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#31
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the welders we had were almost all too old to be drafted - and welders who are trained in welding armor plate would have been needed on the home front for sure - plus keep in mind that York didn't just make new vehicles - it did lots of re-manufactures and upgrades as well
The Army made sure that those welders stayed right where they were after 9/11 for sure - we didnt lose any of them to call-ups, even the ones in the Guard or the Reserve - not with all the Bradley's, M88's and MRAP's we were working on |
#32
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Iraqi Freedom isn't on par with a national mobilization like WW2. Not even with the mobilization for Desert Storm.
For comparison, look at the ages and occupations of Seabees in WW2. None of those is any comparison for the conditions in the U.S. after the canon nuclear exchange, famines, and plagues. Those do not discriminate. Back to older but, survivable systems that make sense to resurrect in T2k. M113 production.... Strykers and LAVs are working, but are considerable more complex..... maybe some M113 IFV conversions? M901s? |
#33
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command post vehicle, rolled off the production line. Addition orders from Kuwait and Thailand, kept the production line running till 1998 IHS Land Warfare Platforms: Armoured Fighting Vehicles 19-05-2015
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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. |
#34
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#35
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M109 SPG - based on older tech and perfect for the military to use for defending their base areas - not many marauders who could stand up to it and for those who don't know what it is it looks like the biggest tank in the world Bradley - you may not have TOW's but that 25mm is more than enough to deal with anything most marauders or Mexican units will have you would only be able to build what you had parts on hand for - but in those days we used to keep up to six months inventory on hand - get power going again and that's a lot of vehicles to use, built at a low rate of production, to be able to re-equip whats left |
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Since the microchips and advanced circuitry to make ATGMs is out of the question in the near term..... T2K - T2K10....
For the defense? A return to towed AT guns by the West? The 105mm and 120mm tank armaments mounted to two or four wheeled chassis? Even the 25, 30, 35, and 40mm belt fed chain guns...... light armor and support fire. I know these all function in much superior manner mounted on a mobile armored chassis (IFV or MBT). However, given the constraints on manufacturing and resources, a 105mm AT gun towed be a deuce and a half would be a boon for a light infantry battalion. Last edited by ArmySGT.; 09-22-2016 at 12:24 PM. |
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#38
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And don't forget the portee concept - a truck slightly modified to allow it to carry and use an artillery piece on its bed. This gives the advantage of leaving the gun in its original configuration so that it can be used in the conventional manner but also allowing it to be used from the truck that transports it allowing the gun a modest shoot & scoot ability. The gun on truck combination also has better mobility than a conventional truck with towed gun.
While it's been stated (notably on the wiki page for portee) that the modern terms for such a setup are "gun truck" or "technical", I disagree. The "en portee" concept doesn't have the gun mount permanently fixed to the truck bed as is typically the case gun trucks and technicals. The concept has been resurrected a few times over the decades with the last one I know of being the M777 Portee from BAE Systems in 2005. http://www.military-today.com/artillery/m777_portee.htm This image shows a New Zealand Army Austin K5 truck with an Ordnance QF 6-pounder AT gun in portee configuration as used in the North Africa campaigns of WW2. The website states, "These vehicles were adapted to serve as platforms for a 6pdr Anti Tank gun in the desert when battles were very fluid affairs moving over considerable distances and the guns were required to be put into action quickly." Website link http://www.shoplandcollection.com/he...-k5-gun-portee ![]() Note that in this case, the gun has simply been chained to the bed, some trucks were modified with wheel channels to make loading and unloading the gun easier such as in this picture ![]() The K5 from the first image had a payload of up to 3 tons so the 6-pdr used less than half that capacity leaving enough spare for the crew and a decent ammo load. So even with the weight of a modern artillery piece, the more capable trucks of the 1970s onwards, should be able to handle the portee configuration with ease. |
#39
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My father's father was a New Zealand Army infantry captain when he fought in the North Africa campaigns. He was commanding a unit of Bren Gun Carriers when they relieved Tobruk. He fought in Crete too. His war ended when he had half his moustache shot off.
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#40
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By the time things get bad enough for a a national production board to consider such a reconfiguration (post TDM), the ability to coordinate and execute the creation of a brand new production line for this simpler product (and that's what it would be; M113 production lines are long gone by 1997) is gone. Promulgating simpler weapon designs that could be produced at a workshop level (such as the Sten or M3 Grease Gun) is one thing; an M113 is quite another. Remember that the production line for an M113 or a cannon is NOT one workshop or even one factory. For the M113, the engine is built and assembled elsewhere; the shipped for inclusion in the M113; the transmission another; track components are forged in one (or more) locations; assembled in another; then shipped to the M113 assembly point; armor panels are assembled elsewhere. I think post TDM things are falling apart too fast. The new (old) component assembly lines would never have completed. That's 6 months to a year of time when they are being built, producing nothing. Rather than trying to coordinate retooling several factories in the face of growing chaos, I'd suggest a better plan would be to simplify the existing designs, such as cheaper electronic components (targeting, radio,radar, etc) - though I think these too would slow and break down due to failures in the transportation network. Uncle Ted |
#41
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I think a good model to look at for real world capabilities would be the "up-armoring kits" shipped to Iraq and Afghanistan once IEDs were recognized as THE threat.
Units in theater did a lot with existing materiel. At least the Marine Corps responded pretty quickly in developing and shipping armoring kits (I'm not saying the Army didn't, but I know the USMC did). http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...ground/mak.htm "Strapping" on extra armor to an already existing fleet of HMMWV or other vehicles is 'easier' then producing a whole new fleet. I think a lot of hillbilly armor would be used by stateside units. Some of that hillbilly armor might be applied to 'standard' commercial heavy duty trucks (like FORD F250 or larger). Look at what the Mexican Narco Cartels have been able to produce in underground facilities. I'm certain that many US cities/or states could produce something at least as good. The USMC depots at Albany, Ga and Barstow, CA would be able to produce some interesting vehicles since they store a LOT of semi obsolete kit and have a very good supply of machine tools, skilled machinists and 'stock materiel.' |
#42
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The Continental engine and the Allison transmission of the A2 are the same as those in quite a few pieces of heavy equipment (bulldozer, front loaders, etc). Those are going to be built regardless of the war effort. Most of the engines / transmissions in U.S. fighting vehicles are found in civil engineering equipment. The one piece that is most difficult to produce in fact is the cast hull.... I might well be very wrong... but, I don't think the U.S. can even make a cast hull in 2016 with the current environmental laws and other compliance issues. |
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#44
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You have the M119 howitzer, a licence produced version of the British L119 Light Gun. At just under 2000kg it could be carried by trucks of 3-ton or more capacity.
To be fair though, there wouldn't be a lot of them, they entered service in 1989 with the 7th Infantry Division. |
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https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/060d4ea...some-help.html
Now, to get a six-shooter chambered for these... ![]()
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"Let's roll." Todd Beamer, aboard United Flight 93 over western Pennsylvania, September 11, 2001. |
#46
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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. |
#47
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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. |
#48
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"light" (unresponsive). You couldn't fire it without destabilizing the 5-ton with the recoil either. You'd be better off shooting modified 105mm howitzer rounds out of a recoilless rifle. Before someone screams foul... Yes, 105mm cannon rounds CAN BE modified to fire in a Recoilless Rifle of the same caliber. There was a tail fin and propellant assembly developed to do just this. It was a "bolt on in the field" modification kit made by the same company that competed in the JADAM tail kit trials. I don't know if the Army ever adopted the kit, though. |
#49
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Found this.... and I think this stays with the spirit of the thread.
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#50
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#51
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#52
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A massive technical college program also seems to need creation. The machinists and welders will need to expand their numbers.
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#53
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1.) The Light Gun uses a normal gas recoil system. This new system uses the "reduced recoil system" pioneered on the 105mm Tank Gun and that would be a MAJOR retrofit to the Light Gun (to avoid overwhelming the 5-Ton's suspension). One way to "overcome" this issue would be to "dismount" the 105mm Howitzers from Spectre Gunships. These already have a similar "recoil reduction system" fitted. 2.) Removing the Light Gun's carriage ALSO REMOVES ALL OF THE GUN'S SIGHTING SYSTEMS. The mounts for new sights would have to be engineered and PRECISELY PLACED in relation to the barrel in order to achieve any accuracy at all. This is why I made the suggestion above. All of that being said, I really think that the current Army SHOULD look at a system like the one above. You could run a 6 man Section with just TWO 5-Ton trucks (the gun truck and an uparmored ammo carrier). This system would be cheap AND mobile for use in "Insurgent Theaters" where you need enhanced mobility OVER firepower/range. These would have been great to deploy to Afghanistan during the "surge." |
#54
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The mortar itself can fire on single shots or on automatic using 4 round clips. Range for direct fire is 1,000m and indirect fire is 4,000m. The US Army is also working on a 120mm system using Elbit Systems SPEAR - Autonomous Recoil Mortar System (RMS)120mm Mortar System http://www.hmmwvinscale.com/hmmwvprototypes.htm http://www.network54.com/Forum/21183...t+the+Scorpion
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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. |
#55
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Here is the production numbers and dates of the M113 which ran form 1964 to 1992, and then restarted again in 1994 and ceased in 1997.
Interesting Points 1. The US Army still has and operates 6,000 M113 2. Over 4,500 were produced in Italy under licence, for their army and export
__________________
I will not hide. I will not be deterred nor will I be intimidated from my performing my duty, I am a Canadian Soldier. |
#56
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#57
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That's what I was thinking, could also be captured equipment too. I wonder how hard the project was?
__________________
I will not hide. I will not be deterred nor will I be intimidated from my performing my duty, I am a Canadian Soldier. |
#58
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#59
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#60
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This is the way of the apocalypse https://youtu.be/v-XS4aueDUg
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