Category Archives: weapons

Rolling Bones

80 years ago. Awaiting removal of a roadblock on the road to Eisfeld, Germany, a 90mm GMC M36 tank destroyer crew whiles away the time shooting craps. 28th Infantry Division (“Keystone”), U.S. Third Army, 12 April 1945.

Signal Corps Photo 111-SC-204555, National Archives Identifier 6927819

The men are likely “Cossacks” of the 630th TD Battalion, Battle of the Bulge vets who passed from temporary XVIII Airborne Corps control back to the 28th near Wolfstein around this time.
Among the camp gear accumulated on the back of the M36 is a case of “10-in-1” rations, Menu 3, which would include bulk-packed K rations in two 5-serving packs, the first in packages and the second in cans. Of key importance, a 10-in-1 also held ten packages of cigarettes– each holding 10 Chesterfields, Luckies, or Pall Malls– along with ten GI matchbooks and 250 sheets of GI toilet paper. Tough but fair.

Harpoons Away!

Some 80 years ago today, “somewhere in the Western Aleutians,” 10 April 1945, we get a good look at the bristling nose of the new Lockheed PV-2 Harpoon maritime patrol bomber of the “Vee-Gees” of VPB-139 as it gets ready for a sortie, showing off five forward-firing M2 .50 caliber Brownings. The type had another two .50 cals in a dorsal turret and two in the tail.

Official caption: “Loading machine gun ammunition in Lockheed Harpoon PV in their strikes against the Northern Kuril Islands. Inside the plane. R.W. Medlock, AOMM2, receives a load of ammunition from D.A. Tarkington, AOM2, as they prepare one of the bombers for a strike.”

U.S. Navy photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-32266

Just over 500 PV-2s were built in 1944-45 and were rushed out as replacements for war-weary PV-1 Venturas.

As noted in Curacao-based VPB-147’s official history for April 1945: “All of the squadron pilots were checked out in the aircraft before bringing in PV-2s from the States to replace the worn-out Venturas. The old PV-1s were self-destructing as time went on. In May, one Ventura was written off when its landing gear collapsed on landing. A second Ventura lost power on takeoff, settling back onto the runway with its gear up.”

Here is another Aleutians’ Harpoon snap, from the same day and place, showing off not only her gun armament but her underwing rocket hardpoints for 5-inch HVARs as well. They could also carry as many as six 1,000-pound bombs.

Lockheed Harpoon PVs at an advanced Aleutian air base waiting for action against the Kuril Islands, April 10, 1945. Note the caterpillar tractor as it tows a Harpoon medium bomber along a taxiway. U.S. Navy photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-322695

The above photos are from VPB-139, who were on their second tour on the Alaskan front, the first being with Venturas in 1943. Now, the first Harpoon squadron to see combat, they were flying out of Casco Field, NAS Attu, and had just gone aloft on the type’s inaugural attack sorties.

Detailed by DANS:

6 Apr–Jun 1945: Four VPB-139 Harpoons attacked Kokutan Zaki, Kuriles, with rockets and machine guns. On 6 May, attacks against ground targets were stopped on the order of BuAer. Problems with the strength of the wings and stabilizers on high-G pullouts over the targets confined Harpoon squadrons thereafter to patrols and occasional attacks on surface vessels until the HEDRONs and PATSUs made repairs. Throughout May, searches and photographic runs were made over Minami Zaki and the Okhotsk areas in the Kuriles. Little enemy fighter opposition was ever encountered on these missions. AA fire, however, was always present.

On 22 April, Lieutenant William D. See and his crew of five failed to return from a patrol and were listed as missing in action.

On 10 May, a group of eight aircraft attacked radar installations at Minami Zaki, Shimushu, and five of the eight were hit by AA fire. All returned to base with no casualties. In June, the squadron made several strikes on Shimushu and numerous ships in the harbors. Although fighter opposition was often present, few attacks were ever pressed home.

“Returning from a mission, Lieutenant R.E. Garnett found that the port engine of his Harpoon was losing oil rapidly, possibly because of damage from debris thrown up by his rockets in an attack on a Japanese installation. The oil loss became so heavy that he had to feather the prop on this engine and depend on the other to bring him back 400 miles across the North Pacific to his advanced Aleutian base. He got back – as seen here making a successful one-engine landing, April 10, 1945. U.S. Navy photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-322668

According to the Dictionary of American Naval Aviation Squadrons, Harpoons only shipped out with 24 units (VPB-100, VPB-130, VPB-131, VPB-135, VPB-136, VB-138, VPB-139, VPB-142, VPB-144, VPB-146, VPB-147, VPB-148, VPB-150, VPB-153, VPB-198, VP-199, VP-900, VP-905, VP-906, VP-911, VP-907, VP-914, VP-916, and VP-917) mostly in 1945-46. With many of these squadrons soon afterward being disestablished as part of the peacetime drawdown, and the new and much superior Lockheed P-2 Neptune entering service in 1947, the lifespan of the Harpoon was limited indeed.

The final squadron to report the PV-2 in inventory was VP-ML-3 (formerly VP-136, soon after VP-3) in August 1948.

Lockheed Harpoon with Radar Guided ‘Bat’ Bombs

We found out why the Hotchkiss Universal did not have universal appeal

The manufacturing firm established by American gunsmith Benjamin B. Hotchkiss in France in the 1860s saw nearly a century of success in making everything from revolving cannons (think 47mm Gatling guns) to light machine guns, automobiles, and even tanks. By the late 1940s, however, the firm was barely hanging on and developed at least four new submachine gun models with tubular receivers to court military and police sales.

The weirdest of these was the Model 010, or “Type Universal.”

To make a gun as compact as possible, almost every component of the Universal was designed to fold, collapse, or telescope. The sheet metal buttstock folds completely under the gun. To make the folded weapon as svelte as could be, both the magazine well and the hollow pistol grip pivot forward. The 10.79-inch rifled barrel slides back a few inches into the receiver through a long trunnion to further abbreviate the firearm.

 

Hotchkiss Universal
With all this done and the stock folded, the Universal is only 17.3 inches long. Compared to its contemporaries – the American M3 Grease Gun and the Soviet PPS-43, which were both 23 inches long with their stocks collapsed – the Universal saves a few inches. (Photo: Chris Eger/Guns.com)
Hotchkiss Universal
When the stock unfolds and the barrel is telescoped forward, the sub gun’s overall length is 30.67 inches, the same length as a STEN gun. It weighs 7.5 pounds and loads with a box magazine full of 32 rounds of 9mm. It is selective fire for single shots or a zippy 650 rounds per minute full-auto cyclic rate. (Photo: Chris Eger/Guns.com)
Hotchkiss Universal
However, the gun proved unpopular, and besides some local use in Indochina with French colonial forces and some limited sales overseas (to Venezuela, for example), it faded into history. 
French paratroopers M1 carbines
It seemed French airmobile and parachute troops, a demographic that would seem an ideal user of the folding Hotchkiss, preferred GI surplus .30 caliber M1A1 Carbines, which weighed about 6 pounds and would compact to 25 inches when folded but were much simpler to use. (Photos: French military archives) 

Our Hotchkiss experience at Battlefield Vegas had a learning curve. To be more to the point, it was needlessly complicated and had terrible ergonomics.

It shot OK, but, after spending some time with it, we could easily tell why the Universal did not have a universal appeal.

More, including the transformation and shooting footage, in my column at Guns.com. 

Birth of the Burkes

Official caption of this 1982 work of art: “Artist’s concept, by Vincent Piecyk, of an experimental guided missile destroyer planned for delivery to the Navy in 1989. Piecyk equips his destroyer with an AGM-84A Harpoon missile, a RIM-67 Standard-MR/SM2 missile, a 5-inch 54-caliber gun, and a Phalanx 20mm close-in weapon system (CIWS). In addition, the 1989 destroyer will be equipped with YBGM-109 Tomahawk cruise missiles, advanced lightweight torpedoes, and a high-quality anti-air warfare (AAW) system.”

U.S. Navy photo DNSC8203847, National Archives Identifier 6349352

Fast forward a decade and the result looked fairly close to the concept.

A starboard view of the guided-missile destroyer USS Arleigh Burke (DDG-51) underway off the Virginia Capes. 19 July 1991. Navy photo DNSC9201471 by PHAN Vann. National Archives Identifier 6474766

Ordered on 2 April 1985, launched on 6 December 1988, and commissioned on Independence Day 1991, USS Arleigh Burke (DDG-51) is still in service at age 34– and she has 92 sisters in service or planned, making them arguably the most numerous and successful destroyer class since the 98-ship WWII-era Gearing class.

Bunting and a rainbow flag hoist adorn the guided-missile destroyer USS Arleigh Burke (DDG 51) on its commissioning day, July 4, 1991, in Norfolk. DNST9202340. National Archives Identifier 6478464

Traveling light

Some 80 years ago, “backpacking around Europe,” a GI takes a breather along the Rhine in increasingly Allied-occupied Germany, April 1945.

LIFE Magazine Archives – William Vandivert Photographer

Besides his M1 Garand cane (muzzle awareness be damned), he is lightly equipped with his M1936 khaki webbed belt and suspenders complete with E-tool, while two extra 80-round bandoliers for said Garand are carried bandito style. A pair of cardboard K-ration “Supper” boxes are tied together. As a party favor, he has what looks like an M1 pineapple grenade on his left shoulder. 

Mandalorian Build, Anyone?

Studio Auctions got their hands on the screen-used blaster carried by Pedro Pascal in Season 1 of The Mandalorian that is set to have the gavel drop on it on April 5. Based on 1894 Bergman, unlike the guns used in the original Star Wars, it is fully cast resin rather than being a conversion of real steel.

I’m not a modern (Disney era) Star Wars fan, but in case anyone out there is and also happens to have a junk-grade Bergmann on hand or are good at 3D printing, there are some great detail images:

The listing, for posterity:

The Mandalorian, 2019-Present, Lucasfilm. The main sidearm of “The Mandalorian” (Pascal), this static blaster pistol was based on the rare Bergmann 1894, hence its name “1B-94″. Constructed of cast resin and expertly studio painted to resemble the Bergmann, this piece is highly visible throughout Season 1, always the Mandalorian’s weapon of choice. Highly visible on publicity material as well. Measuring approximately 14 x 7.25 x 1 in. Exhibiting production wear and handling. In very good condition.

2d Amtrac Battalion Hangs Up its Tracks

Earlier this year, the Marines’ 2d Assault Amphibian Battalion received its first new 32-ton Amphibious Combat Vehicles. Based on the Italian Iveco SuperAV, the Marines plan to buy 632 of these big 8x8s to replace the Corps’ 1,300-odd remaining circa 1970s tracked AAVP-7 variants.

The new ACV. This is the P transport variant. About a half of the ACVs will carry either a stabilized dual-mount M2/Mark 19 grenade launcher turret in a support role or a 30mm Mk44 Bushmaster II (XM813) chain gun in a fighting role (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Leo Amaro)

The legacy AAVP7. “AAV7A1 assault amphibious vehicles transport Marines with 2d Assault Amphibian Battalion and 1st Battalion, 2d Marine Regiment, both with 2d Marine Division, for a wet-gap amphibious crossing as part of a company-sized infiltration on Camp Lejeune, N.C., Aug. 10, 2021. The infiltration focused on maneuvering across complex terrain and picket lines with near-peer capabilities in an unscripted force-on-force scenario. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Jacqueline C. Arre)

While the AAV is as tall as a house and can carry two dozen uncomfortably, it also does it slowly and with a terrible safety record, giving the ACV, which can only carry 13 passengers but make 65 mph on roadways, a bright shining ray of hope.

The 2d AABn just completed the first amphibious combat vehicle crewmember course on Camp Lejeune, making the redesigation official this week. 

U.S. Marines and instructors with 2d Assault Amphibian Battalion, 2d Marine Division, pose for a photo upon completion of the first amphibious combat vehicle crewmember course on Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, March 28, 2025. The crewmembers are tasked with the operation and maintenance of the Marine Corps next-generation amphibious combat vehicle platform in support of 2d MARDIV. (U.S. Marine Corps photo illustration by Lance Cpl. Frank Sepulveda Torres)

All Aces, No Jokers

Check out this great shot of some F-16Cs Block 50s of the Gamblers of the 77th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron out of Shaw AFB in South Carolina, on deployment for trilateral training during Cope25 at Korat Royal Air Base, Thailand, with Thai and Singapore AF units.

The airframe is 34 years old and has been with the 77th FS since 1994

Of note, the squadron leader with the full-color “4 of a Kind” poker hand painted on the tail, SN #91-0353, is a bona fide MiG killer, having splashed a Yugo MiG-29 with an AIM-120B during Operation Allied Force on 4 May 1999.

The 77th has a lineage that dates back to 1918 and earned seven campaign streamers alongside a Distinguished Unit Citation flying close air support missions in the European theater during WWII (28 Dec 1943–25 Apr 1945).

Flying the F-111 during the Cold War on NATO assignments kept them out of Vietnam, but they have been Falcon flyers since 1993, including several stints over Bosnia and in Southwest Asia.

The Double Edge of Simple Weapons

One of the most oft-retold tales of military equipment is that the spear used by the Roman Legions, the two-part composite pilum, was easy for a legionnaire to master as a thrusting weapon and, if thrown, the soft iron shank would warp and deform on impact, preventing its further use by the enemy.

Panzerfausts were no pila.

Easy to make in quantity and even easier to use, the Germans dutifully included with each crate a two-page instruction sheet that you didn’t need to know German to grasp.

They even distilled the knowledge to a simpler pictograph on the side of the Fausts themselves.

Vorsicht!

This allowed last-ditch Volkssturm to field the disposable anti-tank rocket with about five minutes of instruction.

“The Volkssturm” Painting by Franz Kleinmayer, showing the typical make up and arms of the doomed militia.

And, as seen in these images from recently Soviet-occupied Danzig in March 1945, it was just as easily translated to Red Army inheritors.

New Springfield Armory Optics-Ready TRP AOS 1911

Back in the 1990s, the FBI was in the market for a pistol to equip its elite Hostage Rescue Team and regional SWAT teams, and the contract went to Springfield in 1998 for 500 M1911s crafted to very tight specs via meticulous hand fitting in the SA Custom Shop. Shortly after, the Marines ordered a batch of 150 similar pistols for its MEU(SOC) units. The HRT contract gun soon morphed into the Professional Model and eventually the TRP, which has gone on to become legendary over the past couple of decades.

SA’s Professional 1911s

Standard features on today’s top-shelf TRPs– going beyond the careful selection and fitment of components– include front strap checkering at 20 lines per inch, forward slide serrations, sighting plane serrations, the company’s Gen 2 Speed Trigger, a skeletonized hammer, premium sights, a straight mainspring housing, and G10 grips.

New for 2025 are eight optics-ready models, all equipped with an Agency Arms optics sighting system and offered in 9mm- both a first for the TRP. Priced at $1,999 across the board (we told you these were Springfield’s top shelf 1911s), there are full-sized all-steel 5-inch railed models in either black or Coyote Brown and in .45 and 9mm, as well as a lightweight Commander-length (4.25-inch) Carry Contour series in the same calibers and color options.

Springfield sent me a Coyote Commander-length Carry Contour TRP AOS in 9mm in this review; light and optic are not included.

In a nutshell, we found it to look good, feel great, and run like a gazelle. The slide-to-frame fit is legit, and the gun has no slop. The AOS system allows for lots of different optics, and it is great that SA is now making the TRP in a 9mm option, even if some consider such a thing in a 1911 platform to be an abomination.

The only rocks we can find to throw on this one are that the asking price of $1,999 is a bit steep, even in today’s inflated dollars, and that, perhaps a direct mount ACRO footprint would be a bigger hit.

The full review is over in my column at Guns.com.

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