Posted on 08/05/2021 2:07:34 PM PDT by Enlightened1
COVID Vaccine Passport company ENTRUST and their rich NAZI heritage.
https://banned.video/watch?id=610c38c002663f30666e952b
All jet aircraft engines have a ‘nazi past’.
Granted and ditto for our space program.
Jul 29, 2018 · Inventor of the first jet engine. An Englishman and a German both contemporaneously invented jet engines. Sir Frank Whittle is often given credit for the invention of the turbojet engine which made jet airplanes possible. The truth is that he and a German physicist Hans von Ohain both independently invented jet engines in the late 1930’s.
They never strapped Sir Whittle’s gizmo to the underside of a Messerschmitt.
Family also owns a big chunk of BMW.
Didn’t a ME 262 have two “gizmos”?
Untrue.
There’s a British lineage too.
And if you want to really go back there was a Frenchman designing and building an early plane that, IIRC, used a piston engine driven low power compressor of some sort that he dumped more fuel into … I want to say in combination with the hot exhaust from the engine. He was not a pilot though so on a day he was running an engine test, and completely unaware was rolling forward and gaining speed, he found himself hurtling towards the walls of Paris … so while he did manage to pull up and fly over the walls he crashed right on the other side.
Robert Goddard was earlier but lacked funding.
Here’s a fun fact: the A6M Zero, which was indeed a truly native Japanese design and not a copy of anything, used a Hamilton Standard propeller legally built under license.
The jet engine is not a Nazi invention. Long before Whittle and Ohain invented their engines, as far back as 1791, Englishman John Barber was granted a patent for a gas turbine. In 1861 Marc Mennons and Nicolas Teleshov were granted a British patent for a gas turbine for a locomotive. In 1899, Charles Curtis patented the first gas turbine engine in the US.
The Gloster Meteor was the first British jet fighter and the Allies' only jet aircraft to achieve combat operations during the Second World War. The Meteor's development was heavily reliant on its ground-breaking turbojet engines, pioneered by Frank Whittle and his company, Power Jets Ltd. Development of the aircraft began in 1940, although work on the engines had been under way since 1936.
So apparently they did strap Sir Whittle's gizmo to the underside of a British plane.
They also strapped them to American planes, as the P80 Shooting Star actually was used for a few recon missions in Italy during the war.
“That would have made for one fast Fokker!”
That I didn’t know and thanks for the lesson.
True. But their “gizmos” were spelled “Jumo.”
so is a certain woke ice cream company
I believe the punchline to the old joke was “Them fokkers was flying’ Messerschmitts!”
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