Monthly Archives: August 2015

Intresting article on private floating armories in the maritime security industry

SOFREP has a neat piece up on the scows used by force protection assets in pirate heavy areas that reads pretty easy. Its not all sunshine and cinnamon out there, from testicle-chewing rats and moody kit to Greek fire bombers disguised as cooks.

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It was 2013 when I first set foot on one of the infamous floating armories on the Indian Ocean, and my experience on it was something to remember. It was around that time that maritime security companies started to rely more on floating armories to sidestep local laws and costs that land-based armories and hotels present. They started using these ships/armories to store weapons and as a place for guards to wait for the next transit.

In the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, and in Fujairah, the waters are filled with various kinds of ships—from former Coast Guard vessels to tow boats—all packed with semi-auto rifles, level-4 vests, night-vision optics, and a bunch of maritime security guards.

When piracy was at its most prominent, the fears of such a vessel being captured by pirates, thus giving them access to modern weaponry and materials, were not groundless.

Read more here

Poland’s 120,000 person volunteer army

Back when WWI kicked off, Poland didn’t exist. Partitioned by Germany, Austria and Russia in the 18th Century, there were Poles in the respective army of each. However, there were also the Polish Rifle Squads (Polskie Drużyny Strzeleckie, PDS) and Riflemen’s Association (Związek Strzelecki “Strzelec,”) paramilitary civil groups roughly comparable to the DCM clubs and airsoft groups in the U.S. today.

However these groups later proved pivotal to Polish independence in 1919 and formed the basis of the new Polish Army.

Revived in 1991, they are now stronger than ever as seen in the Vice Germany episode above.

The ‘carry Colt’: Ruger’s brief flirtation with the 4 inch Redhawk .45LC

A decade ago, Sturm, Ruger put its .45 Long Colt chambering of their vaunted Redhawk double action revolver on hiatus and only this year brought it back– well that is true, except for a brief run of standard service sized wheel guns.

Redhawk background

Introduced in 1979, the Redhawk built on Bill Ruger’s proven Security Six and Single Six, popular military and police style revolvers with standard 4-inch barrels chambered in .38/.357, but supersized them to come in .41 and above. These new guns were huge, using 5.5 and 7.5-inch barrel length options and tipping the scales at 50-55 ounces depending on options.

As a one up on the competition, the frame is a one-piece investment casting to which the trigger group, swing out cylinder, and hammer was affixed to. Not only did this simplify production, but also it gave a more solid feel to the gun. A unique single spring mechanism that used a music wire coil spring for both hammer and trigger allowed for a smooth, light trigger pull.  The cylinder double locked to the frame at the rear, and bottom at set up to help keep the timing regular shot after shot. A transfer bar safety system kept the gun from going off when the hammer was carried down on a loaded chamber, which is always nice to have. On top of this, a crane latch held the cylinder rock-steady to the frame, giving it a triple-locking cylinder.

They were meant for heavy trail use in dangerous areas where bear and large predators are a problem, as well as hunting and long-range target shooting. Sure, in a pinch, you could use one for home defense, but truth be told, the huge size– especially in the 7.5 inch/55 ounce options– was just awkward.

Originally just offered in .44 Spl/Magnum, within a few years it was also offered in .41 (1984-91) and .45 Long Colt (98-2005) while the Super Redhawk, introduced later came in bear-busting .454 Casul and .480 Ruger.

Then in 2007, the company restarted the .45 LC offering– but in a more compact size.

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Read the rest in my column at Ruger Talk

You do know Bilharz, Hall & Co, yes?

Bilharz & Hall Confederate Carbine5,

Manufactured by Bilharz, Hall & Co., Pittsylvania Court House (Chatham), Va. – Bilharz & Hall “Rising Breech” breechloading single-shot percussion carbine. Box-like chamber at the rear of the barrel rises vertically to expose the chamber for a .54 caliber paper cartridge by activating the lever/triggerguard mechanism. Lockplate and breechblock blued. Sling ring and bar left side. One band, screw fastened. Two-leaf rear, blade front sight.

The gun's mechanism is very interesting to say the least

The gun’s mechanism is very interesting to say the least

Bilharz & Hall Confederate Carbine4,  Bilharz & Hall Confederate Carbine2,

Only 100 of these were delivered to the Confederacy in September, 1862. Only six (6) of these are known today and three (3) are in the Springfield Armory collection.

 

Warship Wednesday Aug 12, His Majesty’s Frozen U-boat Busting Bulldog

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off 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. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, Aug 12, His Majesty’s Frozen U-boat Busting Bulldog

varristant 1942 at a bouy png

Here we see the modified V-class destroyer HMS Vansittart (D64) of the Royal Navy tied to a buoy in 1943. The hardy ship was a member of a huge group of WWI-era British tin cans that pulled yeoman service in the twilight of their lives.

In 1916, the Admiralty was in dire need of as many destroyers as they could find to fight the ever-growing U-boat menace that threatened to cut the British Isles off and hand victory to the Kaiser. This led to a crash emergency order of up to 107 Admiralty V-class flotilla leaders.

The Brit’s previous design– the 275-foot/1,075-ton S-class– mounted three 4-inch popguns, a pair of 18-inch torpedo tubes and could make 36 knots on two boilers. Well, the new V-boats were much larger at 312-feet/1,360-tons, higher to allow for a large wireless suite, needed three boilers, but upped the armament to a quartet of QF 4 in Mk.V mounts and 3 21 inch torpedo tubes a triple tube arrangement.

The first ship, Valentine, was laid down in August and completed just seven months later. By the end of the war, these hardy boats numbered some 67 hulls afloat and the remaining 40 were canceled.

Now enter the subject of our tale: HMS Vansittart (D64).

Laid down at William Beardmore and Company, Dalmuir, on New Year’s Day 1918 (no holidays off during wartime) she was completed after the war and only commissioned 5 November 1919.

Built to a modified W-class design, she shipped 1,550-tons largely due to her heavier suite of 4 x BL 4.7 in (120-mm) Mk.I guns, each capable of firing a 50-pound semi-armor piercing shell to 14,450 meters and a full half-dozen torpedo tubes rather than the original trio.

Vansittart served with the 4th Destroyer Flotilla and the Mediterranean squadrons then was laid up in 1925 due to the overall draw-down of the RN in those lean years. For the next 14 years, she was part of the Maintenance Reserve at Rosyth, staffed by reservists occasionally on summer training, and was reactivated in August 1939 as the drumbeat of a new war called.

By September 12, she was part of the 15th Destroyer Flotilla and serving on convoy duty in the Channel, protecting the BEF crossing into Europe. Next, Vansittart shipped to Norway and took part in the pivotal destroyer clash that was the Battle of Narvik, where she was damaged by German aircraft, then promptly returned to convoy duty and the evacuation of Rotterdam in May.

On 1 Jul 1940, as Britain stood alone in the War, she took out German Type VIIB U-boat U-102 in the North Atlantic south-west of Ireland, in position 48°33’N, 10°26’E, by 11 depth charges then proceeded to pick up 26 survivors from the British merchant Clearton, U-102′s last victim.

U-102 took all 43 hands including Kptlt. Harro von Klot-Heydenfeldt to the bottom.

Vansittart at the time had a very photogenic mascot.

A bulldog named Venus stands at the helm of the HMS Vansittart, a British Destroyer, c.1941

A bulldog named Venus stands at the helm of the HMS Vansittart, a British Destroyer, c.1941

Venus was one god looking pooch

Venus was one god looking pooch

More gratuitous Venus

More gratuitous Venus

1941 saw Vansittart assisting in mine laying operations off the French coast and spending a few days in May searching for SMS Bismarck.

She was adopted by the town of Kidderminster during the Warship Week National Savings drive in December 1941. The RN got their money’s worth out of the Great War-era ship, later allowing Hereford to adopt the old girl as well in the war.

THE MAYOR OF KIDDERMINISTER, ALDERMAN O W DAVIES, VISITS HMS VANSITTART - THE TOWN'S ADOPTED SHIP. 11 JUNE 1942 IWM photo A 10786

THE MAYOR OF KIDDERMINSTER, ALDERMAN O W DAVIES, VISITS HMS VANSITTART – THE TOWN’S ADOPTED SHIP. 11 JUNE 1942 IWM photo A 10786 (The officer shaking hands with the mayor of Kidderminster is Lt Cdr Thomas Johnston DSC, who captained HMS Vansittart from 1942 to 43 including the relief of Malta)

In February 1942, she reported to Gibraltar and took part in the epic resupply convoys to besieged Malta including Operation Pedestal where she helped screen HMS Eagle from both air and submarine attacks.

By 1943, she was undergoing a six-month refit at Middleborough from which she emerged with a more potent AAA defense, and traded in half her torpedo tubes for more ASW weapons, but restricted to just 25 knots.

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This put her back to escorting merchant convoys in the Atlantic for the rest of the war, including some very hard service in the ice zones.

Chipping away ice on the deck of H.M.S. Vansittart on convoy escort duty in the Arctic

Chipping away ice on the deck of H.M.S. Vansittart on convoy escort duty in the Arctic

Chipping away ice on the deck of H.M.S. Vansittart on convoy escort duty in the Arctic feb 1943

Soon after VE Day, unneeded for the war in the Pacific, she was placed up for disposal along with the rest of the ships of her class still in the Atlantic.

As a whole, these hardy little ships gave their full measure, with many going down fighting.

One, Vehement, was lost to a mine in the North Sea in 1918. Two others, Verulam and Vittoria were lost to the Bolsheviks in the Baltic in 1919, and 9 would go on to meet their end at the hands of Axis forces in WWII.

At least 35 of the class survived the war only to be unceremoniously paid off and sold to the breakers between 1945 and 1948. The last afloat, the Australian-manned HMAS Vendetta (D69), was scuttled off Sydney on 2 July 1948.

The hero of our story is not immune to this fate, being sold to BISCO for scrap on 25 February 1946.

She is remembered on a .26 Euro stamp issued to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Malta run.

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Specs:

Image via Shipbucket http://www.shipbucket.com/images.php?dir=Real%20Designs/Great%20Britain/DD%20D64%20Vansittart.png

Click to big up. Image via Shipbucket

Displacement: 1,140 tons standard, 1,550 tons full
Length: 300 ft. o/a, 312 ft. p/p
Beam: 30 ft.
Draught: 10 ft. 11 in
Propulsion: 3 Yarrow type Water-tube boilers, Brown-Curtis steam turbines, 2 shafts, 27,000 shp
Speed: 34 kn
Reduced to 25 kn 1943
Range: 320-370 tons of oil
3,500 nmi at 15 kn
900 nmi at 32 kn
Complement: 111 as designed, 150 by 1943
Type 271 surface warning Radar fitted 1942
Armament: As-built 1920:
• 4 x BL 4.7 in (120-mm) Mk.I guns mount P Mk.I
• 2 x QF 2 pdr Mk.II “pom-pom” (40 mm L/39)
• 6 × 21-inch Torpedo Tubes
1943 LRE conversion:
• 3 × BL 4.7 in (120mm) Mk.I L/45 guns
• 1 × QF 12 pounder 12 cwt naval gun
• 2 × QF 2 pdr Mk.II “pom-pom” (40 mm L/39)
• 2 × 20mm Orkelion cannons
• 3 × 21-inch Torpedo Tubes (one triple mount)
• 2 × depth charge racks
• Hedgehog anti-submarine mortar

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!

Hood’s bell saved, retrieved from Poseidon

HMS HoodNo shock was greater to the Royal Navy in WW2 than the loss of HMS Hood in a brief, brutal encounter with Hitler’s flagship Bismarck on May 24 1941.

The ship blew up, her magazines detonated by a German shell, and she sank in minutes, taking all but three of her 1,418 crew down with her. She remains the largest British warship lost and the Royal Navy’s heaviest loss of life in a single ship.

As Hood sank, the battlecruiser broke in two and debris, including the bell, was scattered around the sea bed.

The bell was mounted on a high wooden stand, which was kept on the warship’s quarterdeck in harbour and typically outside the captain’s quarters when at sea.

It was sounded by a Royal Marine to mark daily routine and watches on board, but would also be struck in the event of fire or other calamity aboard.

And now it has been saved.

hoods bell hood bell

Once restored – the conservation work is likely to take around 12 months – it will be reunited with the bell of HMS Prince of Wales, which took part in the same Denmark Strait action with the Bismarck but survived, only to be sunk at the end of the year by the Japanese in the South China Sea.

More here

The AR-15s .308 caliber Grandpa: The Armalite AR-10

Many today will contend that a .308 caliber and larger AR is a modification of the AR-15 design, which of a .5.56mm semi-auto direct gas impingement rifle. Well the funny thing is it’s actually the other way around.

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Introducing Sullivan and Michault

In the early 1950s, an engineer who moonlighted as an attorney, George Sullivan, teamed up with a talented inventor by the name of Jacques Michault to design a breed of new rifles that could be pitched to militaries around the world. These new guns, products of the latest design techniques, used instead of the WWI/WWII standard wood stocks and steel receivers, would be made with space age plastics and aluminums wherever possible. They would also include such forward thinking designs as built-in carrying handles, hollow pistol grips that could accept a purpose built cleaning and maintenance multi-tool that predated the Leatherman by thirty years, and elaborate flash suppressors.

Sullivan and Michault took their concepts to Dick Boutelle, president of aircraft maker Fairchild Aviation (maker at the time of the C-119 Flying Boxcar and the C-123 Provider transports for the Air Force), and Boutelle saw potential. This spawned Fairchild subsidiary Armalite, founded in 1954. With the new company came a pair of designers and engineers, L. James Sullivan and one Eugene Stoner.  The latter soon cranked out the AR-5, a 22 Hornet chambered survival rifle for the Air Force (to come complete in new C-119s and 123s!) and the follow-on .22LR caliber civilian AR-7 “float gun.”

By 1955, this plastic rifle dream team, with the addition of Melvin Johnson, who had a very forward thinking rifle/light machinegun adopted briefly by the Marines in World War II, coughed up the basic design for a revolutionary battle rifle.

Design of the AR-10

AR-10 prototypes

With the armies of Free World chasing 7.62x51mm caliber battle rifles (the T44E5 which became the M14 in the U.S. and the FN FAL/CETME/Sig Stg.57 families in Europe), the Johnson-Sullivan-Stoner team at Armalite switched the original 30.06 caliber rifle design they were working on to one that accommodated the new NATO round. This gun was gas operated, using a modified Ljungman-style direct impingement action with a rotating bolt. The ambi charging lever was atop the upper receiver, hidden under an elevated carrying handle, which held the high-line aperture rear sights. All exposed metal surfaces were given a thick anodized/parkerized finish.

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Select-fire and capable of being rattled off at a blistering 650-750 rounds per minute, capable of emptying a “disposable” 20-round waffle mag in just two seconds, it was controllable due to a distinctive coke can-sized flash suppressor/compensator and the overall high bore axis of the 21-inch barrel.

So why didn’t it take the world by storm?

Portuguese A.I. AR-10 africa

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

Inside the sneaky dope sub

The Coast Guard Cutter Stratton crew seizes cocaine bales from a self-propelled semi-submersible (SPSS, a/k/a/ sneaky dope sub, a/k/a narco nautilus) interdicted in international waters off the coast of Central America, July 19, 2015. The Coast Guard recovered more than 6 tons of cocaine from the 40-foot vessel.

Interesting footage of the Stratton‘s 35 foot LRI-II notching in the rear ramp of the big 418-foot National Security Cutter. I’ve done it on a 17 footer in the back of a WPB and it was a blast so I can only imagine the scale involved here.

More on Stratton‘s epic 8.4 ton seizure here.

 

 

Lighting up the sky with the Angry Gun

My friend Ben Phillipi just put this together on his favorite gun, the HK51  ‘Angry Gun’.

You do know the HK51 yes?  If not, here is a brief primer:

These were never made by HK and basically take a G3 or its semi-automatic clones (PT91/HK41/HK91/SAR 48 et. al), chop em down to a 8-inch ish barrel (!) and deck them out with MP-5 furniture. The result is a 24-31 inch gun that is typically an SBR by definition and, since you have to get the tax stamp anyway, usually select fire. HK followed up with this gun with their HK53 later, which is the same concept.

And they are a blast to shoot. I mean, who doesn’t want to kick a 3-pound 7.62x51mm NATO out on full-auto?

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