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Snapped this today.

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  • outrunner
    • Apr 2019
    • 2420

    #1

    Snapped this today.

    While out and about on the bike I saw this and thought of you military modellers.
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    WW11 25 pounder, it has sat in the park in Dunbar since 2005 and gets a hard time with kids clambering all over it. I have seen it many times but today I thought of this forum, no idea if the pictures mean anything to a modeller.

    Andy.
    Attached Files
  • PaulTRose
    SMF Supporters
    • Jun 2013
    • 6454
    • Paul
    • Tattooine

    #2
    someones looking after it.........not that rusty and the tyres are in good condition
    Per Ardua

    We'll ride the spiral to the end and may just go where no ones been

    Comment

    • outrunner
      • Apr 2019
      • 2420

      #3
      Originally posted by beowulf
      someones looking after it.........not that rusty and the tyres are in good condition
      I think it had a refurb a couple of years ago..

      Andy.

      Comment

      • Tim Marlow
        SMF Supporters
        • Apr 2018
        • 18890
        • Tim
        • Somerset UK

        #4
        I see that and immediately think of Airfix! I also think of the Larkhill artillery days when I were a nipper. They used to demonstrate all sorts of barrage types with whole batteries of these, firing off tons of ammo. The word on the street being that they were trying to use up WW2 ammo stocks…….I always thought the high angle/low angle shot was really ace….fire one shot at a target from very high angle, then re-lay the gun over direct sites and fire a second shot. Both shots hit the target at the same time…..it got a big wow from an eight year old kid!

        Comment

        • Guest

          #5
          Originally posted by Tim Marlow
          I always thought the high angle/low angle shot was really ace….fire one shot at a target from very high angle, then re-lay the gun over direct sites and fire a second shot. Both shots hit the target at the same time…..
          PzH 2000 can do this with up to five rounds, all indirect, and as I recall, with a whole battery at the same time if need be …

          Comment

          • Airborne01
            • Mar 2021
            • 3951
            • Steve
            • Essex

            #6
            Ah, computers - what happens when they fail and traditional soldiering has to take over I wonder ... Unless the EMP has been completely negated of course!

            Comment

            • Tim Marlow
              SMF Supporters
              • Apr 2018
              • 18890
              • Tim
              • Somerset UK

              #7
              Originally posted by Jakko
              PzH 2000 can do this with up to five rounds, all indirect, and as I recall, with a whole battery at the same time if need be …
              Yep, but these guns are forties technology loaded, laid and aimed by hand, and I saw it happen When the PzH2000 was still a glint in the gunners eye

              Comment

              • Guest

                #8
                Originally posted by Airborne01
                Ah, computers - what happens when they fail and traditional soldiering has to take over I wonder ... Unless the EMP has been completely negated of course!
                The EMP from a nuclear explosion, you mean? Nobody ever trained for what happened after that anyway. Well, I suppose some civilian organisations did, but NATO exercises tended to end at the point when nuclear weapons would have been deployed …

                Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                Yep, but these guns are forties technology loaded, laid and aimed by hand, and I saw it happen When the PzH2000 was still a glint in the gunners eye
                I know, I was just saying it’s even worse now

                Comment

                • Airborne01
                  • Mar 2021
                  • 3951
                  • Steve
                  • Essex

                  #9
                  Jakko,
                  There definitely was contingency planning and scenario modelling - how realistic it was fortunately never befell us to discover
                  Steve

                  Comment

                  • Guest

                    #10
                    Sure, but it seems hardly anyone ever did an actual field exercise to practice how to fight after the bomb dropped. Fighting in NBC kit, sure, but never on the scale needed to properly prepare for a post-nuke battlefield, as far as I know.

                    Comment

                    • Airborne01
                      • Mar 2021
                      • 3951
                      • Steve
                      • Essex

                      #11
                      Jakko,
                      The definition of a post-nuclear battlefield scenario was, by extension, contentious by all the major powers; I was personally involved in the development of 'stay behind' groups as one aspect of 'future' planning . I believe that any large scale field exercise would have been seen as unnecessarily provocative, counter productive, and against all established national security norms in the latter years of the Cold War. However, that is merely a personal viewpoint based on my experience and training! I also think we are digressing from the main thrust of this thread - I'm more than happy to continue this via PM should you wish though!
                      Steve

                      Comment

                      • Graeme C.
                        SMF Supporters
                        • Apr 2018
                        • 1597
                        • Graeme
                        • UK

                        #12
                        The 25 pounder looks like one used at Edinburgh castle for the one o'clock gun, shiny & polished up, pretty loud too!

                        Comment

                        • colin m
                          Moderator
                          • Dec 2008
                          • 8740
                          • Colin
                          • Stafford, UK

                          #13
                          I had one of these when I was a lad.. Made by Corgi, a poor representation, but it could fire matchsticks a good distance. The dog hated young Colin.

                          Comment

                          • David Lovell
                            SMF Supporters
                            • Apr 2018
                            • 2186

                            #14
                            Andy great pics bet you didn't think it would go off on one like this ,Tim Larkhall done some work in there a great many years ago now but had a excellent outside contractors naffi huge brekkie for about thirty or forty odd pence so tells you how long ago , Colin me and my little brother would play on the landing with the toilet door open obvious what the target was. Dave

                            Comment

                            • rtfoe
                              SMF Supporters
                              • Apr 2018
                              • 9072

                              #15
                              Originally posted by David Lovell
                              Andy great pics bet you didn't think it would go off on one like this ,Tim Larkhall done some work in there a great many years ago now but had a excellent outside contractors naffi huge brekkie for about thirty or forty odd pence so tells you how long ago , Colin me and my little brother would play on the landing with the toilet door open obvious what the target was. Dave
                              If there was a passerby I don't think "I'm singing in the rain" would have been the choice of song. :tears-of-joy:

                              Cheers,
                              Richard

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