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The Scouts certainly earned their keep in NI didn't they.... Mind you, I think as general work horses they were totally flogged to death by the time they were pensioned off. Like the single and twin pioneer 'taxis' in Malaya. I remember exactly where I was when NI all kicked off. I was in Oz, sat on my bed on a Sunday afternoon, writing a letter home when one of the diggers walked up the outside corridor, came in and told me that the paddies had started rioting in NI. I remember saying to him that it was probably IRA inspired/fomented and it'd all be over by Xmas............ Never been more wrong!
Maybe......, just maybe, someone will write the whole warts an' all story of the whole saga. Miami showband, central laundry, Welch Guards int breakthrough......... Nope, maybe not. Just best left unsaid
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04-20-2017 02:01 PM
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Gil, do you remember a GPMG getting snatched in Northern Ireland which, if memory serves me correctly, I seem to remember seeing on news reports from the late 1980s period? I seem to remember from what was said on the news that it caused a "hell of stink" at the time but that the army recovered it fairly quickly.
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Long time since I saw a Bell Sioux. Last one was way out in the bush, I was lead scout for the rifle company...step through the bushes into a clearing and here's this chopper and two man crew. A Lance Sgt and Lance Cpl. flying it. They conflabbed with the OC and then it cranked up and rattled off into the distance...not sure how long until I saw the Gazelles.
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Originally Posted by
mrclark303
Finally, a respected Armourer breaks cover and gives the official reason for these short rifles, cheers Mike!
I hear you were involved with the early classified Humber pig / Sarsons pickled onion trials, hope I haven't got you into bother with the Official secrets act!
No probs John, The real Official secret was. The trials were abandoned, due to the Pigs ignoring the Onions. & Much preferring truffles!........
---------- Post added at 12:48 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:41 AM ----------
Pete, TBH. I cant say for certain why the bayonets were not utilised. I can only assume that they were stolen off the Rifles in a Crowd control situation. Where it was potentially easy for a member of the public. To grasp the bayonet area round the handle area & flash Hider, & press the catch.
But I 'suspect' that the real reason was. They were deemed 'Too Aggressive' when carried fixed. & thought it might upset those poor little rioting paddies?....
Gil: Yes in the very early deployment years, of British
Troops in NI. Tea & Sarnies were welcomed by the Lads. But........when later, ground glass & other 'Nasty Stuff' was included in them. but as You Know, The Practice was stopped by Orders issued from above!.......
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Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
Gil, do you remember a GPMG getting snatched in Northern Ireland which, if memory serves me correctly, I seem to remember seeing on news reports from the late 1980s period? I seem to remember from what was said on the news that it caused a "hell of stink" at the time but that the army recovered it fairly quickly.
So many weapons stolen over the years to remember which Regiment lost what
oops sorry Lost/Stolen correction
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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I can remember a very brief camera sweep of an IRA arms cache being decommissioned on the news, a wood stocked L1A1 was among the AK's, Armalites and M60's etc
Last edited by mrclark303; 04-21-2017 at 04:15 AM.
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The only "funny" I ever saw, (and fired) was an L2A1, that had been around the block with someone and came back with a flash-hider from an M-60 attached to a slightly shortened barrel.
It had modified late-pattern L1A1 hand-guards held on with stainless-steel hose clamps, instead of the C2 type bipod / hand-guard rig. L2A1 dust-cover and sight retained. L1A1 trigger housing and components.
Looked nasty, shot fine.
Do not know of its "heritage", but doubt it was an "official" mod, even for the "interesting chaps" from Western Australia
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There was also alleged to be an L1A1 issued to a rather "gung-ho" Oz Infantry company commander (Major), which was bog-standard, but had a set of hand-guards with brass plates attached to them. On these plates were engraved the words: "Happiness is a warm barrel and a high body count." I suspect there may have been a set of "issue" hand-guards available, come "tech inspection" time.
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The snatch GPMG saga was the late 80's and was taken from one of the Jockistan regiments during a village sweep in bandit country. Some women ran off with it plus he belt hanging from it but the stumbling block was that the engagement rules did not allow the patrol to open fire on the women due to the fact that simply running off with a gun isn't a killing offence. So they had to let them escape. But not for long. One of them had already surrounded and sliced the face of one of the others too. Reinforcements were quickly on scene and the village TOTALLY locked down and sealed. A couple of Para Reg search teams came in - I think that they called then chaos squads - very quick plus dogs and after a while it was found. Much more to it than that but there you go...... Gil, you'll remember this albeit by association with our mutual friend
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Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
Bruce_in_Oz
The only "funny" I ever saw, (and fired) was an L2A1, that had been around the block with someone and came back with a flash-hider from an M-60 attached to a slightly shortened barrel.
It had modified late-pattern L1A1 hand-guards held on with stainless-steel hose clamps, instead of the C2 type bipod / hand-guard rig. L2A1 dust-cover and sight retained. L1A1 trigger housing and components.
Looked nasty, shot fine.
Do not know of its "heritage", but doubt it was an "official" mod, even for the "interesting chaps" from Western Australiaicon.
There was also alleged to be an L1A1 issued to a rather "gung-ho" Oz Infantry company commander (Major), which was bog-standard, but had a set of hand-guards with brass plates attached to them. On these plates were engraved the words: "Happiness is a warm barrel and a high body count." I suspect there may have been a set of "issue" hand-guards available, come "tech inspection" time.
Ring any bells Bruce?
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