Yay for Strike Witches, then.
Fact 10:
In firearms, a sub-machine gun is an automatic carbine that is designed to fire pistol cartridges.
-a: A carbine is basically a shortened rifle.
Fact 11:
In firearms, a silencer is a barrel attachment that suppress both flash and noise by trapping escaping gases. People call them "silencers", but that is a misnomer; the bullet can still be heard.
-a: There are also weapons with an "integral suppressor" (the suppressor is part of the barrel itself). Two examples would be the Heckler and Koch MP5SD sub-machine gun and the VSS Vintorez sniper rifle.
-b: Subsonic ammunition, designed to reduce the sonic boom a bullet makes when escaping the barrel, is recommended for suppressors. More quiet, but velocity is decreased.
-c: The Russians have developed a 30mm suppressed grenade launcher called the "Tishina" and a suppressed sniper rifle chambered in specially designed 12.7mm cartridges, the VKS Vychlop. For reference, 12.7mm cartridges are used on enemy materiel, like lightly armored vehicles and whatnot.
-d: "Materiel" is spelled right; it is used to refer to equipment in a military.
Edit: Continuing...
Fact 11:
Erich Hartmann had to crash-land his plane 14 times during his career. The cause? It was not enemy fire; he never had to crash-land because of it. It was either mechanical failure or the parts of the planes that he had shot down hitting his plane. Hartmann's style was to get as close as possible to enemy fighters, then open up with every weapon, causing the parts to fly at him.
-a: There is also a story about Hartmann and how he took Hitler's hat by accident. It goes like this: in 1944, Hartmann and other famous aces were invited to Hitler's house in the Bavarian Alps. All of them got drunk on cognac and champagne on the way, and while they all had time to sober up, Hartmann was still intoxicated. Realizing that he couldn't find his own hat, he took a hat from a stand and said it was too big. The Luftwaffe adjutant, Major von Below, immediately criticized Hartmann, saying the hat he was wearing was Hitler's and that he should put it back. Hartmann made a crack about how Hitler's head had to be big for his job before following the order.
--The episode of Strike Witches where Erica steals Lucchini's panties because she couldn't find her own is a reference to this event.
F. 12:
While the best fighter ace was Hartmann, the most decorated Luftwaffe pilot and German serviceman in World War II was Hans-Ulrich Rudel, a dive-bomber pilot. He managed to destroy about 2,000 targets, including a battleship and nine aircraft. To get an idea of how much decorations he had earned, the Nazi government gave him the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Golden Oak Leaves, Swords, and Diamonds. He is the
only German serviceman to ever earn that distinction.
F.13
The Thach Weave, in aerial combat, is a maneuver developed by US Navy aviator John Thach as a way to counter the Japanese Mitsubishi A6M "Zero" and its better mobility compared to the slower-turning F4F Wildcats the US Navy was using. It needed at least two planes: one would be the "bait", and the other would be the "hook". If an enemy followed the "bait" plane, then both planes would turn towards each other. Once both planes had passed each other and had gained some distance, the two would repeat the same tactic again. When done correctly, it always allowed someone a perfect chance to shoot down an opposing plane while limiting how much room the enemy place had to fly. It was eventually adopted by the other branches of the US military in World War II, and it remains a viable tactic today.
Video on how it looks like ( From 7:21 to 7:27):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRGrrf20Hys