Clark
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2006
- Messages
- 772
Nice photo, man I'd hate to be on the receiving end of that.
I have some pics that are not in the public domain yet, and are too big for my scanner, so I just take pics of pics.
Nice photo, man I'd hate to be on the receiving end of that.
Camp Carrol was our base camp but I did not see it very long. Was at the Rockpile for most of the time. I remember the 175's well. They fired over our position frequently. I still remember the sound of those loose bands on the projectiles whistling as they passed over our position. Good memories and bad all wrapped into one moment of time. Glad it's over and wish it wasn't happening now for some. I pray for those who are going through it now and what many that return will have to live with in their future. For some it will not be a bed of roses. PTSD is nasty for some and others will die from it. I do not envy anyone going to war. It is never over and there are no winners. On the bright side, I'm still living and trying to enjoy it.
Catch you later my friend. ..SARGESNIPER ..SEMPER FI.
Agreed.
I have built some reloading benches with co-ax presses and a rockchucker. The rockchucker puts the most tipping force on the bench and the co-ax puts the least. Put the rockchucker on the end of a picnic table bench and have a fat person sit on the other end.
I am 63. I was not around when my father got the patents in the M55, but those patents got him a single bidder contract on the M107 and M110 designs. I was a little kid and I thought that all that red liquid on the ground was blood from people being shot by those big guns.
Nice photo, man I'd hate to be on the receiving end of that.
that red liquid is nothing but ATF fluid like you put in your automatic transmission. Your photo shows why you can't build an SPG off a tank platform. Even with the suspension in full lock up and the transmissions brakes in full; you can see the hull shifting backwards. I shot M110's a little bit (maybe a hundred rounds), but mostly trained on M107's. Even though the hull is the same, they are a different beast (also in serious overbore!). Might add here that the M110 was a good ride compared to the M107. The guns I trained on didn't have governors, and would do 70mph head down Ft. Sill Blvd.
gary
Got a small digital scale, hand dies and an arbor press... Fit everything I need in a tool box...which serves as my wind screen. For the few cartridges that I only have threaded dies for I have a small hand press for seating and just bring plenty of prepped brass for those.