The two-fingered salute from the one-armed ace

Squadron Leader J.A.F. MacLachlan, the one-armed Commanding Officer of No 1 Squadron RAF

Squadron Leader J.A.F. MacLachlan, the one-armed Commanding Officer of No 1 Squadron RAF, standing beside his all-black Hawker Hurricane Mark IIC night fighter, ‘JX-Q’, at Tangmere in West Sussex, England, November 1941. He had lost his arm just seven months before to a Bf 109 over Malta. (Source – Royal Air Force official photographer Woodbine G (Mr) © IWM CH 4015. Colorized by Paul Reynolds. Historic Military Photo Colourisations)

James Archibald Findlay MacLachlan DSO, DFC & Two Bars, “One-Armed Mac,” was credited with 13 victories over Axis planes. On 18 July 1943 the P-51 Mustang in which he was flying was hit by flak and crashed over France, cutting his life short at age 24.

No 1 Squadron RAF, founded in 1911, endures, currently flying Typhoons out of  RAF Lossiemouth.

The Pratt Helmet Gun

pratt helmet gun2 pratt helmet gun

“An invention of Albert Bacon Pratt in 1916 the Pratt helmet gun combined a helmet and a firearm all in one.  The helmet gun was fired by blowing into a tube.  While the helmet gun was never produced, Pratt was awarded a patent for his invention, patent # 1183492.  It was a semi automatic firearm, with the recoil of the guns discharge blowing back the bolt and cocking the hammer. A strong spring drove the bolt back forward, supposedly fast enough that the user wouldn’t even feel or notice the recoil. ”

More over at Lock, Stock and History

An ‘assault weapon’ by any other name…

In 1989 California lawmakers puked up one of the first assault weapons bans in U.S. history and in subsequent years added tweaked it and added such blanket restrictions as prohibitions on .50BMG (because there are so many crimes done with these…). While the California Department of Justice has tried really hard to ban anything that is AR-15ish or AK-47like, all enterprising gun owners have had to do is use devices such as ‘bullet buttons’ and low-capacity magazines to be able to own one today.

Still, between 1989 and 2001, the state allowed the registration by civilians of grandfathered guns. Well through Guns.com I did a public records request to CA DOJ and obtained their list of registered guns, all 145,253 of them. A detailed analysis found some really interesting things.

Here’s a snapshot of the top 25 manufacturers for example:

 

  •     28,259 Colt Mfg, almost all Sporters and AR-15 type rifles
  •     16,665 Chinese Norinco/Polytech/Clayco rifles, primarily AK and SKS pattern guns in 7.62mm
  •     14,797 Bushmasters, almost exclusively XM-15 series rifles
  •     9,158 Heckler & Koch firearms, with Model HK 91, 93 and 94 rifles accounting for the majority
  •     4,529 Springfield Armory rifles, primarily M1/M1A 7.62mm guns
  •     4,528 IMI guns including 179 Galil rifles and 4301 UZIs of multiple types in 9mm and .45
  •     4,199 Armalites including 291 AR-10s and 1046 AR-180s
  •     3,124 Eagle AR-pattern firearms
  •     2,924 Intratec branded guns, all variants of the TEC-9/AB-10 and TEC-22 pistol
  •     2,732 Ruger firearms, mostly Mini-14 and Mini-30 rifles
  •     2,199 FN/Browning/FNH with mainly FAL and FNC type rifles listed
  •     2,189 SWD guns mostly Cobray and M10/11/12 MAC-style pistols
  •     1,876 Arsenal made AK-pattern rifles in 7.62mm
  •     1,461 DPMs, all AR-15 variants
  •     1,457 Austrian Steyrs, almost all AUG-series 5.56mm rifles
  •     1,303 Korean Daewoo firearms in several variants, almost all 5.56mm rifles but also 16 DR300s in 7.62 and 5 DP51 pistols
  •     1,170 Franchi shotguns in the uber-scary SPAS 12 and LAW12 varieties
  •     1,132 CAI/Century guns, primarily 7.62mm rifles
  •     1,082 Hungarian FEG guns, mostly SA85 AK-style rifles
  •     914 Auto Ordnance, typically all Thompson 1927 style carbines
  •     770 Imbel L1A1 type rifles in 7.62mm
  •     693 DSA rifles, all SA58 models
  •     526 Enterprise Arms 7.62mm rifles
  •     496 Berettas including some 122 AR-70s and 60 rare BM-59s
  •     445 SIGs, including 122 P-series pistols and 139 SG550 5.56mm rifles
  •     392 Benellis, split roughly between their M1 and M3 tactical shotguns

The rest of the 3,000~ word report over at Guns.com along with a photo gallery of some of the more interesting guns here.

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What a 20-pack of diesel boats look like in hard storage

Here we see at least 20 inactivated boats of the WWII-era Salmon/Sargo, Gato, and Balao classes at rest at Mare Island, California on 3 January 1946.

Click to bigup

Click to bigup USN photo # 17-46, courtesy of Darryl L. Baker. Text courtesy of David Johnston, USNR. Photo via Navsource

Front row left to right: Sand Lance (SS-381), next two could be Sealion (SS-315) and Seahorse (SS-304), Searaven (SS-196), Pampanito (SS-383), Gurnard (SS-254), Mingo (SS-261), Guitarro (SS-363), Bashaw (SS-241).

Back row left to right: Unknown, Tunny (SS-282), next three could be Sargo (SS-188), Spearfish (SS-190), and Saury (SS-189), Macabi (SS-375), Sunfish (SS-281), Guavina (SS-362), Lionfish (SS-298),Piranha (SS-389).
The Scabbardfish (SS-397) is docked in ARD-11 on the other side of the causeway.

Although out of commission, most of these boats remained in pier-side service as classroom for Naval Reserve units for years and many returned to active duty in either the U.S. or allied fleets– in fact, two are still afloat today.

  • Sand Lance would be transferred to Brazil as the Rio Grande do Sul (S-11) in 1962 and struck ten years later.
  • Sealion who sank the Japanese battleship Kongō, would be recalled to operate in Korea and as a SEAL boat in Vietnam, would be struck in 1977 and sunk as a target off Newport on 8 July 1978.
  • Seahorse would never be beautiful again and would be sold for scrap, 4 December 1968.
  • Searaven, who tried to reinforce Corregidor, was A-bombed at Bikini then sunk as a target off southern California on 11 September 1948.
  • Pampanito has been a museum ship in San Francisco since 21 November 1975.
  • Gunard was sold for scrap, 29 October 1961.
  • Mingo was transferred to Japan in 1955 as the Kuroshio, then sunk as a target in 1973.
  • Guitarro was transferred to Turkey as TCG Preveze (S 340) and remained in service until 1972.
  • Bashaw was GUPPY’d and returned to service until 1969 then scrapped in 1972.
  • Tunny gave hard service in Korea and Vietnam, then expended as a target in 1970.
  • Sargo, another Corregidor vet, was scrapped in 1947.
  • Spearfish was likewise scrapped in 1947.
  • Macabi was transferred to Argentina as ARA Santa Fe (S-11) and remained in service until 1971.
  • Sunfish only left Mare Island again when was scrapped in 1960.
  • Guavina was converted to a submarine tanker (AGSS-362) and was to be used to refuel P6M SeaMaster strategic flying boats at sea. However, as SeaMaster never took off, she was scrapped sunk as a target off Cape Henry, 14 November 1967 (see below).
  • Piranha was scrapped in 1970 after 24 years at Mare Island.
  • Lionfish was brought back for Korea and after she was finally struck was donated to become a museum ship at Battleship Cove, Fall River, Massachusetts in 1972.
  • Scabbardfish was transferred to Greece as Triaina (S-86) and remained in service until 1980– the longest-serving of the above subs.
  • As for ARD-11, the Auxiliary Repair Dock, she was given to Mexico in 1974 and her final fate is unknown.
 USS Guavina (AGSS-362), refueling a P5M-1 Marlin flying boat off Norfolk, Virginia (USA), in 1955. Prior to World War II several submarines were fitted to refuel seaplanes. During the war, Germany and Japan used this technique with some success. After the war this technique was experimented with within the US Navy. It was planned to use submarines to refuel the new jet powered P6M Seamaster flying boats. As part of this program Guavina was converted to carry 160,000 gallons for aviation fuel. To do this blisters were added to her sides and two stern torpedo tubes were removed. When the P6M project was canceled, there was no further need for submarine tankers. This concept was never used operationally in the US Navy.


USS Guavina (AGSS-362), refueling a P5M-1 Marlin flying boat off Norfolk, Virginia (USA), in 1955. Prior to World War II several submarines were fitted to refuel seaplanes. During the war, Germany and Japan used this technique with some success. After the war this technique was experimented with within the US Navy. It was planned to use submarines to refuel the new jet powered P6M Seamaster flying boats. As part of this program Guavina was converted to carry 160,000 gallons for aviation fuel. To do this blisters were added to her sides and two stern torpedo tubes were removed. When the P6M project was canceled, there was no further need for submarine tankers. This concept was never used operationally in the US Navy.

Going Iron Sights for Big Game

Today the military’s standard rifle round, barring snipers and designated marksmen, is the 5.56x45mm NATO. However back in World War II, most grunts in front line service carried a .30-06 Springfield caliber battle rifle be it an M-1 Garand or M1903 bolt-action weapon and the soldiers and Marines were instructed to be able to make 500-yard shots without using any glass. These guns, especially the latter 1903s, were capable of 1,000-yard shots with iron sights and the proper end-user. In fact, the standard rear aperture sights on the M-1 are graduated to an optimistic 1,200 yards.

Aperture or peep sights work through a theory called parallax suppression. The concept goes that the human eye will immediately jump out to and focus the front sight when looking through a very small, sometimes pinhole-sized, rear sight. The smaller the peephole, or aperture, the more it will force the shooter’s pupil to focus…

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Read the rest in my column at Big Game Journal

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Eugene Voishvillo

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

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Eugene Voishvillo

Eugene Valerianovich Voishvillo was born in Libau (now Liepāja, Latvia) in the Holy Russian Empire in 1907. The son of a naval engineer in the Tsar’s Navy, he had a love of the sea and saw the fleet everyday as a child. In 1927 he obtained entrance to the highly competitive Academy of Fine Arts (which accepted only 40 candidates out of hundreds of applicants each year) but after just a year there, he left to join the Soviet Navy. Training as a seaplane mechanic, he left the fleet in 1930 and took a job at a child’s toy factory in Leningrad, where he created concept drawings and toy illustrations.

When war came in 1941, he was recalled to the Navy as a Marine in a coastal artillery unit, even though he was a 34-year-old father. However he soon was given a job at the fleet newspaper Za Sovetskuyu Rodinu (For the Soviet Motherland), commonly just referred to as ZSR, after his skills with a pencil were noticed.

Za Sovetskuyu Rodinu

As the war progressed, he was a senior draftsman and helped illustrate maps and charts as well as texts for the Voroshilov Naval Academy.

Demobilized in 1948, he transitioned into drawing and painting for a number of Warsaw Pact nautical and shipbuilding publications as a member of the Union of Artists, producing more than 150 circulated prints of various warships and sailing vessels.

The Santa Maria

The Santa Maria

The German Navy Schulschiff Deutschland

The German Navy Schulschiff Deutschland

The Donald McKay shipyard, East Boston built clipper Lightning. She made the New York to Liverpool run in 13 days, 19½ hours, all under sail and was known to break 19 knots, outrunning many steamships of the time.

The Donald McKay shipyard, East Boston built clipper Lightning. She made the New York to Liverpool run in 13 days, 19½ hours, all under sail and was known to break 19 knots, outrunning many steamships of the time.

He gained an unofficial fan club as across the Soviet Union people cut out his drawings and decorated their walls and after a time most nautical schools, club and ship-modeling groups soon had his art as standard decor. He had a flavor for ships involved in polar exploration and I have used his paintings in several Warship Wednesdays (such as on the St. Anne and the Yermak)

The 1,500 ton training barque Tovarish (formerly Kreigsmarine's Gorch Fock)

The 1,500 ton training barque Tovarish (formerly Kreigsmarine’s Gorch Fock)

Steamship Savannah

Steamship Savannah

Nuclear icebreaker Lenin meets the elderly Yermak

Nuclear icebreaker Lenin meets the elderly Yermak

Peter The Great's first Russian Naval ship

Peter The Great’s first Russian Naval ship

His magnum opus was a series of 60 paintings of historical oceanography ships (primarily Russian) for the World Ocean Museum in Kaliningrad during the 1980s and early 1990s many of which were used for stamps, seals, and posters not only in Soviet Bloc countries but worldwide.

Baron Toll's ill-fated 450-ton steam- and sail-powered brig Zarya on the 1900-1902 Russian Polar Expedition

Baron Toll’s ill-fated 450-ton steam- and sail-powered brig Zarya on the 1900-1902 Russian Polar Expedition

Fridtjof Nansen's Fram

Fridtjof Nansen’s Fram

The 92-foot 1,450-ton Swedish motor schooner Albatross circumnavigated the globe on a research trip  in the late 1940s http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albatross_expedition

The 92-foot 1,450-ton Swedish motor schooner Albatross circumnavigated the globe on a research trip in the late 1940s

The Danish-built ice strengthened steamship SS Chelyuskin, built in 1933 for an attempt by the Soviets to run through the Northeast passage from Europe to Asia, she had to be abandoned in the ice in 1934.

The Danish-built ice strengthened steamship SS Chelyuskin, built in 1933 for an attempt by the Soviets to run through the Northeast passage from Europe to Asia, she had to be abandoned in the ice in 1934.

Lt. Georgy Sedov on his doomed ship the St Foka

Lt. Georgy Sedov on his doomed ship the St Foka

HMS Beagle

HMS Beagle of Darwin fame

The 1,500-ton German Reichsmarine colonial gunboat turned survey ship Meteor, who survived both World Wars only to end up in the Soviet Navy until 1968

The 1,500-ton German Reichsmarine colonial gunboat turned survey ship Meteor, who survived both World Wars only to end up in the Soviet Navy until 1968

The German Imperial corvette Gazelle on China Station

The German Imperial corvette Gazelle on China Station

Capt.Cook's HMS Endeavor

Capt.Cook’s HMS Endeavor

HMS Discovery on the British Arctic Expedition of 1875–1876

HMS Discovery on the British Arctic Expedition of 1875–1876

115678028_1024px1971_Parohodofregat_Vladimir 115678027_1024px1971_Botik_Petra_I

He died in 1993 in Latvia after living through the Tsar, Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev, Brezhnev, two world wars, a revolution, civil war and the like, all with an upbeat outlook on life. As long as he had a canvas or piece of paper and a ship to draw or paint, he was satisfied.

When speaking about his paintings, he said, “”And yet I have lived a happy life. I painted what I loved.”

In 2009, the immense 376-foot long Russian training bark Kruzenshtern took 15 of his paintings on a world-wide cruise. The World Ocean Museum has 83 paintings and 74 other illustrations by Voishvillo on display.

Thank you for your work, sir.

Nearly 7 of 10 cops surveyed use Glocks on the job

A survey of some 6,000 law enforcement officers from across the country conducted by a police website found that some 68 percent of all respondents carried Glocks and, further, an impressive 61 percent would choose the gun if given an option.

A survey conducted earlier this year by PoliceOne, a law enforcement website, of their vetted members asked a series of questions about their duty sidearms. The surprising results found that the overall majority carried Glocks with 3 carried for every Sig Sauer, about 4 for every Smith and Wesson, and 8 for every Beretta. This backs up the company’s often-cited claim that approximately “65 percent of police departments in America already put a GLOCK police pistol in between them and the problem.”

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For some of the possible reasons, check out my column at Glock Forum

Duck and cover, foxhole edition

U.S. Army nuclear weapons countermeasures at Operation Desert Rock, Nevada test site. Desert Rock nuclear tests, Nevada test site. Includes films of the first ever nuclear surface burst, the 1.2 kt “Jangle-Sugar” test, Nevada, 1951 (all previous nuclear explosions had been air, tower, or underwater bursts), and the first shallow underground test, the 1.2 kt “Jangle-Uncle” test, Nevada, 1951. Film shows the heat, blast and radiation protection afforded by military equipment, foxholes, and the (apparent) simplicity of fallout decontamination.

“…troops observed the detonation at a distance of 5 miles and did not closely approach ground zero. Near ground zero the radiation level was 5000 roentgens/hour at one hour after the test, with levels of 1000 R/hr extending up to 1200 yards from the burst point. Hazardous levels of 100 R/hr extended past 5000 yards in some areas.”

SECNAV arriving

150527-N-TI693-082  PANAMA CITY, Fla. (May 27, 2015) Secretary of the Navy (SECNAV) Ray Mabus presents an award to Gunnery Sgt. Bo Irving, a Marine Corps combatant diver course instructor, in the aquatic training facility at Naval Diving and Salvage Training Center. NDSTC is the largest diving training facility in the world and is home of the military diver. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Fred Gray IV/Released)

150527-N-TI693-082 PANAMA CITY, Fla. (May 27, 2015) Secretary of the Navy (SECNAV) Ray Mabus presents an award to Gunnery Sgt. Bo Irving, a Marine Corps combatant diver course instructor, in the aquatic training facility at Naval Diving and Salvage Training Center. NDSTC is the largest diving training facility in the world and is home of the military diver. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Fred Gray IV/Released)

Secretary of the Navy (SECNAV) Ray Mabus presents an award to Gunnery Sgt. Bo Irving, a Marine Corps combatant diver course instructor, in the aquatic training facility at Naval Diving and Salvage Training Center in Panama City, Florida.  NDSTC is the largest diving training facility in the world and is home of the military diver. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Fred Gray IV (Released) 150527-N-TI693-082.

Gunny Irving received the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal

Marlin’s Turn of the Century pump: The Model 19 shotgun

Produced for a scant two-year period, the often-overlooked Marlin Model 19 was a scattergun with class that signaled the end of 19th century thinking and stepped boldly towards a modern design that we can appreciate today.

Starting in 1898 Marlin made its first slide or trombone action shotgun, the imaginatively named Model 1898. This remained in production for almost a decade when it was replaced by the “teen series” (M16 and 17) guns which gave way to an improved Model 24 in 1908, which, like all of the above, had an external hammer. An often forgotten blip on the map here was the interesting and short-lived Model 19.

So what’s so interesting?

Well, the Model 1898 was a good takedown 12-gauge shotgun, with its 26-32 inch cylinder bore barrels, tubular magazine and pistol grip stock. What its follow-on versions did in the Model 16 was offer different calibers (hint: 16) and a straight stock (Model 17) without really changing much. They waited for the Model 19 to do that.

Overall, the new gun, introduced in 1906, was lighter, which made it faster to the shoulder and easier on the field carry for sportsmen. Further, to accommodate complaints that the previous Marlins scatterguns suffered from having too glossy a finish on the top of the barrel, the Mode 19 was given a special two-part matte finish on the topside to help with glare. This was one of the first times that the such feedback for better sporting use translated into changes made at the factory.

Further, the mechanism of this gun (in later 19G, 19N, and 19S versions) included internal safety features, which kept it from going into “false battery” like the previous Marlin pumps. Finally, these guns were set up to allow for the use of 2 3/4 inch smokeless shells whereas most of the Marlins before it in 12 gauge were 2 1/2 inch black powder guns.

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Read the rest in my column at Marlin Forum

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