Monthly Archives: June 2013

Aircraft Machine Guns of WWII

Today when two or more warplanes mix it up over the skies in combat, they usually do it with air-to-air missiles. Nevertheless, back in World War Two, when one aircraft met another in combat over the battlefield, the duel was carried out with guns.

Just nine years after the Wright Brothers proved that a heavier than air vehicle could even fly, the US Army put on gun on one in an experiment. Captain Charles de Forest Chandler, shown above seated in the passenger seat of a Wright Model B Flyer, fired the Lewis light machinegun from the airplane in flight on June 7 and 8, 1912. This is thought to be the first time, other than random rifles and pistols carried by pilots, that a gun was fired from an aircraft in flight. This was just in time because just two years later, World War 1 brought about a completely new era of flying terror.

When the Fokker Eindecker, one of the first purpose-built fighter planes, took to the sky in 1915 armed with a single DWM Spandau MG14 Parabellum machine gun, synchronized to fire through the plane’s propeller, appeared, it was terrifying to the British and French pilots. This started a steady arms race that continued until the end of the war where most fighter, bomber, and scout aircraft were armed with as many as three .30 caliber machine guns whereas huge German Zeppelin dirigibles carried up to five.

By 1944, this would be considered well underarmed….

Read the  rest in my column at Firearms Talk

B25allmachinegunsfiringfrontally

The Ugly Rifle Club

If you want to get technical about it, a rifle is just about any shoulder fired long arm with a rifled barrel used to hit targets accurately at long distances. Nothing in there says anything about being easy on the eyes and indeed never once did aesthetics alone make one shooter better than another. But it does hurt sales, and with that in mind, I take a look at a number of rifles that no one ever would consider gun
porn….the rest at Guns.com

How many of these can you name?

hipoint planet of the apes armscor 1600 itallian vett sg510 martini schuetzen rifle German Schuetzen Rifle by Miller & Valgrass world war two subguns thumbhole-stocked 'assault rifle' of the 1990s tkb059

Guy Finds Mir Relic in River

“Phil was puzzled by the strange rock so he held on to it. But before long, he placed it in the yard and forgot about it. The rock sat under a tree for six years until a friend started asking questions.

Phil’s sister in law also thought it was from space so she sent it to a friend who works for NASA.

That friend confirmed the rock was special, and that it wasn’t actually a rock at all.

What Phil had found was a piece of the Russian Space Station Mir….”

mir

Sea Harrier FA2 Jump Jet For Sale….on eBay

Saw this on eBay of all places.  Looks like someone is selling a pre-owned RN Sea Harrier. Of course it hasn’t flown since 2001 and is largely a static display, but heck, who doesn’t want a Harrier? Perhaps the USMC could add it to their collection as they own something like 80% of all the Harrier airframes in existence.

 

http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Sea-Harrier-FA2-Jump-Jet-/281126520805?pt=Motors_Aircraft&hash=item41747247e5

“This Ex-Royal Navy Harrier Jet Serial number ZD615 located in Red Deer, Alberta, Canada and is for sale by owner Ian Cotton

This aircraft is in outstanding condition and comes with a Rolls-Royce Pegasus MK107 engine, a parts donor extra fuselage and another Harrier cockpit that can be used for display or the basis of a simulator.

Built in 1986, converted to the latest FA2 standard in 1997 and last flown in 2001, this aircraft will require several parts before it can be flown again and is being sold as not airworthy – for display purposes only.

Further pictures and details are available for serious bidders only.”

$T2eC16F,!)8E9s4l59QeBRyGGDfuBw~~60_3

Beretta M12 Subgun: The Spaghetti Uzi

The Italian firm of Pietro Beretta has long been known in this country for their semi-auto pistols of all sizes. What you may not know is that they also marketed some of the most popular submachine guns of the past century—for which they are very well known outside the US.  One of these is the crowd-pleasing M12.

Beretta was one of the first companies in the world to manufacture what are considered submachine guns today. In fact, their wood-stocked M1918 9mm was the first conventional subgun ever issued to troops in combat and it was during World War One! Their later M1938 was one of the better subguns of WWII and is still in somewhat limited service around the world. With a lineage like this, it was almost predetermined that in 1953, the company would invent a new pistol caliber select fire burp gun for the modern age—and that’s where the M12 came in.
Read the rest in my column at Guns.com

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Build Your Own Remote Control Helicopter Gunship!

A plexiglass maker rigged up a remote control Octocopter (eight-bladed helicopter) to a Taurus Judge revolver to fire airborne shots at cellphone screens they are developing. Total cost, probably under $2k. interesting concept.

The Pedersen Device: The WWI superweapon that (almost) won the war

When America found herself in the brutal trench warfare that was the First World War, she needed lots of weapons—fast. One unsung inventor came up with a secret weapon that turned the standard bolt action infantry rifle into a fire-breathing dragon. This man was John Pedersen and he (almost) helped win WWI.

John Moses Browning is said to have told Maj. Gen. Julian S. Hatcher of U.S. Army Ordnance that Pedersen “was the greatest gun designer in the world”, yet too many gun nerds have never even heard the name. Pedersen was a behind-the-scenes type of engineer who, in some four decades in the gun industry was awarded over 70 patents. He designed most of Remington’s pre-WWII 20th century product line. Among these were the Model 51 pistol and the Model 12 rifle. He worked with Browning on a collaboration that became the Remington Model 17 shotgun—from which both the Browning BPS and the Ithaca 37 are descended.

In 1917, with the US entering the morass that was World War One, Pedersen tried to help give Uncle Sam a little something extra to take with him over there.

Read the rest in my column at GUNS.com  

pedersen device installed on a 1903 with magazine and box of rounds

Warship Wednesday, June 26th Hems Subchaser

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  June 26th

Here we see the converted motor yacht Pilar as she appeared just before WWII. This boat had a very colorful history.

el-pilar

Bought by the great bearded man-card holder Ernest Miller Hemingway April 1934 from Wheeler Shipbuilding in Brooklyn, New York, for $7,495,  the 38-foot two-engined Wheeler Playmate was delivered to Miami, Florida later that year. Pilar had a 70-hp Chrysler Crown gasoline engine reportedly capable of generating a cruise speed of 8 knots and a top speed of 16 knots. Coupled with six bunks, double rudders, and, with 300 gallons of water, 2,400 pounds of ice, and cruising range of 500 miles, it was a pretty capable boat. To this,  Hemingway added  a separate, straight-shaft Lycoming four-cylinder gasoline engine for trolling at 5 knots (with an economical fuel burn of 3 gph); flying bridge with steering/control station, bridge ladder, and bottle-stowage rack; and the set of outriggers and a fighting chair.  In addition, there was a livewell with valves for filling and emptying; extra fuel-carrying capacity in four, 75-gallon galvanized tanks; two copper-lined fishboxes in the cockpit sole; and a long wooden roller mounted across a cut-down transom to facilitate hauling big fish aboard.
Old Hem used her to win just about every fishing rodeo across the Caribbean from 1935-41, only taking time off to go to the Spanish-Civil War. Named after his second wife, it was on the Pilar that Hemingway did the research into big game fishing that later came out in The Old Man and the Sea and other works.

hemingway and son Jack waiting for a bite on the pilar with his tommy gun in hand note the massive size of the reel

It one incident in 1935, Hem took a Thompson submachine gun out and riddled a school of sharks who were eating on a 1000-pound marlin that he and painter Mike Strater were struggling to pull aboard. This only created an epic feeding frenzy that left the marlin ‘apple-cored’ with its entire back half eaten down to the spine.
the apple cored 1000 pound marlin
Well when WWII rolled around, Hem, living in Finca Vigía in San Francisco de Paula, Cuba, at the time, sprang into action. He organised friends and acquaintances, some of the notorious nature, into an intelligence gathering organization in Cuba he dubbed the ‘Crook Factory’– with the US ambassador’s blessing. Not content with his ad hoc intel work, Hem cooked up another plot.

heming3

With the permission of the ambassador and the loan of some HF/DF radio equipment, Hem outfitted the trusty Pilar as a sub chaser. The idea was to float around offshore as an innocent fishing vessel, tracking German U-boat radio communications, until said Nazi sub was spotted.

Hem never did catch that Uboat....(image by Gina Sanders from a 1934 picture of Hem in the JFK collection)

Hem never did catch that Uboat….(image by Gina Sanders from a 1934 picture of Hem in the JFK collection)

Then, wait til the dastardly submersible came close enough to unleash tommy guns and grenades on her boarding party and deck crew. If he got close enough, a short fuze explosive charge thought capable of scuttling a sub was to be thrown down the hatch of the U-boat.

His crew included his sons Patrick and Gregory as well as other volunteers. While the government supplied some equipment, Hemingway was using his own boat, filled with his own gas, and risking the lives of both himself and his family to bring the war to the Germans.

Type VII

From the summer of 1942 until the end of 1943, although the Pilar did actually set out on U-boat patrols, and possibly even spotted one of them, Hem never did catch one. He did, however, drop a grenade down the throat of a mako shark caught during one of the patrols. Failing at grabbing a German by the coat at close range, he left Cuba for the European Theater of Operations as a war correspondent, going ashore just after the Normandy Invasions.

The original Pilar has been landlocked in Cuba for the past fifty years

The original Pilar has been landlocked in Cuba for the past fifty years

The Pilar remained Hem’s pride and joy until he left Cuba in 1960, leaving it to one of the boat’s local captains, Carlos Gutierrez, who promptly donated it to the Cuban government. Today she sits as a shrine to Hemingway in Cuba and is a popular tourist attraction. Another Wheeler Playmate dressed up to look like the Pilar is on display at the Bass Pro Shop in Key West.

a mock up of the Pilar is at the Bass Pro Shop in Key West, adrift on tshirts

a mock up of the Pilar is at the Bass Pro Shop in Key West, adrift on tshirts

In the end, Hemingway, after losing the love of his life (Pilar) tripped both barrels of his favorite Boss shotgun into his head just a year later. Gutierrez, the inheritor of the beautiful woman, lived to be 104.

Boats have a funny way of doing that.

Specs
Length:     38 ft (12 m)
Beam:     12 ft 0 in (3.7 m)
Height:     17.5 ft (5.3 m)
Draught:     3 ft 6 in (1.1 m)
Installed power:
Main Engine – 70 HP Chrysler
Trolling Engine – 4 Cylinder Lycoming
Speed:     16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph)

Armament : At least one M1921 Thompson submachine gun, a Colt 22 Woodsman pistol and a cut-down .30 Krag rifle (all in the Pilar‘s regular small arms locker owned by Hemingway) . An unmounted .50 caliber Browning on loan, ‘a handful of grenades’, scuttling charges, and some sources state, ‘a bazooka’.

If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO)

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval lore http://www.warship.org/naval.htm

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

Nearing their 50th Anniversary, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.
I’m a member, so should you be!

5 Surplus Rifles under $500

Today most new, large-caliber rifles begin at a MSRP around the $500 mark and move up from there. For less than that price, there are several long serving legacy military surplus rifles out there that can offer a whole lot of bang for the buck.

Read the rest in my column at GUNs.com

crate of m91 30s yes, you can still buy these guns by the crate

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