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  #1  
Old 02-10-2010, 07:22 AM
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Originally Posted by Legbreaker View Post
That makes no sense.
I think what he was saying was that by going back to crossbows one is ignoring 400 years of technology.

As far a crossbows go, I can certainly see areas without much of an industrial base going in that direction, but there was a reason those weapons were for the most part abandoned 400 years ago.

I have not had much time recently so this is my first post in this thread. One thing to remember is that Ney York City has the largest port on the East Coast. Millions of tons of war material would have traveled through the area. A portion is going to get stolen and a portion is going to be in the rail yards, on the docks or just loaded onto ships when TDM happens. You also have the lost weapons of the Police/MP and elements of the 85th infantry Division.

IMO NYC is going to have a larger proportion of Military small arms floating around it's populace than most areas of the country. Personally my goals would be to capture and refurbish them.
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Old 02-10-2010, 12:27 PM
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I can't remember if I posted this anywhere else, so at the risk of repeating myself I gave the manufacture of small arms within SAMAD (Thunder Empire) some thought. There is a great deal of 5.56mm brass and filled ammo around, plus reloading equipment, courtesy of the Pentagon's Division of Contingency Planning. There is also some 9mm Parabellum and a comparatively large quantity of 7.62x51mm ammo and equipment. Unexpectedly, gangs of Phoenix discovered a train load of .357 Magnum which was abandoned in Phoenix some time in late 1997 or early 1998. No one knows the story behind why such a large shipment of what is essentially civilian handgun ammunition was moving through Phoenix, but one does not look a gift horse in the mouth.

(SAMAD traded the gangs for the ammunition, which opens a whole other can of worms about ethics. During 1999, Huachuca had a bare-bones idea of what was going on in Phoenix, even if the gruesome details were a bit out of focus. There were no illusions that by trading food and other finished goods for the trainload of .357 ammunition and a host of scavenged materials that Huachuca, in effect, was providing material support for Phoenix's armies of the night, Mayors, and Dukes. But I digress...)

The gunsmiths and workshops of SAMAD design a handful of weapons to use the available mix of ammunition. The following notes reflect the status as of early 2001.

The so-called "SKH" is essentially an SKS chambered for 5.56 NATO. The manufacturers use as many stamped parts as possible, given their circumstances. Like the SKS, the SKH is a semi-auto rifle with an integral ten-round magazine and no autofire capability. The stock and all wooden parts are of mesquite. The barrel is somewhat longer than the barrel of the SKS, which compensates somewhat for the limited quality of barrel manufacture SAMAD can manage. Effective range is about 250 meters.

The Huachuca SMG is a copy of the PPsH-41 SMG manufactured by the Soviets during the Great Patriotic War. The Huachuca version is chambered for .357 Magnum, since there is a good deal of it available from 1999 onwards. Some modifications have been made, such as the addition of a forward grip. [Author's note: I have to do some more research on how the .357 brass is going to interact with the bolt face.] The finished product superficially resembles a Thompson SMG.

SAMAD also manufactures a pump-action shotgun based on the Mossberg 500. Stock and forward pistol grip are of mesquite.

A battle rifle based on the Springfield 1903 is also in very limited production. The Huachuca version has some modifications to simplify manufacture. Effective range is reduced somewhat as a consequence of the manufacturing trade-offs. The rifle fires the same 7.62x51mm round as the M60 MG. All wooden parts are of mesquite.

SAMAD also produces a six-shot .357 Magnum revolver as its standard side arm and for the civilian market. (Despite the authoritarian nature of the SAMAD government by 2001, the right of the citizenry to self-defense is recognized. Few can afford one of these revolvers, so carrying one becomes something of a status symbol.)

The long-term goal of manufacturing small arms is the creation of a strong export capacity, in addition to the provision of arms for the forces of SAMAD. Huachuca wants to (re-)equip militias throughout Arizona. Ideally, Huachuca will have something to offer MilGov during the inevitable reconciliation talks. Perhaps even more significantly, around the time that an American Special Operations team is recovering a downed weather satellite in southern Baja California, Constitutionalist forces in California initiate operations to secure the entirety of the Baja. The Second Mexican Civil War offers the Americans the opportunity to pit Mexican factions against each other and possibly replace the existing Mexican government with one that will be much friendlier to the US. Unfortunately, Colorado Springs is not in a position to take advantage of this opportunity. Fort Huachuca is. The provision of small arms and ammunition on any scale will be welcome and (hopefully) remembered by the Constitutionalist government of Mexico.

Webstral

Last edited by Webstral; 02-10-2010 at 01:21 PM. Reason: Hit "submit" too early
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  #3  
Old 02-11-2010, 06:25 PM
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In the 1990s, the US Government destroyed or otherwise disposed of the following small arms:

400,000 M1 Rifles
125,000 M2 Carbines
575,000 M14 Rifles
650,000 M16 Rifles
115,000 M4 Carbines
75,000 M1903 Rifles
100,000 M1911 Pistols
62,000 Browning Automatic Rifles
35,000 M3 Submachineguns
14,000 M177 Carbines
12,000 M2 Machine Guns
21,000 M1919 Machine Guns

This was the result of the post-Cold War drawdown, in which a policy decision was made to reduce the military small arms stockpile from "3 weapons for every member of the military" to "2 weapons for every member of the military". Such was the Cold War determination to avoid a repeat of the situation in 1940, when many US Army units went on exercises with broomsticks rather than rifles.

Given the rather modest increase in the size of the US military in the v1 1996 and 1997 and the very real spectre of nuclear war hanging over the heads of government authorities for almost a year before it actually happened, it is likely that a great number of these weapons (and hundreds of thousands of their civilian equivalents) were distributed to state guards, law enforcement bodies and FEMA stockpiles like the one detailed in Allegheny Uprising, along with attendant ammo stockpiles (last year the last of the US Army 30-06 ammo for Garands was sold off).

There should be plenty of relatively modern military small arms available for militia units. The issue in 2000-01 is going to be the ammo supply and, if for some reason the militia wasn't founded in 1997 or 1998, finding and standardizing on a few weapons types.

IMHO.
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Old 02-11-2010, 09:10 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chico20854 View Post
in the 1990s, the us government destroyed or otherwise disposed of the following small arms:

400,000 m1 rifles
125,000 m2 carbines
575,000 m14 rifles
650,000 m16 rifles
115,000 m4 carbines
75,000 m1903 rifles
100,000 m1911 pistols
62,000 browning automatic rifles
35,000 m3 submachineguns
14,000 m177 carbines
12,000 m2 machine guns
21,000 m1919 machine guns

this was the result of the post-cold war drawdown, in which a policy decision was made to reduce the military small arms stockpile from "3 weapons for every member of the military" to "2 weapons for every member of the military". Such was the cold war determination to avoid a repeat of the situation in 1940, when many us army units went on exercises with broomsticks rather than rifles.

Given the rather modest increase in the size of the us military in the v1 1996 and 1997 and the very real spectre of nuclear war hanging over the heads of government authorities for almost a year before it actually happened, it is likely that a great number of these weapons (and hundreds of thousands of their civilian equivalents) were distributed to state guards, law enforcement bodies and fema stockpiles like the one detailed in allegheny uprising, along with attendant ammo stockpiles (last year the last of the us army 30-06 ammo for garands was sold off).

There should be plenty of relatively modern military small arms available for militia units. The issue in 2000-01 is going to be the ammo supply and, if for some reason the militia wasn't founded in 1997 or 1998, finding and standardizing on a few weapons types.

Imho.

nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo oooooo!

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  #5  
Old 02-11-2010, 10:18 PM
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And when they mean destroy, they don't mess around. I saw a show featuring the Anniston Army Depot, and they showed how a weapon is destroyed by throwing the all the parts of an M-16, the barrel and receiver included, into a roller/grinder device that breaks the parts into smaller unusable bits.
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Old 02-11-2010, 10:44 PM
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And then it gets melted down to make razor blades, or spoons, or drink cans, or....

Sad really. Really, really sad.
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Old 02-11-2010, 11:37 PM
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Yeah, what a waste.
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  #8  
Old 02-12-2010, 03:48 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chico20854 View Post
In the 1990s, the US Government destroyed or otherwise disposed of the following small arms:

400,000 M1 Rifles
125,000 M2 Carbines
575,000 M14 Rifles
650,000 M16 Rifles
115,000 M4 Carbines
75,000 M1903 Rifles
100,000 M1911 Pistols
62,000 Browning Automatic Rifles
35,000 M3 Submachineguns
14,000 M177 Carbines
12,000 M2 Machine Guns
21,000 M1919 Machine Guns

This was the result of the post-Cold War drawdown, in which a policy decision was made to reduce the military small arms stockpile from "3 weapons for every member of the military" to "2 weapons for every member of the military". Such was the Cold War determination to avoid a repeat of the situation in 1940, when many US Army units went on exercises with broomsticks rather than rifles.

Given the rather modest increase in the size of the US military in the v1 1996 and 1997 and the very real spectre of nuclear war hanging over the heads of government authorities for almost a year before it actually happened, it is likely that a great number of these weapons (and hundreds of thousands of their civilian equivalents) were distributed to state guards, law enforcement bodies and FEMA stockpiles like the one detailed in Allegheny Uprising, along with attendant ammo stockpiles (last year the last of the US Army 30-06 ammo for Garands was sold off).

There should be plenty of relatively modern military small arms available for militia units. The issue in 2000-01 is going to be the ammo supply and, if for some reason the militia wasn't founded in 1997 or 1998, finding and standardizing on a few weapons types.

IMHO.
Great information, Chico. Thanks for doing the leg work. I feel obliged to point out that existing in a storage depot is not the same as widely available for use. Nevertheless, given the number of modern firearms available, I think one could easily make a case for any given organization having access to at least some kind of modern rifle--provided one is willing to trace the path of the weapons from storage to the hands of the owners. The list above includes two million rifles and carbines. This is a lot of hardware, but we should bear in mind that before the nukes fly there are 290 million (give or take) Americans. Setting aside stocks of weapons not destroyed because the Cold War didn't end, the above list is sufficient to provide roughly one American in every 149 or 150 with a modern rifle. Even if these rifles were evenly distributed across the nation, somebody is going to have to go without. Halving the population as of early 2001 doesn't solve the problem because this stockpile of weapons are going to suffer from its own types of attrition. Still, given the sheer numbers of rifles involved, I'd buy off on any well-considered explanation for how a militia gets hold of 1,000 modern rifles after the Exchange.

By the way, the numbers involved make it a lot easier for someone to claim that rifles were set aside during the July-November period in 1997. This is how Fort Huachuca gets most of its hardware. Surely Huachuca isn't the only place in the country where materiel was sent in the event that the worst occurred.

Webstral
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Old 02-12-2010, 04:43 PM
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I'm of the impression that while the US government may have disposed of those weapons, some of the older designs (bolt-actions, semi-autos) where also sold to gunstores for civilian sales. What I'm trying to say is okay, so that's the number they destroyed but how many did they keep and what was the size of the original stockpile?
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Old 02-12-2010, 07:27 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by StainlessSteelCynic View Post
I'm of the impression that while the US government may have disposed of those weapons, some of the older designs (bolt-actions, semi-autos) where also sold to gunstores for civilian sales. What I'm trying to say is okay, so that's the number they destroyed but how many did they keep and what was the size of the original stockpile?
The Army disposed of the firearms in three ways:

1) a large shredder at the Anniston Army depot, referred to as "Captain Crunch". Stocks were removed, weapons fed in, and scrap steel emerged.
2) foreign aid. The Estonian Army, for example, fielded M-16A1s marked "Property of US Government" in 2000. A lot of M-16s and M-14s went this way.
3) sales to individuals, through the Division/Directorate of Civilian Marksmanship (a part of the Army, which permitted a civilian to buy a single Garand after extensive marksmanship training & competition) until 1996, when it was spun off into a nonprofit organization, the Civilian Marksmanship Program (CMP). CMP reports that it and DCM distributed over 400,000 Garands from 1968 to present. Lots of those, however, were returned to the US Army after retirement by foreign militaries - they had been given as military aid and upon retirement were required to be returned to the U.S. The three most recent batches were returned from Denmark, the Greek Army and, most recently, 18,000 from the Greek Air Force, including several hundred still in the original factory wrapping. How many would be available in a T2k setting is unknown...
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Old 02-12-2010, 05:02 PM
Abbott Shaull Abbott Shaull is offline
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Black powder guns would show up again. Granted not many people make guns the old way, there would be learning curve people would have to learn in making any type of fires arms. Communities that had resources would be able to support or at least add to their arsenal.

Also crossbows that big to fit on tri-pod and unusable, it would probably be better on simple trailer device similar to the 120mm mortar. Now large man portable crossbow could use bi-pod for would be more manageable to use. Anything heavy enough to mounted on the try pod would require several people to move, thus negating any mobility that one would need in order to field such weapons effectively, unless you plan on using this weapon more or less in fixed position.

Crossbows are slow in general. I know there was device found that was used like a magazine on modern rifle were use to speed thing up, but drawing the string back will still take time.

Now in defense, using crossbow, black powder weapons, or even single shot rifles/shotguns limitation can be negated some. Especially if have some extra hands that could reload/rearm the weapon while the shooter fires another round with second or third weapon, or at least pull the cross bow string back....

Honestly, I see regular bows and composite bows, being used more than crossbows for largely mobile forces (raiding force). Especially if they are up against a force with single shot weapons with no magazines.
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Old 02-12-2010, 07:11 PM
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Atcualy under that son of a bitch kolintoon I hope his fuckin stints give out and he dies a horrible death. <yes I met the man and his wife more! Hate is a strong word, but not strong enough!> He ordered that all arms by Federal government that are not in use will be destroyed, rather than sold. There were no exceptions. That goes for military officers and others as well. So you could not have the option to purchase your service pistol that you had carried for an entire career. Same with Law Enforcement too.

And they would not be sold to the open market either! So, a good source of antique weapons in Gov stores like 30-40 Krags, 03 Springfields, M1 Garands and Carbines all get turned into scrap. Even though to sell them to civilians who would undergo a background check and give a decent source of money to the Federal Gov poof gone! What horsecrap! I can honestly say I would never take the oath of allegiance to the gov again. As Eithan Edwards said "A man can only be bound ta one oath at a time."

Yes, my hate is still strong after all these years, but it keeps me warm. And the "darkside" is a good life
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