- Reaction score
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- Points
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Posted by "John Gow" <jgow@home.com> on Mon, 26 Mar 2001 23:38:21 -0500
Can remember all the driblets of blood flowing down my face from doing the
winter firing of the 3.5 which were actually a great deal of fun, ‘til you
had to reach into the back of the tube, to rotate the rocket 90 degrees to
get the magneto to work
Anyway, the extreme cold of the Plains would freeze the propellant, and
everyone but the 3 would get blasted in the face with bits of propellant
blasting back from the rocket as it exited the tube.
Don. of course, is completely correct, it was evolved for Korea and
defeating the T34 at the time would melt through the armour of any tank in
existence, given a square hit...
John
PS
Screwed you up because the original Carl G is an 84 on the bore...when the
FNG‘s lost control of it and blasted into the air, we referred it the 84 mm
mortar...which in turn is the why of the 6.5 sub cal training round for the
weapon, to correct the expensive waste of ammo
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ian Edwards"
To:
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 11:33 AM
Subject: Errata - Mortars
> Before anyone jumps on me, on a recent posting I stated the bore size of
the
> Canadian weapon to be 84mm.
> I was just following what someone else had posted, as I had it in my
memory
> that it was 81mm. In any even it was forty 40 years ago that I took all
of
> three 3 days training on the weapon from 2PPCLI instructors. Took
> considerable more instruction, and taught, the 3.5" rocket launcher. For
> Newbys, that weapon was similar to the American "bazooka". Of course I
> didn‘t ever get to fire the 3.5". but then money was scarce in the Militia
> in the 1960s. Just as well, as a Pte/Cpl can‘t remember which from the
> PPCLI was killed in Wainwright about 1966-67 from the "blowback" from the
> firing of the 3.5. Wrong place at the wrong time.
> Ian Edwards
>
> --------------------------------------------------------
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> to majordomo@CdnArmy.ca from the account you wish to
> remove, with the line "unsubscribe army-list" in the
> message body.
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Can remember all the driblets of blood flowing down my face from doing the
winter firing of the 3.5 which were actually a great deal of fun, ‘til you
had to reach into the back of the tube, to rotate the rocket 90 degrees to
get the magneto to work
Anyway, the extreme cold of the Plains would freeze the propellant, and
everyone but the 3 would get blasted in the face with bits of propellant
blasting back from the rocket as it exited the tube.
Don. of course, is completely correct, it was evolved for Korea and
defeating the T34 at the time would melt through the armour of any tank in
existence, given a square hit...
John
PS
Screwed you up because the original Carl G is an 84 on the bore...when the
FNG‘s lost control of it and blasted into the air, we referred it the 84 mm
mortar...which in turn is the why of the 6.5 sub cal training round for the
weapon, to correct the expensive waste of ammo
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ian Edwards"
To:
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 11:33 AM
Subject: Errata - Mortars
> Before anyone jumps on me, on a recent posting I stated the bore size of
the
> Canadian weapon to be 84mm.
> I was just following what someone else had posted, as I had it in my
memory
> that it was 81mm. In any even it was forty 40 years ago that I took all
of
> three 3 days training on the weapon from 2PPCLI instructors. Took
> considerable more instruction, and taught, the 3.5" rocket launcher. For
> Newbys, that weapon was similar to the American "bazooka". Of course I
> didn‘t ever get to fire the 3.5". but then money was scarce in the Militia
> in the 1960s. Just as well, as a Pte/Cpl can‘t remember which from the
> PPCLI was killed in Wainwright about 1966-67 from the "blowback" from the
> firing of the 3.5. Wrong place at the wrong time.
> Ian Edwards
>
> --------------------------------------------------------
> NOTE: To remove yourself from this list, send a message
> to majordomo@CdnArmy.ca from the account you wish to
> remove, with the line "unsubscribe army-list" in the
> message body.
--------------------------------------------------------
NOTE: To remove yourself from this list, send a message
to majordomo@CdnArmy.ca from the account you wish to
remove, with the line "unsubscribe army-list" in the
message body.