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Maggie’s Military Jeopardy

Your butter bar has the look, while trying to match his map to the ground you've been humping for 3 days. LOL


(There's a boat house at Hereford? If so, can it be ambushed by a cup of coffee?)

I'm sure that's true, but not the famous quote:

"You've never been lost until you've been lost at Mach 3"

Attributed to an SR-71 crew
 
Ok, another gimme:

"Yea, though I fly through the Valley of the Shadow Of Death, I shall fear no evil, for..."
 
That's true for a bada$$ grunt, but remember we're flying here.

It's another SR-71 quote:

"Yea though I fly through the Valley of the Shadow Of Death, I will fear no evil, for I am 80,000 feet and climbing."

No Blackbird was ever shot down despite constant SAM launches against them. They were just too high and too fast to touch. By the time a missle reached up to where they were when it was launched, the Blackbird was in another Time Zone by then.
 
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pretty sure a blackbird was shot down over cuba during the missle crisis and the pilot was killed..........
 
Nope. Never happened.

https://theaviationist.com/2013/12/0...1-speed-enemy/

I think you're thinking of Gary Powers, who was shot down in a U-2 over Cuba. He survived.



I thought Powers an his U-2 was shot down over Russia, an the one in Cuba was just a Fighter equipped for a Photo/Recon run?
Add,..... I was but 13 when Powers was shot down but in 1978 a X girl friend of his (Norma Hilton) taught me a few things about shotgun shooting. I took heed as she was a past Olympic coach as well as eye candy.
 
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There were U2's shot 'at' over Cuba. But the SR-71 did not even exist until the Johnson administration. I believe that there were also some 'standard' fighters set up as reconnaissance aircraft that were either hit or shot down during the missile crisis. But no SR-71 was ever touched by enemy fire. Its operational record is as perfect as one could hope.

Cheers,

Sirhr
 
GF, you are correct. Powers was in Soviet airspace when he was shot down. I let the other poster put the Cuba thing in my head.
 
There were U2's shot 'at' over Cuba. But the SR-71 did not even exist until the Johnson administration. I believe that there were also some 'standard' fighters set up as reconnaissance aircraft that were either hit or shot down during the missile crisis. But no SR-71 was ever touched by enemy fire. Its operational record is as perfect as one could hope.

Cheers,

Sirhr

My guess would be RF-4's going warp factor snot...
 
btw .....the luckiest city in the world is....................

Kokura japan.

It was the secondary target for the Hiroshima bomb. It was a clear day over Hiroshima so they got a break.
Kokura was the primary target for the second bomb. It was cloudy that morning so the plane make three passes
over the target and decided to move on to the secondary target Nagasaki. Again saved by weather. Almost
annihilated twice!
 
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THANK you, Shootist for clearing that up. Between you, me, and Gunfighter, we each had about 2/3 of our story about U2s getting shot down correct. Put them all together and we finally have something resembling actual history.

I was going to ask you to answer your previous question. I read it and guessed it probably had something to do with the Japanese nuke targets, but had no idea which city, or the details of the story. Cool!
 
Alex I'll take tactic items for 1000
your going on ambush it's 0100 hrs, you need to lead everyone in an locate them very quietly w/o night vision, what none issue item do you use?
 
Answer is fishing line,
The best at scouting, map to ground, an kim'ing the topo from the map is sent in after getting his eyes ready*. Then finds the bush site makes his best judgement call for best place for largest weapon an OIC. Ties the fishing line to that spot and strings it to back to the RP, tieing off every so often. Line is used to lead everyone in very quietly. Once there (RP) lays it out for the OIC an ranking NCO under a poncho. While he was gone everyone was assigned a number all odd to the left at main weapon even to the right. Numbers assigned based on issued weapon, once you get to the OIC you are to be 2-3 yds from the last man you past. last to set up are MG's right an left flanks as well as right next to the OIC, once he bangs the largest weapon (normally a claymore) then the other claymores are popped and everyone opens up at once. Done right no one survives, the KZ. Fishing Line is never strung more than 200yds long, with a quality team it can be done with as little as 50 yds.


* eyes ready, poncho doubled over head (keeping eyes wide open) for at lease 10 minutes before needing them, gives you about 10-15 minutes of good night vision.
 
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Decorations for $200:

21314569_1239184976228147_7895764997513350706_n.jpg


Whose shadow box is this?

Cheers,

Sirhr
 
Gunfighter,

Cyclical rate Usually less than say 49 rpm
Sustained 450 - 550rpm

Rates of fire also employed:
single
slow
rapid
cyclic

Plainly referred to as "sustained" & "cyclic."

 
Gunfighter,

Cyclical rate Usually less than say 49 rpm
Sustained 450 - 550rpm

Rates of fire also employed:
single
slow
rapid
cyclic

Plainly referred to as "sustained" & "cyclic."

Answer I was looking for was the M85C 50bmg, low rate 400-500 for ground troops an high rate 800-900 for aircraft. Odd thing about that weapon was it had issues running on the low rate but on high, ran like a Swiss watch.

http://modernfirearms.net/machine/usa/m5-tank-machine-gun-e.html
 
What is a "duckbill" spreader attachment.


Military Small Arms for 400 Alex.
What was designed to be carried by infantrymen during an assault, advance while supported by the sling over the shoulder, or to be fired from the hip. It used a double-column 20-round box magazine, although 40-round magazines were also used in an anti-aircraft role.
 
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Military Small Arms again for 500. The M261 kit allowed the service rifle to do this.
 
Great picture. Is that a Babbage difference engine? I'm going to guess polynomial functions used in naval
navigation?
 
Correct enough... but not on navigation. That was done with the Harrison clocks that I visited last weekend.

This was used to create naval gunnery tables that let them manually 'computerize' big guns. Figured out all the flight trajectories. Until radar-assisted guns on big U.S. ships in WW2 (The Missouri and North Carolina among them), gun aiming was by mechanical computer designed using the calculations turned out by the Babbage Engines.

Before that, computers were humans... who computed. Mainly women who ran the same calculation again and again with tiny variable differences. Monotonous work, often with errors. Babbage put it in to brass gears... and turned it into a machine problem.

Among the first computers. If you don't count the Antikythera Mechanism from 2,000 years earlier...

Next up????

Cheers,

Sirhr
 
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Browning-1919A4-M13-Spare-Parts-Roll-1919-A6.jpg

Military Arms for 600. This spare parts kit kept this popular weapon functioning..