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#81
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
Thanks, it does look promising from a quick check. Whether any of it is digitised, I haven't yet established.
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#82
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
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After rambling through this thread I think the selling maxim “Never ask the customer what he would like” comes to mind…. |
#83
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
I know Eddie Creek donated much of his collection to it recently Nick
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#84
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
Eddie's donation went to the Deutsches Technikmuseum in Berlin rather than the Deutsches Museum in Munich.
As far as I am aware, none of the German aviation holdings at the Deutsches Museum have been digitised but I'd be happy to be proven wrong as they do have some wonderful material. Pleasingly, they do at least now allow the use of digital cameras as long as they are not too high spec. The archive at the Deutsches Technikmuseum is searchable: https://www.technikmuseum.findbuch.n...php?ar_id=3750 |
#85
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
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#86
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
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The arcane term "Market Research" involves exactly this. The same is true of industrial/product design. Manufacturers need to know what customers want. They can't guess. A person can publish whatever they want without doing market research but run the very real risk of printing/publishing something few will buy. |
#87
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
edwest2 wrote in part:
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I began my interest in the Luftwaffe and buying books and magazines about it in 1964 as a result of a bad accident in Freiburg that put my Oldsmobile F-85 out of commission for nearly a year. No more nightly runs to the Gasthäuser. Since then (58 years ago), I would conservatively guess some 250 books and major articles have appeared on the beloved Bf 109. How many more will have to be published before the few buyers that are left finally say, "Okay, I've got everything I need now, you can stop the presses!" L. |
#88
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
On the contrary AMC, this thread has been most illuminating. It's vital I try and publish books people want, not least for the sake of my bank balance
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#89
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
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Volume One: Photo and technical identification guide. I'm talking about as many good, clean photos of all the production versions and variations, all the field conversion kits and other add-on equipment, with arrows if need be and copious references to original documents like service manuals. Volume Two: Engines and internal cockpit equipment, with details about gun-sights and radios. Volume Three: Airframe internal details, test document references and performance data against any Allied fighters. |
#90
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Re: Market research - 'Most Wanted' Luftwaffe books
Ed's suggested Bf 109 books would be welcomed here too. As far as I know, despite Larry deZeng's reference to some 250 books on the topic, the hard truth is, I think, that vast majority of those in English are woefully outdated and are not based on deep archival research. For example, the handling and performance issues are treated in a very fragmented and unanalytical way in most English books. For, I have never come across expert discussion on the effect of tge slats opening asymmetrically. E.g. Eric Brown mentions that while not a single Finnish pilot account mentions that. And not in a single English reference I have seen analytical discussion of 109's spinning characteristics.
Another aspect completely lacking is the German mechanics' view of 109's technical characteristics. How did it compare to the Fw 190 as far as ease of field maintenance etc. go. Again, there very probably ample material on that in the archives, but they have ignored by authors more interested in heroic ace pilot personal combat stories. After all, the more technical aspects require understanding of the technicalities discussed. And the best qualified persons to have that knowledge are aircraft designers and engineers, not journalists or others coming from humanistic disciplines.
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"No man, no problem." Josef Stalin possibly said...:-) Last edited by Jukka Juutinen; 11th June 2022 at 14:43. |
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