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#1
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I've always disagreed with issuing a sniper rifle to every Project vehicle, I often replace it with a .22 caliber varmint rifle for hunting small game and a 12 gauge shotgun for hunting birds and larger game.
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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. |
#2
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I have always replaced the M21 with a Mossberg 590. The latter with less than lethal stunbag and rubber buckshot. Also a full length hunting barrel with goose shot.
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#3
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Just a couple of items for a teams comfort...
Butchering Kit A high impact plastic case containing a variety of knives and saws useful for the preparation of game. This kit contains the following: 3" camping knife 8" Howie style butcher knife 5.25" carving fork 4.25" skinning knife 10" double ground wood/bone saw 5.5" boning/fillet knife 6.5" cleaver Heavy duty game shears Spreader Tungsten carbide V-style knife sharpener 10" x 14" cutting board Gambrel and hoist system (238kg capacity with 20m of line Total weight 23kg with case Camp Mate This is a plastic and steel container that provides 7,000 cubic inches of storage space. The top storage area can hold a camp stove, the protective lid doubles as a sink. A silverware tray doubles as a dish drainer. Plate and cutting board storage inside the main compartment holds plates and dinner wars for eight. Both doors are equipped with racks for holding spices and seasonings. Total Weight is 5kg with case.
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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. |
#4
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At 4 meals a day (for high stress/activity periods) and with an MRE massing around .75 kilograms that gives each person 3 KGs of rations per day. I think 6 months of food is a good benchmark, so each person needs 540 kg of food for that period. If this is divided between the bolt hole and the six caches that reduces it to a more manageable 80ish Kg in each location (per person) That still means each team will be toting over half a ton of food around at the start of things. |
#5
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Its amazing what useful items/kits one can pull from military surplus and camping catalogs!
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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. |
#6
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Strangely enough I was told the New Zealand MRE is made in Australia and the Australian MRE is made in New Zealand. I suspect a politician was involved
EDIT: Surely The Morrow Project fits its fusion-powered vehicles with a Commonwealth-style 'boiling vessel'!? |
#7
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As for the "boiling vessel" that's one feature overlooked in the layouts, I've always added a small hot water heater along with a water storage tank and a purification pump/filter arrangement....
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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. |
#8
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Still, a .22 for rabbits and squirrels....can even be issued with a suppressor for those pesky sentries.
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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. |
#9
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Was the reason every team got an M21 a way of giving them a useful weapon to mount the Starlight Scope on? What with the old ANPvs2s being relatively difficult to switch between weapons?
Also in the couple of years timescale originally planned for wake up, wouldn't most of the game been eaten or run away from hordes of hungry survivors? |
#10
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I think I will continue to leave the cooking kit out, except in the case of the Winter Kit.
Just to force the players into the villages to trade (with contents of the trade pack) for knives and cook pots. My experience in the past is it is damned difficult to get them out of the V-150. to the extent that their trying to even sleep inside. I simply impose a discomfort rule and make lack of sleep cumulative and a negative skill modifier to boot. |
#11
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I agree with you, impose a discomfort rule and lack of sleep modifiers.
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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. |
#12
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As far as food supplies go, you have to plan for a reasonable amount of time, the question then becomes, what is reasonable? For planning purposes, 30 days is not unreasonable for rations, 2-3 units of fire for the small arms would also be reasonable.
So what can a PD do? According to the modules, the V-150 is supposed to support a 8 man team, one solution is to delete two positions and replace them with supply lockers to hold food and ammo, the tunnel leading back to the rear hatch is converted with additional storage racks along one side, a chemical toilet is placed next to the rear hatch. A 50 gallon water tank is placed on the engine bulkhead, with a water tap for use and in a outside locker, a pump, filter and hose to allow the team to refill from local sources. You can also attach a trailer to the V-150...there is a tow pintle at the rear of the vehicle and you can always store additional gear....as well as enjoy the driver modifiers when crossing obstacles or backing up in those combat situations!
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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. |
#13
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My personal fave is the hood of the humvee. Before sleep systems and bivy bags I had a artic bag and a body bag (nylon carrier). Totally scared the shit out of a guy in 1991 in the Iraqi desert. He thought I was, in fact, a corpse waiting for pick up when he came to our truck for directions and I sat up. Slept on a pile a A-bags (Duffle bags) more than once on a tarmac to deploy somewhere. On the deck (platform between the seats) of a humvee with my feet up under the radio during a looooonggggggg (three days) convoy while the truck was driving. more than once in the old dogpile at the range because no woobie and just field jackets or gortex... Pro tip... polar fleece vests in black or green work under either and much better than liners. What kind of positive modifiers for coffee, copenhagen, and pure hate for the living? +5% cumulative? |
#14
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How do they heat the the water for the rations they are issued?Is there an integral water heater on the MPV? |
#15
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#16
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![]() Changing out the reticle takes about 10 seconds...... This doesn't zero the weapon at all so that needs to be done if you swap from rifle to SAW to GPMG. If your going to use the AN/PVS-4 on a tripod like a spotting scope the M60/M240 reticle is the best to help with accurately ranging targets. The power adapter to use AAA batteries instead of the short lived (top hat) batteries is very important to have too. |
#17
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Food is an interesting one, it raises one big question.
How long were teams meant to be in the field before being withdrawn for r&r? Did they just stay there until they were wiped out or the world was restored? My guess is that they would have been out there for at most 6 months. I'm pretty sure they would never have returned to a cache so each cache would provide sufficient supplies for a month that could be loaded onto a vehicle. This would be a way of not only keeping them moving. But also stopping them being trapped from reaching vital supplies that were behind a horde of enraged survivors chasing after them. Of course the problem is food is bulky and heavy. A 24 hour MRE can weigh a couple of kilos and be about the size of a couple of ammo clips. So repeat this for a month for say a 4 man team and you're carrying around 240 kilos of extra bulky supplies. How did the project cope with this? 1 Freeze dried rations to be made up with water. Water would not have been a big issue, project vehicles don't need fuel tanks so just convert it into a giant water tank. Freeze dried rations weigh about half as much and are far less bulky. Of course if a team member is separated from a vehicle without water becomes problematic. 2 Food bars or pastes etc or other hitech food solutions. Ever since the ww2 D ration the fantasy has been rations could be reduced to a small bar that a soldier can carry around with them. They exist they're demoralising, unhealthy and really only suitable for a few days supply. There are of course other problems. MREs are demoralising and to this day armies will go to pretty extreme lengths to ensure even isolated bases in hostile territory get "normal" fresh foods fairly regularly. So what do I suspect the project supplied? Each cache would contain rations for the team for 40 days (10 more than theoretically needed to give leeway) Consisting of 1 10 days of food bars, similar to the first strike ration 2 15 days of freeze dried rations 3 15 days of mre style rations. 4 5 days worth of "luxury rations" for moral purposes such as rice, freeze dried meats etc. |
#18
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The lack of space is the biggest problem in all project vehicles. There is not enough room to store a months work of ammunition, gear, equipment and rations in any of the vehicles, let alone the weight all of this has on a vehicle.
The project vehicle blue prints do an excellent job at showing what is the layout of each vehicle. I have compared few of the various V150's with manuals and they did get it right, so living near by CG did help out greatly.. When you look at the space requirements and what is available make for a vert cramped vehicle. There is going to have to be alot of equipment stored on the outside. |
#19
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[QUOTE=Project_Sardonicus;74426]Food is an interesting one, it raises one big question.
How did the project cope with this? 1 Freeze dried rations to be made up with water. Water would not have been a big issue, project vehicles don't need fuel tanks so just convert it into a giant water tank. Freeze dried rations weigh about half as much and are far less bulky. Of course if a team member is separated from a vehicle without water becomes problematic. My Response: This idea has some merit. Freeze dried and tight seals give 25 years storage. This type of food is in my personal stash here at the house. I probably have enough for 3-4 months. Problems, as I see them. 1) WATER!!! You MUST have access to clean water to prepare this type of food. This has been a major problem in many games I have been in. Per TM1-1 ver. 4.0, Pg. 164 each Morrow trooper has 6 liters of water storage. SO if you have a 6 member team, that is 36 liters of water. As I have read in TMP V 3.0 and v 4.0, these storage containers are empty on wake up. You have to find water NOW. Another problem with water is purifying it. Most games I have been in propose a bottle of 100 Iodine Tablets in each persons gear. A second method of handling water is boiling. This is very effective but supposes access to fuel NOW. So out of the bolt hole you come. You have to find water and fuel NOW. Another problem with water, the freeze dried food mentioned above. Each serving of Mountain House Beef Stroganoff with noodles needs roughly 200 ml of water. That means a liter of water can prepare five (5) meals. The above example does NOT include how much water YOU need to live. You need about 2 liters a day. This will change based on weather, physical activity, etc. SO our trooper with 6 liters of water has about two (2) days of water IF his/her storage containers are full. 2) Boredom. Each can of Mountain House Beef Stroganoff has 10 meals. The Mountain House company suggests that you use all 10 meals within 7 days of opening the can. 3) Storage. Each can weighs just over 1/2 Kilogram. For us silly Americans, about 1 lb. 4 oz. 4) Meal Prep. Each meal in the can needs about 200 ml of BOILING water. 5) Cleanup. You MUST clean your cooking pots and dishes at the end of the meal. More Boiling water. In conclusion (Oh, thank God) Freeze dried can be done. I have created and/or planned around most of the objections in this note. It took a lot of planning and thought to get to that point. My $0.02 Mike |
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