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#1
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off topic - love to know how that got there - sabot projectile
“On 10/22/17 at 1325 hours, Harrisburg Police were flagged down by a jogger on the Front Street River Walk at Peffer Street. The jogger advised the officer of a strange object in the river bank. Officers identified the object as a possible tank Sabot projectile. The area was secured and notification to the Pennsylvania State Police (PSP) Bomb Squad was made.
At 1531 hours, PSP bomb technicians arrived and confirmed that the object was a Sabot projectile. The projectile was collected and taken into custody by PSP. An HPD bomb K-9 was summoned after the projectile was secured to verify that there were no other explosives in the area. No other objects were found." Ok heard of losing a lot of stuff but a sabot projectile just randomly ends up in the river? |
#2
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I've heard of worse, wait till you dig a foxhole in Graf and find a case of Panzerfaust warheads, just rotting away.
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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. |
#3
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I saw a blurb on the Military Channel that just in Germany, 5600 unexploded bombs from World War 2 are found or dug during construction every year.
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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 |
#4
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Finally saw a photo of the projectile, it looks like a 105mm APFSDS round, sabot is intact and there are no apparent rifling marks on the bands.
There are reports of writing on the round, but the photo I saw was still covered in us... Just a guess, but I'll bet that someone pulled it off a service round, intending to use it for a trophy wall.
__________________
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. |
#5
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Luckily whoever found it wasnt a terrorist - that would have made a very very dangerous bomb part - especially with a shaped charge that could have propelled it. Still hard to believe it was found just sitting in the open
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#6
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If it is a Sabot there is no shaped charge, if it was a full up US round it is an metal case with powder (that after having spent time in/around the river may or may not be water logged) the "warhead" is a titanium or DU (if combat round/steel if training) penetrater surrounded by a light metal ring (actually three pieces) that fall off after leaving the barrel. So the only thing that maybe could be made to explode would be the gun powder if it was not wet.
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#7
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not really worried about the gunpowder or the round exploding - it sounds like the round is intact - i.e. the penetrator - if you found a way to propel it that would be bad news for anything it hits - so you cant make the round go boom but thats still a penetrator made to go thru armor if you can somehow propel it
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#8
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Quote:
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Writer at The Vespers War - World War I equipment for v2.2 |
#9
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I ave not seen any pictures of it, do you remember what color the ring was? Or how far past the end did the fin (or was it a cone) stick out?
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#10
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#11
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