nice to see Sequisha doing his bit for the war in pic #20
Always enjoy your posts!
Cover a road with a anti tank cannon waiting for a tank attack looks something really really dangerous
In the 4th picture is that some sort of IFF the checkered pattern on the soldiers back?
Wow , the quality of those photos is remarkable
~~Im pretty sure these are all AI created images~~
Edit: i see now, thank you. I didnt realise the upscaling gave that effect
The Triumph (motor)cycle company was founded by the german Siegfried Bettmann. He moved 1885 from his hometown Nuremberg to UK and founded the company 1886. In 1896 he founded also a Triumph company in Nuremberg (TWN) so there have been uk Triumph bikes and german ones, too. So in both large wars there were different Triumph (motor)bikes in use from both sides.
Nuremberg has been an important center city for (motor)bike companies: There have been about 50 different producers there until the 1950ies the car industry brought them down.
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nice to see Sequisha doing his bit for the war in pic #20
Always enjoy your posts!
Cover a road with a anti tank cannon waiting for a tank attack looks something really really dangerous
In the 4th picture is that some sort of IFF the checkered pattern on the soldiers back?
Wow , the quality of those photos is remarkable
~~Im pretty sure these are all AI created images~~
Edit: i see now, thank you. I didnt realise the upscaling gave that effect
The Triumph (motor)cycle company was founded by the german Siegfried Bettmann. He moved 1885 from his hometown Nuremberg to UK and founded the company 1886. In 1896 he founded also a Triumph company in Nuremberg (TWN) so there have been uk Triumph bikes and german ones, too. So in both large wars there were different Triumph (motor)bikes in use from both sides.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siegfried_Bettmann
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triumph_Cycle
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triumph_(TWN)
Nuremberg has been an important center city for (motor)bike companies: There have been about 50 different producers there until the 1950ies the car industry brought them down.
https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/N%C3%BCrnberger_Motorradindustrie
These are really cool, thanks for sharing it with us.
I had to do a double take for Gunner Wilson from NZ. Almost looked contemporary. Wonderful selection of photos.
The shirt in picture 14 really looks out of place.