Download The Weapons of World War I: A History of the Guns, Tanks, Artillery, Gas, and Planes Used During the Great War AudioBook Free
World Battle I, also known in its time as the "Great Battle" or the "Battle to End all Wars", was an unprecedented holocaust in conditions of its utter range. Fought by men who hailed from all edges of the globe, it saw an incredible number of soldiers do fight in brutal assaults of attrition which dragged on for weeks with little to no respite. Tens of an incredible number of artillery shells and untold vast sums of rifle and machine firearm bullets were terminated in a conflict that exhibited man's capacity to wipe out each other over a heretofore unprecedented range, and since always, such a warfare brought about technology for a price that made the growth of the Industrial Revolution appear stagnant. The hands race prior to the warfare and the attempt to break the deadlock of the American and Eastern Fronts at all possible changed the face of battle in ways that could have recently been considered unthinkable. Before 1914, traveling machines were objects of public interest; the first plane tickets of any bill on rotor airplane have been made significantly less than 5 years before and were regarded as the province of daredevils and lunatics. By 1918, all the fantastic capabilities were fielding squadrons of fighting aircraft armed with machine-guns and bombs, to state nothing of light reconnaissance planes. Tanks, one common feature on the battlefield by 1918, had not previously existed outside of the world of technology fiction stories written by writers like H.G. Wells. Machine guns had gone from being heavy, troublesome pieces with intricate water-cooling systems to single-man-portable, magazine-fed affairs like the Chauchat, the Lewis Weapon, and the M1918 Club. To these grim improvements were added flamethrowers, palm grenades, zeppelins, observation balloons, poison gas, and other advancements or innovations that revolutionized the face of warfare. The Weapons of World Battle I analyzes the scientific breakthroughs in weaponry that produced the deadliest conflict ever sold up compared to that time.