Read more
FT-17 with Hotchkiss machine-gun
World War One Diary for Friday, May 31, 1918: Western Front Battlefield debut of French Renault FT-17 light tank: 30 Read more
Killed Japnaese soldiers Attu
WW2 War Diary for Sunday, May 30, 1943: Sea War Pacific: End of organized Japanese resistance on Attu. 2,622 Japanese Read more

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About WW2 Weapons

WW2 affected virtually almost any corner of the globe. In the six years between 1939 and 1945, some kind of 50 million people lost their lives, and hardly any who survived were not affected. It was the costliest and utmost widespread conflict the world has forever obtained.
It was subsequently battled on ground, sea and in the air with weapons which in fact had first been used in World War One of 1914-18. Ironically, a far greater conflict was to come out from the burning embers of these ‘war to end all wars’, and with it huge innovations in technologies.
The countries engaged in WW2 finally owned the techniques, potential and weapons to fight every other in a much more powerful – and more deadly – manner.

However only Britain, her Empire allies as well as Germany were engaged during the full period (as well as, in fact, Japan and China since 1937). For all the other nations the conflict was of a shorter duration. The US and Japan, for example, were at war from December 1941 to August 1945 (and the USA was at the same time at war with Germany, until Hitler‘s defeat in May 1945).

The state of affairs was so complex, the skeins of partnerships and enmity so connected that it would require a really huge document in fact to illustrate the prospect.
Only one factor was less complicated and widespread to all the nations involved: the nature of the weapons that the soldier used to struggle their way to triumph – or defeat.

Of course, there were differences in detail of the WW2 weapons: the German Panzer V Panther was a very different tank from the US M4 Sherman, the Russian T-34, or the English Cromwell. But in fact they were all much the same – armored vehicles mounting powerful guns running on tracks.

The small arms with which the various opponent countries equipped their armies were totally different weapons in details too, but basically these were all guns for launching projectiles at high speed.

Simply speaking, lots of people would just say that guns are guns, bombs are bombs, aircraft are planes, and so on. But there is definitely even more to it than that, for the abilities to obtain victory or lose a war actually rested on these kinds of WW2 weapons’ qualities, just as a lot of as it did on the fighting abilities of those who employed them and on the strategic sense of those who directed them in their use.

Texas High School Diploma Online for Military History

Shermans vs Panthers
Shermans vs Panthers with 3d models.

General about WW2 Weapons:

All information, data, specifications and statistics used on the website WW2 Weapons have been compiled from a variety of sources and the large library of the author – who now lives on Crete for a long time – about military history and history, especially about the world wars, which has been built up over decades.

The most important source references and notes about additional literature can be found at the end for the most articles. To the best of our knowledge and belief, the most secure and reliable information and sources were used, which are also constantly updated and improved.

These data and specifications are used among other things for as accurate as possible historical military simulations, such as the war game WW2 Total. The photos are mostly ‘public domain’, but partly also property of the author.

The author therefore asks for understanding that he can’t handle additional requests for the sources or pictures beyond that due to time constraints and provides the information and its sources to the internet community as ‘as published’, i.e. either the visitor of this website considers it helpful and agrees with it over, or just leaves it.
Discussions and suggestions for improvement are nevertheless welcome and can be held below the respective reports.

Panzermuseum Munster,
Norman ‘Kretaner’ visits Panzer Museum Munster, Germany.
WW2 Weapons
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Conflict of Nations - World War III