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View Full Version : M-14 DMR in Afghanistan (pics)



herr_berg
09-18-2009, 08:14
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0h0Kcbq8Ip9Uk/610x.jpg
Private Don Frigge from 2nd Platoon, Alpha Company, 32nd Infantry Regiment aims his sniper rifle during a gun battle against attacking Taliban forces at their position over the village of Bargematal, Nuristan, August 22, 2009.
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0gBPfaY1TG1TA/610x.jpg
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0eG14LO2OJdjp/610x.jpg

herr_berg
09-18-2009, 09:29
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0cdYaode2k5dq/610x.jpg
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0eNU7NSanO26E/610x.jpg

Jeff L
09-19-2009, 08:27
Cool pics! Thanks for sharing. If I was in combat, that's what I would want have.

:icon_salut:

-Jeff L

John HOLBROOK
09-19-2009, 02:23
Here is a photo of me in 'Nam in 1967. Shortly after this photo was taken, I was involved in a very intense fire fight and the M16A1 in the photo jammed. I threw the sorry excuse for a rifle in the Go Cong River and talked the Marines out of an M14, and I was in love!!!!! The M79 was a hoot!!!

http://www.fototime.com/%7BDB92FA52-8BF5-4403-8BDF-5DD25DD2DB6F%7D/origpict/Copy%20%283%29%20of%20John%20In%20Nam.JPG

Gunner
09-19-2009, 02:54
Mmmhhh, M79 with HE-Frag or Buckshot....nice thing !

Regards

Gunner

BEAR
09-19-2009, 03:32
Here is a photo of me in 'Nam in 1967. Shortly after this photo was taken, I was involved in a very intense fire fight and the M16A1 in the photo jammed. I threw the sorry excuse for a rifle in the Go Cong River and talked the Marines out of an M14, and I was in love!!!!! The M79 was a hoot!!!

http://www.fototime.com/%7BDB92FA52-8BF5-4403-8BDF-5DD25DD2DB6F%7D/origpict/Copy%20%283%29%20of%20John%20In%20Nam.JPG

Gee John,
Maybe it's my old eyes but that M16 sure looks bent in the center. Could be the reason for the jam. I would still have got me an M14 even if the M16 did work though.
BEAR

John HOLBROOK
09-19-2009, 05:45
Well, it is the photo. It is in a book and it covers two pages...

The book is, THE U.S. NAVY:VIETNAM from the United States Naval Institute.

http://www.fototime.com/%7B8C0FB073-8E53-4A67-829A-08488BFFD946%7D/origpict/DSC00448.JPG

BEAR
09-20-2009, 08:00
Ok, now I see how it looks bent.
We used to jump with exposed M16s stapped to our harnesses. Some of our M16s ended up bent in the middle because of hard landings. Not very conducive to combat readiness.

BEAR

John HOLBROOK
09-20-2009, 08:55
This is my real job in the NAVY. I was an Enlisted Bombardier/Navigator in the Douglas A3 Skywarrior.... I have over 3,000 hours in the "Whale" and over 300 cat shots and traps... However, I have proven hard to kill, heh, heh!!!!

I was in 'Nam doing BDA (Bomb Damage Assessment)

http://www.fototime.com/%7B0EE1923E-8B10-4666-9944-25E4FCCF4050%7D/origpict/Group.jpg

This is what it looked like from my seat. I took this photo in the Tonkin Gulf at Dixie Station coming aboard the Bon Homme Richard CVA 31....

http://www.fototime.com/%7B567B95C5-DAC4-4F63-9E1D-1E59049C12E1%7D/origpict/a3no5.jpg

John Sukey
09-20-2009, 09:30
Just as long as the landings equaled the takeoffs you were in good shape;)

Liam
09-20-2009, 11:33
Gotta fess up that I bent an M16A1 barrel in Germany putting together an aluminum Army cot. Good thing the armorer noticed it before I fired it again. Shortly thereafter we had our weapons replaced with the then-new M16A2 with the beefier barrel and improved sights.

John HOLBROOK
09-20-2009, 11:40
Hey John, when you come aboard a carrier, there are only two place you can wind up, and one of them is REAL BAD!!!!!!

SEE WHAT I MEAN!!!!!!

http://www.fototime.com/%7B20C7A164-AF4B-4764-A785-48BE6F87136D%7D/origpict/A3%20Accidents.jpg

BEAR
09-20-2009, 02:48
Just as long as the landings equaled the takeoffs you were in good shape;)

This rule doesn't apply to paratroopers!

BEAR

John HOLBROOK
09-20-2009, 03:11
BTW Bear, why would someone want to jump out of a perfectly good airplane???????------:icon_scratch:


Arrrrggggghhhh

BEAR
09-20-2009, 09:37
Someone estimated that 90% of all air crashes (non-combat) happen on takeoff or landing. We just cut the odds by half.

BEAR

John HOLBROOK
09-21-2009, 07:34
Point Taken......

limazulu
09-21-2009, 03:35
"Hey John, when you come aboard a carrier, there are only two place you can wind up, and one of them is REAL BAD!!!!!!"

That triggered a long ago memory about my Dad. My Dad, a marine, during WWII ended up in the drink landing on a aircraft carrier. It's how he got his purple heart. No lasting affects.

jjrothWA
09-21-2009, 10:33
on the DMR stock?

Looks interesting.

herr_berg
09-22-2009, 08:36
on the DMR stock?

Looks interesting.

That's the Sage EBR mk14 stock

http://www.fulton-armory.com/Sage-Basic-400_50.jpg

http://www.athenswater.com/images/09-08-08_M14EBR.jpg

Allen
09-28-2009, 06:05
Thanks for the M14 photos. Good seeing so many of them still in service----only made sense that Uncle Sam destroyed most of them.

Jeff L
09-28-2009, 06:48
I wonder how our boys over there like the new fangled stocks? Probably doesn't make much difference if you can hold a bead on a bad guy.

-Jeff L

Rick
09-28-2009, 08:07
When I was on the Cat Crew of the USS Independence in 1966 we almost put the A-3 in the drink. Didn't have enough steam on her. Went through the Cat Officer, Cat Captain, Console operator and I was the 17 year old recorder that caught the mistake. I aborted the take off but the Cat Captain fired the Cat anyway. To his credit , realising his mistake, the console operator dragged steam to the cat all the way down the track and it made it in the air.

Years later my wife was reading a book by Barbra Mandrel and she mentioned her husband flying the A3 off the Independence. She really did come close to sleeping single in a double bed.

If I remember correctly they had the cat set for a A-1 prop job which took about 30 Lbs of steam. Think the A-3 weighed in at 72,000lbs or 96,000 lbs can't remember anymore and might have taken as much as 600 lbs of steam. The console operator had to drag a lot of steam in that 258 ft of take off distance.

Anyway John if your ever at an A-3 reunion and you meet Mr. Mandrel tell him how lucky he really is besides having a nice looking wife.

Dave Waits
10-10-2009, 05:51
Hold on John,I'm retired USAF,I know the difference betwen a landing and a controlled crash!LOL!!!

John HOLBROOK
10-10-2009, 11:08
Hold on John,I'm retired USAF,I know the difference betwen a landing and a controlled crash!LOL!!!

Yeah Dave, anyone can land on a 10,000' runway!!!!!!

A Naval Aviator could land, take off and land again on a runway that long!!!:icon_lol:

Dave Waits
10-10-2009, 11:29
Point well-taken John. But, at least we don't 'Fish' for a landing. Truth be known, that has to take guts to do. You guys oughtta invest in some decent brakes!!! BTW, my youngest son was an 'Airdale' on the Carl Vinson. Black sheep of the family an all that.

John HOLBROOK
10-10-2009, 11:33
When I was on the Cat Crew of the USS Independence in 1966 we almost put the A-3 in the drink. Didn't have enough steam on her. Went through the Cat Officer, Cat Captain, Console operator and I was the 17 year old recorder that caught the mistake. I aborted the take off but the Cat Captain fired the Cat anyway. To his credit , realising his mistake, the console operator dragged steam to the cat all the way down the track and it made it in the air.

Years later my wife was reading a book by Barbra Mandrel and she mentioned her husband flying the A3 off the Independence. She really did come close to sleeping single in a double bed.

If I remember correctly they had the cat set for a A-1 prop job which took about 30 Lbs of steam. Think the A-3 weighed in at 72,000lbs or 96,000 lbs can't remember anymore and might have taken as much as 600 lbs of steam. The console operator had to drag a lot of steam in that 258 ft of take off distance.

Anyway John if your ever at an A-3 reunion and you meet Mr. Mandrel tell him how lucky he really is besides having a nice looking wife.


One of my friends and fellow Enlisted Bombardier/Navigators, Sig Signorelli was on the cat and as they moved forward, one of the cat hooks in the fuselage of the A3 tore out. They were moving to fast to stop and to slow to fly so the A3 dribbled off the bow and entered the water directly in front of the carrier. Sig started unstraping to escape as the ship ran over the bird!

He said that he could see the bottom passing over the plane and just as he disconnected all his gear, one of the ship's propellors ripped the top of the cockpit off, He pulled the tabs on his Mae West and he popped to the surface just as the stern passed over. He was the only one that got out!!

HOLY COLD CAT SHOT, BATMAN!! I am fearless, but that scares the snot out of me!!!! I HAVE HAD SOME CLOSE CALLS, BUT NOTHING LIKE THAT!!!!!

John HOLBROOK
10-10-2009, 12:04
Here is a photo of my crew taken in 1959 or 1960 aboard the USS F.D. ROOSEVELT CVA-42..

I am holding the helmet with the checkers on it. On the left is LCDR Jerry Patterson, our pilot, and in the middle is Tom Brown, AE3 our Third Crewman. Note the old style Mae Wests, shortly after, we were issued the new type Torso Harness with an integrated flotation device which they are still using today!

http://www.fototime.com/%7B92364BEB-6376-4D70-8F2D-ED0E49E2BED4%7D/origpict/DSC00504.JPG

Here is a crew wearing the Torso Harness...

http://www.fototime.com/%7BBC6BDB6F-C64F-48CA-A9FE-1F929C0F25E3%7D/origpict/VAH3_crew.jpg

Bill D
10-10-2009, 12:42
I still have my old Mae West and the survival vest we had (actually a belt with a couple of bags with suspenders) and my old orange flight suit. The Navy issued us the old football type helmet with the ribs. We hated them so traded flight deck boots to the Air Force for flight helmets. The commo had to be rewired but we liked them a lot better.

John HOLBROOK
10-10-2009, 01:03
Like these?????

http://www.fototime.com/%7B6072DE6D-D1D4-400D-B2B6-BB064A3380D3%7D/origpict/DSC00505.JPG

Emoney
04-05-2012, 10:29
Geuss what guys, this is my uncle. Just got outta combat few months ago, now hes gonna join Spec Ops wish him luck