#31
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Its likely that armored cars from the various transport firms (like Wells Fargo or Loomis) would be used. Their firing ports are cur for either pistols or shotguns. The larger interstate transports (think armored Greyhound Bus) would be used, but these are very rare. The most likely candiate would be home-built armored trucks, doesn't have to stop antitank rounds, but a 1/2-inch to 1 inch would stop most pistol/rifle rounds.
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#32
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Yeah the New America module in southern Florida covered that. Their Armored Cavalry and Fast Cavalry were built around the various Armor Cars from these companies.
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#33
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Agreed, though for settlements with some engineering know how but without the wherewithal to build a cannon foundry, it wouldn't be beyond the realm of the possible to have something like a de-mil'ed 105mm gun converted to a lower pressure black powder breech or muzzle loader. (Of course, putting a 12 pounder Napoleon back in service would probably be even easier . . .)
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#34
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So, and I blame this on my love of watching weird TV shows at odd hours, if you take some heavy gauge steel pipe, get a welder to weld a plate in place at one end...and then heat shrink a slightler larger pipe around the closed off end and have the welder run a thick bead around the pipe again...then drill a touch hole...load with large charge of black powder...then prime the gunner with several shots of moonshine and have him light it off....then you have a homemade cannon. Or, you can import your 12pdr from Italy and make sure your reenactment battery is ready for post WWIII...
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#35
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Lets not forget about the Avalanche control units of the US state and federal forest service, many of these unit have Working Artillery 105mm or 155mm that fire with ammunition at moutians. Other unit have 90mm RCL, there a show about them on the discovery channel I think?
Here in Canada the Army preforms the task, done various Regluar or Reserve Units
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I will not hide. I will not be deterred nor will I be intimidated from my performing my duty, I am a Canadian Soldier. Last edited by rcaf_777; 01-25-2011 at 11:44 AM. |
#36
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Dear God, 1055mm? That's more than double the bore of the Yamato's guns. Do you control avalanches by destroying the mountains?
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#37
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At least some of them also use 106mm recoilless.
The choke point on them, as far as a scavenger sort of economy, is that I think the US government support for those programs doles out ammunition in ones and twos (or whatever) as needed. Someone in the government having made the occasional bright idea that handing out a 90mm or 106mm recoilless rifle and several pallets worth of ammunition in one go has a some very, very bad potential worst case outcomes. |
#38
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#39
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
#40
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Also, even WWII light tanks like the M3/M5 Stuart have some use. You might not have any ammo for the 37mm cannon, but you still have 2-3 .30-cal / 7.62mm MGs, and the armor is good enough to stop machinegun fire.
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#41
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Yeah well like I said even in the Modules people who had modern AFVs their were some cases that all that worked were the MGs... It was pointed out that with the limited AT weapons found at 2000 that many units that weren't supplied with them, didn't stay around to find out if the main gun would fire or not...
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#42
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Interesting that this subject came up, Ive been piecing together some ideas for US 6th Army, and had some ideas for activating some new units and rebuilding some old ones as well.
Of course I add to canon by adding more Soviet or Soviet backed forces as well. Now lets see if this works or if Im going to need help; http://joest2k.wetpaint.com/photo/11...a2+cav+vehicle |
#43
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...was hoping for an image but the link will do just fine.
This "M2A3" is a simple to build vehicle that can be used as a light Cavalry vehicle or APC. The image and the following links to others are all modifications of images made by the contributors over at Junior General. http://www.juniorgeneral.org/load.php?Period=0 I agree about the 37mm ammunition as well, so I had another couple of thoughts. http://joest2k.wetpaint.com/photo/11...+25mm+and+mk19 A M8 armored car with a 25mm cannon. http://joest2k.wetpaint.com/photo/11...le+w+106mm+rcl A M20 rigged with a .50cal and a 106mm rcl. http://joest2k.wetpaint.com/photo/11514941/- A larger APC based on the M3/M9 series of half-tracks but using wheels instead of tracks for easier maintenance. http://joest2k.wetpaint.com/photo/11509388/m22a6+w+40mm Someone else had the idea for using 40mm guns for ammunition availability...I had thought the same thing. This is a light tank based on the M22 Locust except with a 40mm gun. The idea behind these rigs is the ability to improvise them from other types of vehicles, most being chassis for semi-trucks. Facilities for power generation, a foundry, and the mechanical equipment to build the armor, turrets, mounts and additional equipment. Using older armored vehicle plans and patterns ensures easier access to plans and technical drawings that would likely be unavailable for more modern vehicles. Another consideration is not using vehicles that are too large or too heavy to ensure that it wont take a ridiculous amount of time to build and/or convert each vehicle. |
#44
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#45
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If its worth doing...then its worth over doing!
Besides, there is no such thing as too little when dealing with explosives!!!
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#46
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Don't forget that the early M-3s used riveted armor, the bolt heads had a nasty habit of shearing when hit!
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#47
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That's true with the rubber tracks, but if you were building APCs like that out of other vehicles, it would probably be much easier to find surplus wheels and tires as opposed to finding or making the rubber tracks. I know lots of snocats and off-road tracked dump trucks use rubber tracks, but those aren't very common.
I had thought about using the Mk19 for main armament but I bet the 19s are more useful for ring mounts and technicals. But on that note, I was thinking about the 60mm Brandt breech loading mortar that the French developed. I was wondering if it would be easier to build some kind of single shot breech loading 60mm gun/mortar as opposed to milling an entire new gun barrel for a demilled gun or starting from scratch. What does everyone think? (That's with several small motorshops, at least one small steel mill, and a large mechanical shop, all Gen. Pain's stats) |
#48
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#49
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True, but I'm an easier target behind a tripod-mounted MG than a rivet is on a tank
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#50
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Also each year the Washington Department of Transportation positions two M60A3 tanks just west of Stevens Pass for avalanche control.
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"You're damn right, I'm gonna be pissed off! I bought that pig at Pink Floyd's yard sale!" |
#51
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Of course I'm in shape...round is a shape! There are a couple of photos of various pre-WWII tanks that were sprayed with machineguns (both .50 and .30-cal)...now the .50-cal would just punch through the paper-thin armor...but it was the effect of the .30-cal that caught my bloodshot eye....fired from 500 yards, the API bullets still had enough force to crack the rivet heads, sending the bolts flying about the interior....nasty!
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#52
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I suspect it would be easier to modify a WW2 era turret set up for 37mm than a conversion to 25mm (at least 25mm M242), since it would be easier to sort out ammunition stowage, feed, and such, as well as not having to adjust the wiring to power the gun. A Mk19 is comparatively compact and uncomplicated, and in an open topped turret wouldn't be too hard to set up to employ the existing sights on the gun.
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#53
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Anyone have thoughts on breech loading mortars that could be used in direct fire?
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#54
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#55
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Sure, the French used just such a mortar on the AML 60-20 that was in use in the 50-70s. It was intended for support roles, but the 60mm mortar could be fired directly, whole thing was breech-loaded. And before anybody chips in about its antiarmor capabilities, it didn't have any, not enough muzzle velocity for the mortar. Direct fire range was about 500m.
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#56
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The pics are of Aberdeen PG tests on new armor and new methods of securing army. But when the rivited Stuarts saw action in North Africa, there are a lot of horror stories about the injuries caused.
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#57
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Surplus Armor
The easiest solution for the 37mm armed US tanks/afv's would be to just fabricate some adapters to place a M2HB in it's place. I bet you could fabricate the adapters with the tools and materials found in a basic machine shop.
The 50-cal would have plenty of range and hitting power for what you'd see coming at you anyway. |
#58
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I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#59
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ASP 30. 'Nuff said.
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"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
#60
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Both would be nice, but keep in mind WW2 era turrets were tight for WW2 era people (though I suppose by 2000 most folks would be making Depression era manual laborers look husky and corn fed), and the problem isn't just the gun it's the ammo, the feed chutes to get it from storage to the gun, and such. Shoe horning all that into a space formerly occupied by a manually loaded single shot gun is going to be a pretty major engineering undertaking.
Realistically, if a government/cantonment/whatever had access to a lot of manufacturing and machining capability, they'd probably be better served dropping in a whole new turret into vintage light AFVs rather than trying to jury rig a less optimal solution. (Tanks could be a different story, since I don't think anyone circa 2000 -- with the possible exception of the French and maybe Japanese -- has the capability to fabricate new MBT turrets). |
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