Meet the (very quiet) Integra

integra

Yes, that is a suppressed AR with the suppressor attached. (Photo: Chris Eger)

Gemtech last month brought out a sweet new production Nemo Arms AR upper that includes a pinned suppressor body and titanium core– with an all up barrel length that’s still firmly in the carbine arena.

I shot the Integra, shown off for the first time in public, at the ASA Suppressor Shoot in Knob Creek and have to admit its wicked quiet in .300BLK when using one of Gemtech’s suppressor optimized BCGs which reduces carrier speed to non-suppressed levels and reduces felt recoil.

How quiet? It mics at 128dB, and for comparison, dry-firing an unloaded AR is 124dB

The upper features a 10.1-inch barrel with suppressor tube pinned and welded onto the end to make it 16.1-inches overall and thus a “one-stamp” device.

The core can be removed for cleaning and maintenance. Removal is by a 3/8″ socket.

It costs a good bit more than the similar concept over at Hardened Arms, but this is Gemtech here and we are talking about a Nemo upper for a base, so there’s that.

More in my column over at Guns.com

 

Welcome USS Michael Monsoor

Sally Monsoor christens the future USS Michael Monsoor (DDG 1001)BATH, Maine (June 18, 2016) Sally Monsoor christens the future USS Michael Monsoor (DDG 1001), which is named in honor of her son, Medal of Honor recipient Navy MA2 (SEAL) Michael A. Monsoor. DDG-1001 includes new technologies and will serve as a multi-mission platform capable of operating as an integral part of naval, joint or combined maritime forces. (U.S. Navy photo 160618-N-NO101-002 courtesy of Bath Iron Works/Released)

Petty Officer Second Class (SEAL) Michael A. Monsoor poses for a photo in Hawthorne Nev.. He was postumously awarded the MOH after he leap on a live grenade saving the lives of two fellow SEALs

Petty Officer Second Class (SEAL) Michael A. Monsoor poses for a photo in Hawthorne Nev.. He was postumously awarded the MOH after he leap on a live grenade saving the lives of two fellow SEALs

MA2 Monsoor distinguished himself in by his actions on actions on Sept. 29, 2006

The ship named in his honor will be the second Zumwalt-class guided missile destroyer and as such is huge.

How huge? Check this out when compared to the rest of the U.S. Navy’s destroyer lineage.

destroyer history american

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Geoffrey Stephen Allfree

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sundays (when I feel like working), I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, photographers and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Geoffrey Stephen Allfree

Born 11 Feb 1889 in Kent, England, to the Rev Francis Allfree– the vicar of the Parish of St Nicholas-at-Wade and Sarre, young Geoffrey Stephen Allfree embarked on a career as a merchant mariner until 1911 when he took up painting.

He volunteered to take the King’s Schilling at the outbreak of war in 1914 as a Sub-Lieutenant in the Royal Navy Reserve and served several years in motor launches. By 1918, he was named a war artist and covered a number of maritime subjects of the Great War.

The Wake of a P-boat. A view from the stern of a patrol boat of the waves and spray created by the boat as it moves across the surface of the water. Another vessel is visible in the patrol boat's wake..IWM ART 563

The Wake of a P-boat. A view from the stern of a patrol boat of the waves and spray created by the boat as it moves across the surface of the water. Another vessel is visible in the patrol boat’s wake..IWM ART 563

A Monitor's Turret. A detailed side-on view of the two-gun turret of a Monitor, with part of the ship's superstructure visible behind the turrent to the left. A portion of the deck is visible, with a sailor standing on it in the right foreground. The silhouettes of buildings are visible in the background, showing that the Monitor is moored in a dock. IWM 564

A Monitor’s Turret. A detailed side-on view of the two-gun turret of a Monitor, with part of the ship’s superstructure visible behind the turrent to the left. A portion of the deck is visible, with a sailor standing on it in the right foreground. The silhouettes of buildings are visible in the background, showing that the Monitor is moored in a dock. IWM 564

Submarines In Dry Dock. a view of two Royal Navy submarines being refitted in a dry dock. The foremost submarine is shown from the bow, whilst the second, to the left, is shown from the stern. Both are supported by scaffolding and struts. Men work on the deck and hull of the foremost submarine, with a few men also standing on the floor of the dry dock. IWM 777

Submarines In Dry Dock. a view of two Royal Navy submarines being refitted in a dry dock. The foremost submarine is shown from the bow, whilst the second, to the left, is shown from the stern. Both are supported by scaffolding and struts. Men work on the deck and hull of the foremost submarine, with a few men also standing on the floor of the dry dock. IWM 777

HMS Revenge in Dry Dock, Portsmouth, 1918. A view of the looming bow of the Royal Navy battleship HMS Revenge whilst undergoing maintenance in dry dock at Portsmouth. The huge ship is tethered to the dockside and supported against the side of the dock with large struts. The lower half of the hull, usually below the water level, is a rusty orange colour. Only the tallest part of the ship's superstructure is visible at the top of the composition. The lead ship of her class of 5 30,000-ton modern battleships, Revenge was commissioned in 1916, just before the Battle of Jutland and survived both World Wars, going to the breakers in 1948. IWM 765

HMS Revenge in Dry Dock, Portsmouth, 1918. A view of the looming bow of the Royal Navy battleship HMS Revenge whilst undergoing maintenance in dry dock at Portsmouth. The huge ship is tethered to the dockside and supported against the side of the dock with large struts. The lower half of the hull, usually below the water level, is a rusty orange color. Only the tallest part of the ship’s superstructure is visible at the top of the composition. The lead ship of her class of 5 30,000-ton modern battleships, Revenge was commissioned in 1916, just before the Battle of Jutland and survived both World Wars, going to the breakers in 1948. IWM 765

HMS Revenge In Dry Dock At Night, Portsmouth The Work was Continued through the Night by the Aid of Huge Flares. IWM 761

HMS Revenge In Dry Dock At Night, Portsmouth The Work was Continued through the Night by the Aid of Huge Flares. IWM 761

A Monitor. A front-on view of a large Monitor at sea, with its two-gun turret facing towards the bow. Parts of the ship's superstructure are painted in a chequered pattern. A number of sailors are visible standing on deck and there is a stationary gun platform visible in the background to the left. IWM 568

A Monitor. A front-on view of a large Monitor at sea, with its two-gun turret facing towards the bow. Parts of the ship’s superstructure are painted in a chequered pattern. A number of sailors are visible standing on deck and there is a stationary gun platform visible in the background to the left. IWM 568

Dazzled Tramp In Portsmouth Harbour. a view of the starboard side of a dazzle camouflaged Merchant Navy transport ship, which is moored in Portsmouth harbour. IWM 793

Dazzled Tramp In Portsmouth Harbour. a view of the starboard side of a dazzle camouflaged Merchant Navy transport ship, which is moored in Portsmouth harbour. IWM 793

A Torpedoed Tramp Steamer off the Longships, Cornwall, 1918. A tramp-steamer in dazzle camouflage keeled over to port and grounded on a cliff-lined Cornish beach. A heavy sea flecked with foam washes over the wreck, while a stormy sky passes overhead. Shafts of sunlight illuminate the sea and cliffs with an unearthly glow. The remains of an earlier wreck can be seen stranded on the point in the upper left. IWM 2237.

A Torpedoed Tramp Steamer off the Longships, Cornwall, 1918. A tramp-steamer in dazzle camouflage keeled over to port and grounded on a cliff-lined Cornish beach. A heavy sea flecked with foam washes over the wreck, while a stormy sky passes overhead. Shafts of sunlight illuminate the sea and cliffs with an unearthly glow. The remains of an earlier wreck can be seen stranded on the point in the upper left. IWM 2237.

HMS Iron Duke. The ship is starboard side on, steaming from left to right with a smaller ship in front of the battleship's bow. The lead ship of her 29,000-ton class, Iron Duke was commissioned into the Home Fleet in March 1914 as the fleet flagship, fought at Jutland, and made it through WWII to be broken in 1946. IWM149.

HMS Iron Duke. The ship is starboard side on, steaming from left to right with a smaller ship in front of the battleship’s bow. The lead ship of her 29,000-ton class, Iron Duke was commissioned into the Home Fleet in March 1914 as the fleet flagship, fought at Jutland, and made it through WWII to be broken in 1946. IWM149.

A Dazzled Oiler, With Escort. A large dazzle-painted oiler at sea being escorted by a smaller vessel, with the white chalk cliffs of the coastline visible in the background. IWM 567.

A Dazzled Oiler, With Escort. A large dazzle-painted oiler at sea being escorted by a smaller vessel, with the white chalk cliffs of the coastline visible in the background. IWM 567.

Motor Launches Engaging a Submarine. A motor launch at full steam, moving from right to left, with her bow lifting out of the water. Two figures on the deck are manning a light gun. Another motor launch is visible just behind. Both are moving quickly towards a German submarine that has surfaced, in the background to the left. The artist served in motor launched throughout the war, even while in work as a war artist, so this image was real life for him. IWM 148

Motor Launches Engaging a Submarine. A motor launch at full steam, moving from right to left, with her bow lifting out of the water. Two figures on the deck are manning a light gun. Another motor launch is visible just behind. Both are moving quickly towards a German submarine that has surfaced, in the background to the left. The artist served in motor launched throughout the war, even while in work as a war artist, so this image was real life for him. IWM 148

His work included very popular if stark memorial art to the loss of the cruiser HMS Hampshire

Speaking of loss, the artist was killed at age 29 during the war when on 29 Sept 1918– just six weeks before the Armistice– his craft, HM Motor Launch No. 247, was lost at sea.

From the IWM:

A four boat flotilla of Motor Launches had entered St Ives Bay for shelter during a strong southerly gale, which rapidly escalated to hurricane force winds. In the eye of the storm,the Motor Launches started engines and tried desperately to work their way into deeper water. Allfree’s launch developed engine trouble, one mile off Clodgy Point and started to drift helplessly towards Oar Rock. The St. Ives’ lifeboat raced to reach the stricken ship, but arrived minutes too late by which time the launch had blown up on impact with the rock, presumably as its depth charges detonated. There was only one survivor.

He is commemorated on a brass tablet in St Nicholas’ church as well as on the Portsmouth Naval Memorial.

A number of his pieces are in the National Collection in the UK and displayed at various public locations while the Imperial War Museum has some 53 on file and keeps a detail of his own biography as part of their Lives of the First World War series.

Thank you for your work, sir.

Unternehmen Merkur

Bundesarchiv Bild 141-0864, Kreta, Landung von Fallschirmjägern

Bundesarchiv Bild 141-0864, Kreta, Landung von Fallschirmjägern

German Fallschirmjägers gained an almost mythical standing in the first couple years of WWII.

Sky soldiers of the 7th Flieger-Division cut off the evacuation of Polish officers in the invasion of that country in September 1939.

They made the the first airborne invasion when invading Denmark on the 9 April 1940, taking control of Aalborg Airport and other key strategic locations well behind the front lines by complete surprise. A sequel to this came the near simultaneous Norwegian campaign where German paratroopers captured the defended air base of Sola and leapfrogged around tough defensive obstacles to capture the rail junction at Dombas five days later (but was later taken prisoner by the Norwegians when they ran out of ammo– an important lesson that few airborne pundits kept in mind).

Then came Operation Fall Gelb during which Kurt Student’s Fallschirmjägers fell in little groups all over Belgium and the Netherlands capturing the bridges at Veldwezelt and Vroenhoeven along with the huge fort at Eben Emael. While most of these came out OK, (although Student caught a round from a Dutch infantryman’s Hemburg rifle), a larger effort to capture The Hague and the bridges around Rotterdam failed miserably as the paras went “a bridge to far” so to speak.

Nevertheless, Student’s paratroops were expanded into the 14,000-strong XI. Fliegerkorps, and, used in conjunction with follow-on airlifted troops, conducted the first mainly airborne invasion in military history in Operation Mercury when they dropped into Crete on May 20. While they won the 13-day battle, they faced a some 40,000~ Greek and Commonwealth troops who were ready for them– definitely not the ideal for a mass airborne jump.

Click to big up

Click to big up

On the first day, Student landed 750 glider troops and 7,200 paratroops– of which 80 percent wound up as casualties.

Here is a great older documentary about the battle that proved the end of large-scale German parachute operations just months after they were heralded as a strategic wonder weapon.

Pummel Pipe?

Saw this old article at Zombease (it was new to me though) about a homemade “Pummel Pipe” melee weapon crafted from hardware store items as an ode to an old-school war hammer with a Mad Max twist. The thing looks downright vicious in a trench raider kind of way.

Interesting design, I thought.

pummel pipe

Made from: 3/4″ diameter 24″ long steel pipe, two 3/4″ threaded connections, two 3/4″ end caps, one 3/4″ to 1/4″ adapter, one 1/4 squared plug, 3/4″ T adapter, and 550 paracord.

Probably cost ~$20 all told and, if filled with sand, would make one heck of a first impression.

Anyway, more after the jump if you are interested.

Just Rangering it up

Here is an interesting video that the Canadian Forces posted showing the highlights of the Canadian Ranger Basic Military Indoctrination Course. The course was held from April 10 to 16, 2016 at the Farnham Garrison in Quebec. For those who don’t know, the Rangers are a breed apart from most military organizations.

Most of the land mass of Canada, that sparsely inhabited region away from the population centers near the U.S. northern border, has very little military presence. There, the country is protected by the Rangers. A small, scarcely funded sub-component of the Canadian Armed Forces Reserve founded in 1942, they are spread out in 160 small units known as ‘patrols’ in 200 of the most remote villages in the world. Like the U.S. National Guard, these part-time soldiers serve a few weekends a year in their community. They conduct armed patrols of their area, report suspicious activities, and help with search and rescue. Their job is huge and their equipment is scarce.

And while they are fielding new Sako rifles, it is interesting to see them still drilling with the good old Longbranch SMLEs.

You do know the Standschutze Hellriegel, don’t you?

Historical Firearms has a good piece on the the Austro-Hungarian Standschutze Hellriegel submachine gun. Apparently this mad bulky water cooled (!) burp gun was developed during 1915 and blended pistol caliber ammunition with the firepower of a machine gun making it one of the first weapons which could be considered an SMG.

When you think SMG, you don't really think something with the same portability as a Vickers Maxim with 1/10th the range

When you think SMG, you don’t really think something with the same portability as a Vickers Maxim with 1/10th the range

Dig the assistant gunner with the leather and wood frame spare mag carrier

Dig the assistant gunner waiting patently with the leather and wood frame spare mag carrier

That looks easy to load

That looks easy to load

More here

Farewell Yugo 5.56 PAPs, we hardly knew ye

Yugoslavia’s (Serbia) Zastava has announced that they will no longer be making their series of AK pattern rifles and pistols (M85 PAP NP, M90 rifle) in 5.56/.223 Rem. Company officials say they have no timeline for future production of those items. There have been few complaints that I have heard about either as they seem rock solid with adapted magwell to accept AR-15 magazines and a number of SOTs use the M85 in particular for the basis of SBR builds so word on the street is they were just a limited run of niche guns.

These started to be imported in late 2013 and Century has about 1,500 left. After those are gone there apparently will be no more.

I picked up a M85NP AK PAP Pattern Pistol, Krinkov style, chambered for 5.56×45, a while back whose serial number range place it in the first 100 rifles built. After about 1,500 rounds I have had little to complain about.

Isn't she pretty?

Isn’t she pretty? For a Serbian girl anyway.

It has a 10.25 inch barrel (1:7 twist), hard nickel moly steel bolt and carrier, and 21.5 inch overall length. I really dig the standard hinged top receiver cover with krink pattern flip up white sights and removable muzzle brake (26×1.5 LH thread). With a sling attached and used properly, this NFA-compliant pistol will go 100 yards all day and makes a great Jeep gun.

And it seems now it is a good collectable and future curio. Plus as I mentioned they make great builds for SBRs.

So yeah, I’m pretty sure I am going to turn in a form on this bad boy. The only thing I don’t like is that it has a gritty trigger, but that’s what’s you get on a Serbian made AK (PAP) triggers. Maybe I will trade it out for a ALG Defense AK Trigger (AKT) to go along with my folder on the SBR build.

Stay tuned.

And ever since coming to the Keys I have had a thing for hibiscus. It's a sickness.

And ever since coming to the Keys I have had a thing for hibiscus. It’s a sickness.

If you are in the Beltway area on Friday, look up

Coast Guard air stations from North Carolina, New Jersey, Alabama and the District of Columbia will provide a nine aircraft sortie consisting of at least one of every aircraft type flown by the service to continue its celebration of its aviation centennial, and as such many will have historical paint schemes.

flyover uscg aircraft

The event will occur at noon on the 17th and Flyover viewing points will include: Morgan Boulevard Metro Station; Anacostia Park; 11th Street Bridge; Nationals Park; Fort McNair; Hains Point/East Potomac Park; Jefferson Memorial; Gravelly Point Park; Pentagon; Arlington, Virginia; and Falls Church, Virginia.

flyover

That’s not your father’s MAC

We all know the MAC, and quite a few hate it.

john wayne mac-10 mac10

Well a subgun enthusiast created this rather eclectic looking MAC with a Practical Solutions Thompson stock for an M11/9, extensively modifying a M1928 Thompson vertical foregrip, adding a bunch of Lage Max-11 parts, a Carlson Comp and reparking the whole thing.

I have to admit, it is so ugly it’s beautiful.

mac 10 max 11 built with Thompson M1928 forgrip and Carlson Comp via uzi talk 4 mac 10 max 11 built with Thompson M1928 forgrip and Carlson Comp via uzi talk 3 mac 10 max 11 built with Thompson M1928 forgrip and Carlson Comp via uzi talk 2 mac 10 max 11 built with Thompson M1928 forgrip and Carlson Comp via uzi talk

More over at Uzi Talk Forums

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