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12-287 garand picture of the Day - GELA, SICILY
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Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current. |
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He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
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10-13-2014 12:59 PM
# ADS
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Those stars on the tanks make excellent bulleyes, Ray
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Originally Posted by
rayg
Those stars on the tanks make excellent bulleyes, Ray
The principal "rule" of direct fire gunnery is to aim center of target mass. Better to have the enemy shooting at your national identity than the "friendly fire" of your own air force and ground troops.
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Dont recognize the gun. Help?
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Advisory Panel
The wheels look axis...German
...
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I think it is an Italian
anti-tank gun.
---------- Post added at 06:49 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:43 PM ----------
As it turns out.... it is a French
47mm APX anti tank gun.
47 mm APX anti-tank gun | World War II
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I forgot about them. So, it's basicly new then. Never been fired and only dropped once, like their rifles. Although doesn't that article discuss it as being a French
gun?
Many of these pieces are captured by the German
army, and returned to service by the Wehrmacht as the “2.5-cm PaK 113 (f).”
Last edited by browningautorifle; 10-15-2014 at 10:02 PM.
Regards, Jim
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Originally Posted by
RT Ellis
The principal "rule" of direct fire gunnery is to aim center of target mass. Better to have the enemy shooting at your national identity than the "friendly fire" of your own air force and ground troops.
Yea I guess you're right. No one would recognize the profile of a Sherman tank, Lol
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... Many of these pieces are captured by the
German
army, and returned to service by the Wehrmacht as the “2.5-cm PaK 113 (f).”
True, it is very possible that the APX gun was used by the Germans. or even the Italians in Sicily (or North Africa). The British
Eighth Army, the Italians and the Afrika Korps North Africa campaign in particular all used captured equipment - trucks, tanks, guns - the lot.
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