Agree 100% about the potential problems/dangers about getting the blank orifice correct. You have to hit the "baby bear" diameter - not too big, not too small - to get reliable and safe functioning.
I have been doing WWII reenacting for a number of years and among the reenacting community...
I often read with amazement and amusement about what they do, say, and eat in faraway Maine, and a lot of it I have never even heard of.
However, the song about school, teachers, and tangerines is almost exactly the same as what we sang. The slight difference is that I think we had a different...
I was born an engineer and will die an engineer in the modern era, so I'd likely also be an engineer in the Golden Era. Assuming we could carry our interests/capabilities/qualifications with us, I'd look for an aeronautical engineering design job with Boeing (B-17, B-29), Republic (P-47), or...
Respectfully disagree - The Army published a lot of language phrasebooks, guidebooks, and etc. during WWII. As one example, the War Department put out a small booklet entitled "A Pocket Guide to France" prior to the D-Day invasion. Another later one was "Paris - Guide to Leave Troops".
These...
I think Worf may be thinking of a particular WWII-era movie in which either the Germans or Japanese are using Thompsons with the forearms removed and the guns put on a tripod to simulate enemy weapons. I can see the scene in my head but can't place exactly which movie it was.
Those SPAS 12 shotguns fall firmly into the category of "Be careful what you ask for..." I had one and considered myself lucky to trade it for a good all-parts-correct M1 Garand.
The SPAS was supposed to be either semi-auto or pump, which meant it didn't work very well in either mode. In...
I'm not a huge fan of Wikipedia, but their definition fits how people I know would feel about being called a "redneck":
The term redneck is a derogatory term chiefly used for a rural poor white person of the Southern United States.[1][2] Its usage is similar in meaning to cracker (especially...
I've been WWII reenacting and collecting "Army junk" for a number of years.
The definitions of OD and Khaki have been debated for most of that time, but I think people are finally accepting the fact that Army uniforms and jackets varied widely during the war years and even for similar products...
As a Southerner I *definitely* resent the "redneck" label. Another thread got shut down due to insulting name-calling. You ought to know better...
As for the 'white South' reference I am not exactly sure what you are getting at, but would prefer not to know.
Surely you can comment on the...
From the King James Bible: Exodus 3, 13-14
13Then Moses said to God, "Behold, I am going to the sons of Israel, and I will say to them, 'The God of your fathers has sent me to you.' Now they may say to me, 'What is His name?' What shall I say to them?" 14God said to Moses, "I AM WHO I AM"
I...
From History.com:
On this day in 1917 (June 17), during the third year of World War I, Britain’s King George V orders the British royal family to dispense with the use of German titles and surnames, changing the surname of his own family, the decidedly Germanic Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, to Windsor.
I...
That kid gets around - I saw him at the grocery store over the weekend - dressed *exactly* like that. It was a a lot warmer here, though, 12 degrees F.
As a former NASA aerodynamics researcher, the problem is that cars move through the same fluid (air) at the same speeds, hence they evolve to similar appearance.
I lament that similarity also, and am pleased that I can tell a '57 Chevy from a '57 Ford at 100 yards on a foggy day...
Remember (as you said yourself) that you are statistically part of the "Baby Boom", but not a part of the Baby Boomer culture, so there is no reason for you to like the music of that time.
For most people I know of the Boomers, our music was mostly background sound for whatever it was that we...
Meant to add:
The "jacket" shown in the left hand photo of Tom Hanks is a D-Day "assault vest", a specialized outfit just used for the invasion, worn over the actual field jacket.
GI"s got rid of them right after the landings since they were bulky and heavy and were not sufficiently useful to...
The jacket in the right hand photo of Tom Hanks is an M-1941 jacket.
As for colors, I have a good collection of WWII uniforms, and even the same nominal model of jacket can be noticeably different in exact color due to allowable variations in material.
They changed to the M-1943 in OD #7 mostly...
Due to college deferments my actual draft lottery was in 1970. No. 243
The most ironic twist of the draft lottery involved a good friend of mine. His father was a four-star general and he was Student Commander of the Army ROTC unit. He had planned on a military career all his life.
His...
In case that chart is hard to read (black on black) just copy the image and paste it into a Word document. It then becomes black print on white and you can also expand it to read it easier.
As for the specific data, that little red pointy-peak at the left of the red part is ME - ~1948(!).
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