When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Flamethrower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flamethrower

    Unlike the flamethrowers of the other powers during World War II, the Soviets were the only ones to consciously attempt to camouflage their infantry flamethrowers. With the ROKS-2 flamethrower this was done by disguising the flame projector as a standard-issue rifle, such as the Mosin–Nagant, and the fuel tanks as a standard infantryman's ...

  3. Abwehrflammenwerfer 42 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abwehrflammenwerfer_42

    A US soldier holds up a German static flamethrower, probably an Abwehrflammenwerfer 42. An Abwehrflammenwerfer 42 displayed at Elizabeth Castle, Jersey, 2017. The Abwehrflammenwerfer 42 was a German static defensive flamethrower, flame fougasse or flame mine used during the Second World War.

  4. Flame tank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flame_tank

    The first combat-ready flamethrower tanks appeared in the early 1930s: KhT-27, KhT-26 and a number of others - in the USSR, CV3 LF - in Italy. Before the start of World War II b more than 1,300 flamethrower tanks of various types were produced by Soviet industry. [8] By the mid-1930s, the first combat use of flamethrower tanks took place.

  5. Flammenwerfer 35 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flammenwerfer_35

    German infantry taking cover behind trees on the Eastern Front. One man carries the Flammenwerfer 35. This flamethrower, like all flamethrowers employed by the Wehrmacht, was exclusively used by sturmpionieres (assault pioneers); specialist pioneers who were to assist the infantry in an assault, by overcoming natural and man-made obstacles for the infantry, clearing enemy fortifications with ...

  6. M1 flamethrower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1_flamethrower

    The Americans experimented with and developed flamethrower systems during the war, but were curtailed by the signing of the armistice in November 1918. The previously aforementioned tactics against their deployment and the extreme danger of the flamethrower system contributed to the American forces regarding it as a total failure.

  7. ROKS flamethrowers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROKS_flamethrowers

    The ROKS-2 and ROKS-3 (Shortened from Russian, Rantseviy Ognemyot Kluyeva-Sergeyeva; Ранцевый Огнемёт Клюева — Сергеева; "Kluyev-Sergeyev backpack flamethrower") were man-portable flamethrowers used by the USSR in the Second World War. The ROKS-2 was designed not to draw attention, so the fuel and gas tanks were ...

  8. Is Florida law cool with owning a flamethrower?

    www.aol.com/news/florida-law-cool-owning...

    Since flamethrowers are mostly known as weapons you see in World War II movies, one might ask: Why would anyone have a flamethrower in Florida?

  9. List of flamethrowers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_flamethrowers

    The M2 flamethrower (M2-2) was an American man portable backpack flamethrower that was used in World War II. It was the successor to the M1 and M1A1 flamethrowers. M9 flamethrower: 1960 United States: The M9 flamethrower was an American man portable backpack flamethrower that was used in the Vietnam War. It was lighter and easier to pack than ...