German He 111 bomber of Kampfgeschwader 1 taking off, France, summer 1940

Caption     German He 111 bomber of Kampfgeschwader 1 taking off, France, summer 1940 ww2dbase
Photographer   
Source    ww2dbaseGerman Federal Archives
Identification Code   Bild 101I-385-0560-31
More on...   
He 111 Doppel-Blitz   Main article  Photos  
Photo Size 800 x 562 pixels
Added By C. Peter Chen
Licensing  Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 Germany License (CC BY-SA 3.0 DE).

See Bild 101I-385-0560-31 on Wikimedia Commons

According to the German Federal Archive (Bundesarchiv), as of 21 Jul 2010, photographs can be reproduced with if these preconditions are met:
- quote the "Federal Archives" as source,
- add the signature of the pictures and
- of name of the originator, i.e. the photographer.
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You also can use fotos from the Federal Archives for free on Wikimedia Commons
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Bundesarchiv
According to the German Federal Archive (Bundesarchiv), as of 19 Jul 2023, "You also can use fotos from the Federal Archives on Wikimedia Common free of charge".

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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. Commenter identity confirmed Bill says:
26 Sep 2016 02:56:49 PM

Heinkel He-111H powered by 2 x Junkers Jumo 211 liquid cooled engines. Aircraft looks like its taking off armed with 3 x 7.92mm machine guns in the nose, dorsal and ventral position.

FIRE CONTROL:

As the war continued the He-111 was upgraded with two added 7.92mm's located in the port and starboard beam positions. Later added 20mm cannon's and 13mm machine guns were added, even 1 x 7.92mm machine gun was installed in the tail cone.

SIGHTING IN:

Luftwaffe ground crewmen in left of photo, looks like an S.F. 14Z.Gi H/6400 Artillery Periscope/ Rangefinder Binoculars. Usually called (Rabbit Ears) w/tripod and was introduced and accepted by the German Army in 1905. What does S.F. mean
(Scherenfernrohr) or Scissors Telescope...don't you just love these German Compound words!

Equipment was issued to self-propelled artillery, assault gun crews and artillery batteries.

IF IT AIN'T BROKE DON'T FIX IT:

Did you know the last army in Europe to use this type of field equipment, was the (NVA) the East German Army up to 1990...

I thank the editor/ww2db for his continued support

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