Monthly Archives: April 2014

The Colt Woodsman: A most pined after plinking pistol

Today there are dozens of .22LR target pistols out there on the market. You can walk into any shop in any state and find any number of Ruger, Browning, Beretta, or Walther pistols among others who all promise to scratch that rimfire itch. But nearly a hundred years ago, Colt got this concept out and perfect and before anyone else did and it came in the form of a work of art we know today as the Woodsman—quite possibly the handgun shooters most want to see made again…

The Woodsman is considered by many to be the most accurate .22 caliber production pistol ever made, a concept that started in the drawing room.

At the dawn of the 20th Century, Colt Firearms had a master artisan and visionary on their payroll. His name: John Moses Browning. In the first two decades of the century, Browning designed for the company their Model 1900, 1902, M1903/1908 Pocket Hammerless, Vest Pocket pistol, and that most famous of Colt handguns—the M1911 longslide. Odds are, if you wanted a semi-automatic pistol in the US in the 1900s, you had a Colt.

These guns, ranging from .25 to .45ACP were all made for the purpose of self-defense/military and law enforcement use. What the company needed in 1915 to complete the handgun hat trick was a nice rimfire target pistol.

the woodsman is one of the most accurate 22 caliber production pistols
Read the rest in my column at Guns.com

Shooting Drills: Hostile behind cover targets

When at the range we often fall into the trap of using a simple circular ‘bulls eye’ style target, a normal steel plate, or a standing silhouette
style target for our practice. While there is nothing inherently wrong with that type of shooting, you are cheating yourself if this is all you are
doing.

A simple improvement that can work wonders for your reactionary skills as well as your marksmanship is the so-called hostile behind cover
target.

Simply put, this type of target is one where you have to hit only a portion of the target, which is typically off-centered, rather than firing at a
designated bull’s-eye in the geographic center of the paper (or plate). What this does is provide a shoot/don’t-shoot element to your drills.
This simulates a hostile who is taking cover (or concealment) behind a structure, person, or thing, therefore only exposing a small part of
himself to you…

ringer

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

Air Defence Ramp Alert, 1953 Style

The wartime P-51 equipped 505th Fighter Squadron of the US Army Air Force was re-designated as the 138th Fighter Squadron, and was allotted to the New York Air National Guard, on 24 May 1946. It was organized at Hancock Field, Syracuse, New York, and was extended federal recognition on 28 October 1947 by the National Guard Bureau. The 138th Fighter Squadron was bestowed the lineage, history, honors, and colors of the 505d Fighter Squadron and all predecessor units. It was the first New York Air National Guard squadron that was extended federal recognition.

“In some ways, the postwar Air National Guard was almost like a flying country club and a pilot could often show up at the field, check out an aircraft and go flying. However, the unit also had regular military exercises that kept up proficiency and in gunnery and bombing contests they would often score at least as well or better than active-duty USAF units, given the fact that most ANG pilots were World War II combat veterans.”

Then came the Cold War. It was thought that the long-range (3000nm with 6000-lbs of dumb or nuclear bombs) Soviet Tu-4 (B-29ski) could penetrate over the North Pole from Siberian bases and attack the Northern United States, even if it meant one-way trips with primitive Russian A-bombs.  The first working Soviet A-bomb, tested in 1953 at the Semipalatinsk test range had a deployed yield up to 30 Kt. The first deployed US bomb, Little Boy, dropped in 1945 at Hiroshima, was but a 16 Kt package.

Beginning on March 1, 1953, two Air National Guard units–including the 138th Fighter Interceptor Squadron from Syracuse, New York, pictured here, began a standing Air Defense Runway alert that continues to this day in one form or another.

The 138th placed two F-51D fighters and five pilots on air defense “runway alert” from one hour before sunrise to one hour after sunset (no radar= no nighttime intercept capabilities). The runway alert program was the first broad effort to integrate reserve forces into a major Air Force operational mission on a volunteer basis during peacetime.

(Painting by Gil Cohen, "Runway Alert", National Guard Heritage Painting.)

(Painting by Gil Cohen, “Runway Alert”, National Guard Heritage Painting.) The P-51, while the most advanced fighter in the world in 1943, was just ten years later outclassed by modern MiG’s and relegated to National Guard use.

Still, armed with six M2/AN2 heavy machine guns loaded with incendiary tracers, the P-51s should have been able to chew up a Russki bomber but good.

In 1954 the 138th transitioned to F-94B Starfire jets and the Mustangs in Syracuse faded away. It was the same year that the Soviets introduced the jet-powered Tu-16 Badger and the P-51 just couldn’t catch up to a bomber with a 652 mph maximum speed.

The last P-51s were withdrawn from the Air National Guard in late 1956 and a few remained as chase planes for helicopters at Fort Rucker (being flown by the Army) until 1968. Overseas Mustangs remained with the Philippine and Dominican Republic Air Forces as late as 1988.

Thomas Jefferson on shooting…

Thomas_Jefferson_by_Rembrandt_Peale_1805_cropped

In 1785, Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence and later the Third President, wrote to his 15-year-old nephew Peter Carr with some scholarly advice.  Jefferson counseled that:

a strong body makes the mind strong. As to the species of exercise, I advise the gun. While this gives moderate exercise to the body, it gives boldness, enterprise and independence to the mind. Games played with the ball and others of that nature are too violent for the body and stamp no character on the mind. Let your gun therefore be the constant companion of your walks.

 

 

Warship Wednesday April 23. The Hard Life of the Dorsetshire

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 April 23. The Hard Life of the Dorsetshire

HMS 'Dorsetshire' by Raymond Henderson painted 1972 in the Midlothian Council collection

HMS ‘Dorsetshire’
by Raymond Henderson painted 1972 in the Midlothian Council collection

Here we see the hard-living heavy cruiser of His Majesty’s Navy, the HMS Dorsetshire (Pennant 40). A heavy cruiser of the County class, her and her 12 sisters were all 1920s-era 10,000 ton treaty cruisers designed with experience gained from the naval battles of WWI. Although ostensibly within limits, their wartime displacement shot up to well over 14,000-tons and with a 31.5-knot speed, 8000-nm range, and 8 × BL 8-inch (203 mm L/50) Mk.VIII guns in twin mounts alongside another eight deck-mounted torpedo tubes, the class were bruisers capable of taking on just about any cruiser in the world and able to run away from any 1920s era battleship on the waves.

Dorset grey ship

One of the last of her class completed, Dorsetshire was finished to an improved design that included  a lowered bridge and after superstructure, improved MkII turrets, a different secondary gunnery plan, and the ability to make 32.25-knots, which is always appreciated. Like the rest of her sisters, she was also one of the first ships in the British navy with a functional surface-search radar. But more on this later.

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Laid down at Portsmouth in 1927, she was commissioned 30 September 1930, assigned as flagship of the 2nd Cruiser Squadron of the Atlantic Fleet before moving on to the China station in the Far East. When World War Two erupted in Europe, she sailed for the South Atlantic to join the hunt for German surface raiders including the pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee. For the first twenty months of the war she crashed sortied around the Atlantic and Mediterranean looking for one Axis capital ship after another, never actually finding one. Then in May 1941, that all changed.

HMS_Dorsetshire

The lucky cruiser soon joined the hunt for Hitler’s newest toy, the 55,000-ton ton SMS Bismarck, then loose in the cold North Atlantic near Iceland. The German brawler soon found herself cornered on May 24th by the largest British ship, HMS Hood, which she sank, and the new and incomplete battleship HMS Prince of Wales, which broke off the engagement.

Dorsetshire, along with her earlier sisters HMS Norfolk and Suffolk, used their 25-kw Type 284 radar to good advantage when they shadowed the Bismarck during the RN’s attempts to hunt her down after the sinking of HMS Hood. Then on 27 May the hunt was over. Dorsetshire joined in the kill of the mighty German ship alongside a combined British Task Force. During the one-sided engagement, the cruiser fired 254 rounds of 8-inch shells and no less than three torpedoes into the stricken battlewagon, with her fish being one of the main reasons for the warship’s ultimate sinking.

HMS Dorsetshire (The End of the Bismarck) by Ivan Berryman. Photo credit: Cranston Fine Arts

HMS Dorsetshire (The End of the Bismarck) by Ivan Berryman. Photo credit: Cranston Fine Arts

Of the 110 German sailors rescued from the Bismarck, most of these were picked up by the Dorsetshire. After this engagement, her skipper became the noted WWI VC winner Augustus Agar (the cheeky fellow who torpedoed half the Bolshevik fleet in 1919 from a little Coastal Motor Torpedo boat).

Another view of Bismarck with Dorsetshire behind her to deliver to coup de grace.

Another view of Bismarck with Dorsetshire behind her to deliver to coup de grace.

The ship then counted a more solitary coup on the SMS Atlantis, a 7800-ton converted freighter-turned merchant raider. Encountering the disguised ship in the Atlantic on 22 November 1941, it was an easy kill, and Atlantis was sent to the bottom after zapping her with salvos from 9-miles out.

Then came the war in the Pacific just six months later. This sent the big D to the Indian Ocean to protect His Majesty’s sea lanes between Australia and India. In March 1942, she became part of Force A, under the command of Admiral James Somerville, which was composed of the old battleship Warspite and the carriers Indomitable and Formidable. Forced to leave the task force to return to port to refuel as there were to tankers assigned to the group, Dorsetshire and her sister Cornwall were caught in the open on April 5 by more than 40 Japanese aircraft. With her anti-aircraft armament marginal, the cruiser was effectively as sitting duck.

Dorsetshire left ablaze, Cornwall right. Photo by Japanese bombers

Dorsetshire left ablaze, Cornwall right. Photo by Japanese bombers

In the span of about eight minutes, Dorsetshire was hit by ten 250 lb and 550 lb bombs and several near misses; she sank stern first at about 13:50. One of the bombs detonated one of her ammunition magazines and contributed to her rapid sinking. The Cornwall was sunk as well.

Agar was wounded and drug down so deep by his sinking ship that he suffered from the bends when he finally made it to the surface. Some 500 crew, including the Captain, survived in the water until rescue 32 hours later. Only 16 of the men who went into the water died, a testament to crew discipline and the leadership of Agar and the other officers and petty officers.

Of the 13 County-class heavy cruisers, besides Cornwall and Dorsetshire who were lost in the war, and both nearly side by side each other on the same day by grim irony, only HMAS Canberra was sunk in combat. The 10 remaining sister-ships were retired and scrapped between 1948-1959.

Specs:

 

hms-dorsetshire-1932

Displacement:     10,035 long tons (10,196 t) (standard)
13,420 long tons (13,640 t) (full load) (Some sisters went nearly 15,000)
Length:     632 ft 9 in (192.86 m)
Beam:     66 ft (20 m)
Draught:     18 ft (5.5 m)
Installed power:     80,000 shp (60,000 kW)
Propulsion:     4 × Parsons geared or Brown Curtis steam turbines
8 × boilers
4 × shafts
Speed:     31.5 kn (58.3 km/h; 36.2 mph)
Range:     12,000 nmi (22,000 km; 14,000 mi) at 12 kn (22 km/h; 14 mph)
Complement:     653
Armament:     8 × 8 in (200 mm) Mk VIII guns
8 × 4 in (100 mm) dual purpose guns
24 × 2-pounder pom-pom anti-aircraft guns
8 × 24 in (610 mm) torpedo tubes
numerous light anti-aircraft guns
Aircraft carried:     2 × Supermarine Walrus floatplanes (operated by 700 Naval Air Squadron)
Aviation facilities:     1 × catapult

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

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find http://www.warship.org/

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!

Coastal Command Boat (CCB), The Navy’s New 65-foot Patrol boat

 

Coastal Command Boat. Video by Petty Officer 1st Class Martine Cuaron | Commander Task Group 56.1 | Date: 02.26.2014. A Coastal Command Boat (CCB) assigned to Commander, Task Group 56.7 transits the coastal waters of Bahrain, Feb. 26. CCBs provide a multi-mission platform for the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility by focusing on maritime security operations, maritime infrastructure protection and theater security cooperation efforts, as well as conduct offensive combat operations. (U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Martine Cuaron/Released)

The 65-foot, 50-ton CCB is an early variant of the soon to be delivered, 85-foot MKVI Patrol Boat by SAFE Boats.   The CCB is powered by twin diesel engines and water jets, is capable of speeds in excess of 35 knots and can maintain cruise speed for up to 24 hours.  It features a pilothouse and a main deck cabin with shock mitigating seating for up to 18 crew members and features integrated working stations along with a separate galley, head, shower facilities and engine room.  The CCB is equipped for crew served and remotely operated weapon systems, advanced thermal imaging and features a hydraulic crane  system.

More info on the CCB, which uses a 25-man hybrid crew consisting of Reserve and active duty Sailors to keep it forward deployed, click here

And yes, it does remind us of the old Post-Vietnam 65-foot MkIII Boats  used by the Special Boat Units in the 1970s and 80s, thank you very much.

Dig that vintage MKIII Action. You can almost smell 1984.

Dig that vintage MKIII Action. You can almost smell 1984.

AK vs AR vs Mosin

…if you have an AK47:

Who doesn't dig Dugan H. Ashley

Who doesn’t dig Dugan H. Ashley

-It works though you have never cleaned it. Ever.
-You are able to hit the broad side of a barn
-Cheap mags are fun to buy.
-Your safety can be heard from 300 meters away.
-Your rifle comes with a cheap nylon sling
-Your bayonet makes a good wire cutter.
-You can put a .30” hole through 12” of oak, if you can hit it.
-When out of ammo your rifle will nominally pass as a club.
-Recoil is manageable, even fun.
-Your sight adjustment goes to “10”, and you’ve never bothered moving it.
-Your rifle can be used by any two bit nation’s most illiterate conscripts to fight elite forces worldwide.
-You paid $350.
-You buy cheap ammo by the case.
-You can intimidate your foe with the bayonet mounted.
-Service life, 50 years.
-It’s easier to buy a new rifle when you want to change cartridge sizes.
-You can repair your rifle with a big hammer and a swift kick.
-You consider it a badge of honor when you get your handguards to burst into flames.
-After a long day the range you relax by watching “Red Dawn”.
-After cleaning your rifle you have a strong urge for a stiff shot of Vodka.
-You can accessorize you rifle with a new muzzle brake or a nice stock set.
-Your rifle’s finish is varnish and paint.
-Your wife tolerates your autographed framed picture of Mikhail Kalashnikov.
-Late at night you sometimes have to fight the urge to hold your rifle over your head and shout “Wolverines!”

…if you have an M16:

m16a2 kenny powers

-You have $9 per ounce special non-detergent synthetic Teflon infused oil for cleaning.
-You are able to hit the broad side of a barn from 600 meters
-Cheap mags melt.
-You can silently flip off the safety with your finger on the trigger
-Your rifle has a 9 point stealth tactical suspension system.
-Your bayonet is actually a pretty good steak knife.
-You can put one hole in a paper target at 100 meters with 30 rounds.
-When out of ammo, your rifle makes a great wiffle bat.
-What’s recoil?
-Your sight adjustment is incremented in fractions of minute of angle.
-Your rifle is used by elite forces worldwide to fight two bit nations’ most illiterate conscripts.
-You paid $900.
-You lovingly reload precision crafted rounds one by one.
-Your foes laugh when you mount your bayonet.
-Service life, 40 years.
-You can change cartridge sizes with the push of a couple of pins and a new upper.
-You can repair your rifle by taking it to a certified gunsmith, it’s under warranty!
-You consider it a badge of honor when you shoot a sub-MOA 5 shot group.
– After a long day at the range you relax by watching “Blackhawk Down”.
-After cleaning your rifle you have a strong urge for hotdogs and apple pie.
-Your rifle’s accessories cost eight times as much as your rifle.
-Your rifle’s finish is Teflon and high tech polymers.
-Your wife tolerates your autographed framed picture of Eugene Stoner.
-Late at night you sometimes have to fight the urge to clear your house, slicing the pie from room to room.

…if you have a Mosin Nagant:

 

mosin rifles in the hands of soviet partisans in wwii
-It was last cleaned in Berlin in 1945.
-You are able to hit the broad side of a barn…from two counties away.
-What’s a mag?
-What’s a safety?
-Your rifle has dog collars.
-Your bayonet is longer than your leg.
-You can knock down everyone else’s target with the shock wave of your bullet going downrange.
-When out of ammo, your rifle makes a supreme war club, pike, boat oar, or tent pole
-Recoil is often used to relocate shoulders thrown out by the previous shot.
-Your sight adjustment goes to 12 miles and you’ve actually tried it.
-Your rifle has fought against itself and won every time.
-You paid $59.95.
-You dig your ammo out of a farmer’s field in Ukraine and it works just fine.
-You can bayonet your foe on the other side of the river without leaving the comfort of your fighting hole.
-Service life, 100 years, and counting.
-You believe no real man would dare risk the ridicule of his friends by suggesting there is anything but 7.62x54r.
-If your rifle breaks, you buy a new one.
-You consider it a badge of honor when you cycle 5 rounds without the aid of a 2×4.
-After a long day at the range you relax by watching “Enemy At The Gates”.
-After cleaning your rifle you have a strong urge for shishkabob.
-Your rifle’s accessory is a small tin can with a funny lid, but it’s buried under an apartment building somewhere in Budapest.
-Your rifle’s finish is low grade shellac, cosmoline and Olga’s toe nail polish.
-You’re not sure there WERE cameras to photograph Sergei Mosin.
-Late at night, you sometimes have to fight the urge to dig a fighting trench in the the yard to sleep in.
By AK47 vs M16 vs Mosin Nagant (via muppetz540)

Bren Light Machine Guns: A British import/export

One of the iconic light machine gun designs of the past century has to be the British Bren gun with their distinctive top-mounted magazine and WWII starring role. Yet ironically, if you look into the history of these guns, they may owe more to a town in central Europe named Brno and Toronto Canada than they do to England.

In 1921, the Czech firm of Zbrojovka Brno, (ZB) began experimenting with a compact light machine gun that fired a full sized round from a 20-round top-mounted box magazine. Gas operated, air cooled, selectively fired, this gun became fully fleshed out by 1926 and was adopted by the Czech army as the ZB v26. By 1938 when Hitler marched into Czechoslovakia, over 120,000 of these handy guns were sold to two dozen countries around the world.

Then production really took off…

ronnie bren giun girl
Read the rest in my column at Guns.com

The SIG P229: Homeland Protector

Swiss firearms giant SIG has been a providing military grade firearms to Europe and the US for generations. One of their most interesting officers is the P229 series handgun, which draws an odd balance between combat handgun, duty gun, and concealed carry piece. Without further ado, lets take a look at it.

229 challenge coin
Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

PI Wants a Third Hamilton

In the past couple years the Philippine Navy took possession of a pair of recently retired “378” Hamilton class High Endurance Cutters from the USCG. Although over thirty years old, they were far more modern and better equipped than anything afloat under the Philippine flag. They are set up just for offshore patrol however and are armed simply with a 76mm OTO Melara forward mount and a new Mk 38 Mod 2 auto-cannon and soft-kill countermeasures. However the Agusta Westland AW109 Power flown from its deck allows a greatly enhanced patrol area.

A few months ago the Navy passed on getting a third, but now, with China ramping up tensions in the Spratleys, they are reconsidering.

Philippine Navy's BRP Ramon Alcaraz, (formerly the USCGC Dallas, WHEC-716, served 1968-2012)

Philippine Navy’s BRP Ramon Alcaraz, (formerly the USCGC Dallas, WHEC-716, served 1968-2012)

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