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The Green Machine War You have to be kidding, right!?!

Typical BS – This Is Why the U.S. Air Force to Retire the A-10 Warthog

The US Air Force has always hated doing close air support. The A10 was made with the Air Force Generals kicking and screaming that it should not be built. And they have tried to shut it down at every opportunity even trying to cut the budget for ammunition.

In Iraq the Air Force tried not to deploy the A10 when Iraq had 5000 soviet tanks. General Schwarzkopf said to the Air Force, “Where are my A10’s?” The A10 cleaned house and destroyed more tanks than all other planes combined and even some missile silos.

The air force conducted a misinformation campaign to prevent the public from knowing about A10 amazing contribution in Iraq. Instead they emphasized the stealth aircraft bombing but ignored the A10.

The Air Force generals excuse to retire the A10 is that it is old. The Air Force should have already started developing the next gen A10 by the mid ’80s. That is their fault. Their behavior is reprehensible.

They forget that they are part of the US Armed forces as a whole and if they weren’t adults they should be lined up and spanked. At least a reprimand from Congress and the President of the USA is in order or better yet a few Generals be cashiered!

I think the A10 should be literally ripped out of the hands of the Air Force A10 haters and put in the loving arms of the US Army & the Marines along with all money that would normally be budgeted for the A10 program.

Yes all necessary money should follow it. Clearly a next gen A10 is in order and be in the hands of the Army. Then the Air Force can stick to their air to air combat and bombing that they so love to do and the Army can have their close air support needs properly met. There needs to be a price paid for this kind of short sightedness and selfishness. This is ridiculous behavior

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The Green Machine Well I thought it was funny! You have to be kidding, right!?!

West Point Professor Always Knew Cadet Would Become A Terrible Officer

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN – After savage fighting — much of it hand-to-hand — a brutal Taliban attack on Combat Outpost Hellfire was stopped recently by the heroic actions of the infantry commander on the ground.

While many in the Army are hailing Captain James Wild as a hero of the battle, his West Point professor maintains that the incident is just another in what he calls “a series of extensive leadership failures.”

“I just knew something like this would happen if he was in a leadership position. He didn’t have any discipline at all. He was without a doubt one of the worst students I’ve ever had,” said Major Martin Sutherland, when asked about the incident.

Now serving as a professor of history at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, NY, Sutherland speaks from his experiences as an Air Defense officer from 1984 to 1995. His belief is that discipline and standards are of the highest importance to a good Army officer.

“Wild had the worst looking boots in the company. When other cadets were spending their Friday nights shining shoes, and getting their rooms ready for the Saturday morning inspections that I insisted on, Wild would just go out and party. Can you believe that? A 19 year-old kid in college trying to become an officer, and he couldn’t even find the time to starch his BDU blouse!”

The distraught man rubs a gnarled hand through his thinning comb-over and shakes his head sadly.

“I feel partially responsible for the whole thing. One day, right before graduation I was conducting one of my standard 5am snap inspections. When Cadet Wild showed up to formation I saw that his BDU belt wasn’t regulation issue. Then, when I had the cadets pull up their pant legs I saw that he was wearing white socks. WHITE SOCKS!”

The Major is clearly still troubled by the event, years later.

“I pulled Cadet Wild to the side and explained to him why wearing white socks could get his men killed.”

The man sighs, and opens a folder he has sitting on his desk.

“Look at all these infractions. Failure to wear his TA-50 according to the SOP, missing drill and ceremony training for tutoring sessions with his military tactics instructor, failure to display proper military insignia in a PowerPoint brief!”

The Major was also asked about Wild’s physical and leadership abilities.

“Oh he was always working out. He was on the triathlon and boxing teams. Maybe if he had spent less time training and focused on the important things, like military protocol, marching, or uniform standards then maybe he would have become the officer I’d hoped for. Instead you get something like this,” Sutherland says, as he gestures with disgust at the printed out summary of the battle.

When his isolated outpost was attacked in the pre-dawn hours, then-Lieutenant Wild and his platoon repelled the first wave, killing over 30 enemy fighters in the first few minutes of battle. Unfortunately, dust in the atmosphere, the position of the moon, and civilians within a 4,000 meter radius of the base prevented Close Air Support from being used to support the troops.

Artillery was also denied for the same reasons. The next wave was able to overrun the outer perimeter, forcing Wild and the remnants of his shattered unit to engage the enemy in savage hand-to-hand combat. Reports from the ground confirm that he personally dispatched three enemy soldiers with his entrenching tool, before pushing his men to retake the breached walls of the compound.

During the fighting Lieutenant Wild desperately pleaded for an exception to be granted to the fires restrictions, but the President was out golfing that morning and the required signature of a four-star general officer was unable to be obtained until after the fight had ceased.

When the battle was over, the enemy had been beaten back, but many in Lieutenant Wild’s platoon had been mauled.

This week, now-Captain James Wild and four of his soldiers received the Silver Star for their actions during the fight. Pictures taken after the battle and at the awards ceremony showed Wild wearing white socks.

Major Sutherland did not offer any further comment on his most recent infraction.

Stolen from the Duffel Blog

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This great Nation & Its People You have to be kidding, right!?!

BOYS AND THEIR TOYS BY WILL DABBS, MD

THE WORLD’S BIGGEST GUN

Nuclear bombs are undeniably terrifying. However, it would certainly be fun to have a few to just play around with.

 

What would you do if you suddenly found yourself with a big pile of nuclear weapons and a little free time? I would assert the answer to this hypothetical question is determined by your genome. If you are a woman, you would stack them neatly in a safe place, ensure that they are appropriately secured, and then go forth to do something constructive like raise children or cure cancer. If you are a guy, however, I bet you’d call your buddies to come over and start figuring out ways to seriously blow some stuff up.

I freely admit that I would likely put my most substantial example on the top of a big, honking rocket and shoot it into the moon just to see what it would look like. Don’t judge. If you’ve never thought of that yourself, you are currently imagining it now. Everybody on the planet (well, the half of them facing the moon) would come out to watch. I’d likely scheme it all out to explode on July 4th so the entire world could join me in celebrating America, but that’s just me.

Back in 1957, a group of rambunctious American males found themselves in a very similar situation. Nobody really understood nuclear weapons very well, so these guys took a whole bunch of them out into the Nevada desert for a big, sparkly play date. They called their undertaking Operation Plumbbob.

Details

These fun-loving kids touched off 29 different bombs under some of the most imaginative of circumstances. In one case, they blew up 1,200 pigs. The stated aim of this test was to determine the physiological effects of a nuclear blast on mammalian physiology. My suspicion, however, is that they were simply on a quest to invent the world’s spiciest pre-cooked bacon.

Back then, Uncle Sam used nukes for all kinds of stuff. Nuclear depth charges, atomic torpedoes and fission-based air-to-air missiles were all maintained in the military inventory. In the only live shot of a nuclear-tipped AIR-2A Genie rocket, an F-89J Scorpion jet fighter unleashed one of these puppies out over the Yucca Flats test site. The weapon detonated at around 20,000 feet.

Just to show the world that nukes were not so scary after all, five Air Force officers and a motion picture cameraman all volunteered to stand underneath ground zero for a photo op. Amazingly, they all lived at least another 40 years.

These fun-loving scamps touched off these bombs on towers, underneath balloons, on the desert surface and underground. They were detonating nuclear weapons every few days. My favorite of the lot, however, was code-named Pascal.

That’s a Big Freaking Gun

I’ve done a fair amount of reading about Pascal, and I still fail to grasp the point. Pascal was actually three bombs, designated A, B and C.

For starters, they bore a 500-foot hole straight down into the earth. They then arranged a 64.6-pound low-yield plutonium-based fission bomb at the bottom. This was a tiny weapon, measuring only 11.75×15 inches. It was charged with PBX 9401 and 9404 explosives and was designed simply to fizzle. However, in their enthusiasm, somebody missed a decimal point or two. The first bomb produced a nominal yield equivalent to about 55 tons of TNT.

Pascal-A went off in an uncapped hole. Astrophysicist Robert Brownlee described the results thusly, “We put the bomb at the bottom of it, and we didn’t stem it. So, we fired it. Biggest damn Roman candle you ever saw! It was beautiful. Big blue glow in the sky …”

Yeah, that’s a man …

Showtime

For Pascal-B, they sealed the hole with a 2,000-pound steel cap and welded it in place. On August 27, 1957, Brownlee and Company touched this bad boy off. This bomb produced a yield of around 300 tons of TNT.

They installed high-speed cameras at the mouth of the tunnel that ran at one frame per millisecond. A typical human blink is about 100 milliseconds. Subsequent analysis captured but a single frame of the 2,000-pound steel plug as it accelerated skyward.

Brownlee said, “We did have a lid on that hole. Nobody’s seen it since. We never did find that … We never found that collimator either, and it was about five feet thick.”

This big chunk of machined steel was traveling at 150,300 miles per hour or 41.75 miles per second. That is six times the escape velocity required to put an object into orbit. Not one scrap of the plug was ever recovered.

It has been postulated that the steel muzzle plug from Pascal-B might actually have been the first manmade object launched out of the atmosphere. The first Russian Sputnik lifted off 39 days later. However, that theory is not without controversy.

Some scientists (who are likely not guys) assert that the atmospheric friction associated with such speeds might have just vaporized the big steel plug. Others and I subscribe to this school of thought myself, believe that this 4” thick steel disk is still out there orbiting Uranus someplace. Regardless, in case you were wondering what would happen if a bunch of men were entrusted with a whole pile of nuclear bombs, now you know. They would dig an enormous hole and create the largest gun in all of human history. ‘Merica …

Categories
Fieldcraft Gear & Stuff You have to be kidding, right!?!

See the Difference Between Pipe Bombs and Pressure Cooker Bombs

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All About Guns Allies Ammo You have to be kidding, right!?!

240 YDS with an 85 year old .22 Revolver!!

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Born again Cynic! Grumpy's hall of Shame You have to be kidding, right!?!

Africa wins again

This makes me even more glad to be an American!

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Another potential ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE Born again Cynic! Paint me surprised by this Some Scary thoughts You have to be kidding, right!?!

Why doI feel like its Dec 5 1941?

China, Russia Trying to Infiltrate US Military Bases: Navy Admiral
A high-ranking US Navy official has warned that China and Russia have intensified attempts to infiltrate American military bases.
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All About Guns You have to be kidding, right!?!

The Arrow Gun (More Powerful Than ANY Crossbow!!!)

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A Victory! All About Guns You have to be kidding, right!?!

A portion of the U.S. Navy’s Great White Fleet during its circumnavigation of the globe in 1907–1909.

Funny story about this. In  Theodore Roosevelt could not get The Congress to pay for this. So what to do? He just sailed them as far away as he could and then told The Congress to pay for it to come back! Ah the good old days! Grumpy

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All About Guns You have to be kidding, right!?!

HELLCAT X2 COMMANDER BY ROY HUNTINGTON

GUNCRAFTER’S 18-RD. PERSONAL DEFENDER

Some think the 1911 is outdated — too “old school” to be effective today. They’re not only wrong, but spectacularly wrong. It’s like looking at a Model A Ford from 1931, then, because we still drive cars, proclaiming today’s models to be “antiques” and “outdated” and anyone driving a contemporary car must be a duck-billed dinosaur from the cretaceous period.

Technology being what it is — and enthused designers and engineers doing what they’re wont to do — things generally change. Today’s high performance, economical, utterly reliable cars are like that Model A in the same way a 1911 circa 1915 is to a modern 1911. Both cars have four wheels, seats and a steering wheel — and the similarities pretty much end there.

The 1911 mirrors the situation. There’s a slide, frame, trigger and other bits, but each part on a modern 1911 is vastly different than the original. There is, indeed, a Grand Canyon-like abyss occupying virtually every category between the two. And Guncrafter’s Hellcat X2 Commander in 9mm rides the wave of “modern” right at the very top.
The shape is familiar — but the differences are monumental.

The Reasons

Alex Zimmerman and his team craft carefully handmade 1911 series pistols of many sorts. From the ground-breaking HOSS, a beefy, burly virtually indestructible “454 Cubic Inch-sized” 1911, to his attention-getting .50 GI guns — and to this elegantly lightweight, 18-round 9mm — Guncrafter spares no time or energy in making things exactly right. They also embrace, endorse and take advantage of new technology in materials and design to help them achieve their goals.

Alex has been chasing the 1911 design for 37 years now and the constant pressure he puts on himself to push the envelope for the basic 1911 design seems never-ending. That’s because it’s — how shall we say this — never-ending?

As Alex explains, “The Hellcat X2 came about by taking some of the best features from our single stack Frag and Hellcat pistols and combining those features with a hi-cap frame and grip.

“We took the design of the original Hellcat controls and BattleCrown muzzle treatment, then machined the Frag pattern into an aircraft-grade aluminum hi-cap grip. Presto, 17+1 rounds of 9mm of your choice.” I could “hear” him smiling on the phone — but he wasn’t done yet.

“Then we lightened the slide with a series of racy cuts, both for appearance and function. The lightening of the slide is important since the X2 is designed around the 9mm round. You see, with the slide of the 1911 being designed for the .45 ACP it’s heavier than ideal for the 9mm. Lightening the slide allows us to run heavier recoil springs, ensuring reliable function across the wide spectrum of 9mm loads.”

That’s something I’d not thought of before. If you’ve fired a steel-slide 1911 in 9mm you may have noticed the slide sort of goes “Ka-Chunk, Ka-Chunk” in recoil. It appears you can almost feel the various stages of the recoil cycle. Most function fine, but they do feel different from a .45. The lighter spring needed to allow the 9mm to cycle the heavy slide, also slows the forward snap of the slide back into battery as it picks up another round. I think that’s the “Ka-Chunk” you feel.

The lighter slide on the X2 offers a snappier action, for lack of a better word. The gun runs fast, cycles smoothly and goes into battery with a snick — not the “Chunk.” You can feel it and sense it immediately.

“For concealed carry,” offered Alex, “we offer a Commander-sized version with an aluminum frame and Tritium sights — your test gun. The empty pistol weighs 28 oz. and has that 17+1 round capacity.”

Yet, I noticed the grip frame is very manageable. Without separate grip panels to add girth, even my very average medium-sized hands fit comfortably with no stretching for the trigger. Eighteen rounds — and still reaching the trigger comfortably — is a new thing for me. When I was a cop, I was always the single-stack SIG P225 guy while most others carried the 16-round P226.

Options

 

Alex continued, “We also offer a steel-framed 5″ Government version with an integral light rail, adjustable rear sight and fiber optic front sight. It’s about perfect for competition, at the range or self defense.”

At 35 oz. empty, but with the same 17+1-round 9mm capacity, the all-steel version puts felt recoil in the .380 range to me. If you’re older, infirm or are simply tired of being beat-up with recoil, this is the gun for you. You could shoot it for fun, plink, shoot targets at the indoor range, enjoy a weekend match or defend your family — all with the same gun. And you’d be very comfy while you did it.

You’ve undoubtedly noticed the finish. According to Alex, the use of Cerakote gives Guncrafter a lot of flexibility to come up with some really stunning and durable finish combinations. From “hot” colors to more sublime combinations, you can pretty much get what you dream about.

The Mechanics

 

An extremely heavy duty barrel bushing precisely following the entire outside contour of the slide is eye-catching and business-like. The lower one-third is angled back giving it a distinctive, clean look — a bit racy almost. An extra-thick flange protects the muzzle crown to an unprecedented level here. The barrel is heavily countersunk and has an extra deep crown agreeably blended with the flared opening of the Battle Crown. It’s all beveled, with absolutely no sharp edges to interfere with holstering. It’s a distinctive, impressive look but with a high degree of functionality. It’s an original design by Alex Zimmermann, I might add.

The slide stop is machined from hardened chrome moly steel bar stock, with a slightly enlarged lever — easier to find even when wearing gloves. It’s wide and deep, having lengthwise serrations for a non-slip engagement. The built-in detent eliminates false slide locks — a great idea. I especially appreciate the machined lead-in serving to guide the slide stop during installation. You’ve likely seen the “idiot mark” on some guns where the slide stop has ridden up the side of the frame, leaving a trail to the cut-out hole? Don’t be that guy.

Even the hammer is special. Made of hardened tool steel, it has a solid web for strength, deep serrations for no-slip manipulation, a beveled exterior with no sharp edges and a “hook” geometry for optimal sear engagement. The relocated hammer strut pin hole — along with the other touches — add up to a crisp safe trigger pull. Both the slide stop and the hammer were designed by Christopher Provost of Cerberus Tactical.

There are slide top serrations some might say stop glare but I think they’re just to look good — and what’s wrong with that? A genuine match-grade 9mm barrel contributes to accuracy and reliability and plays well with the match-grade trigger and, as Alex calls it, the “Extreme Reliability Work” done.

The Guncrafter Tritium sights assure you can find ’em when you most need to. The rear is both fixed and burley, with enough height to offer a way to run the slide if you need to by hooking it on something handy.

There’s a lot of attention to detail, and while it’s pretty, most of it also does double-duty one way or another. The ball-end mill cuts offer a certain charisma, while also performing the needed lightening process. The full de-horning done makes perfect sense in a defensive pistol and also simply makes any gun feel better.

The flush-cut slide stop (on the right side) is not just tidy, it also won’t interfere with a finger held alongside the frame. Some say a shooter might inadvertently press the pin out somehow, but I confess in 50 years of shooting conventionally configured 1911s I’ve never seen or had it happen. Nonetheless, I do like the uncluttered look of the mod — and hey, it can’t hurt.

The Hellcat X2 comes with two fitted and tuned magazines and a black Guncrafter Industries Cordura case and test target as part of the package.

The Hellcat’s “wide” frame allows 17-round mags while still fitting most hand sizes.

Lightening cuts in the slide and the aircraft-grade aluminum frame keep the Hellcat light and easy to carry.

Range Thoughts

 

I really enjoyed this gun, and for many good reasons we’ve talked about. We’re fortunate here at Handgunner because while we get to see the mundane, certainly, it’s counter-balanced by the often exceptional guns we meet. The Hellcat X2 is in the exceptional category. I put upwards of 400 rounds of various loads through it and not surprisingly it ran perfectly. I happen to own a Guncrafter FRAG 9mm so I balanced my impressions of the X2 with my experience with the GI brand.

The Frag is an all-steel 5″ 1911 — scary-accurate — and is very likely the epitome of the breed. I’ve also got a good deal of experience with many of GI’s guns in the past and found them all to be absolutely reliable and carefully built. I wasn’t surprised by how the X2 conducted itself.

Like the FRAG, the X2 was extremely accurate. In my hands, with very careful rested shooting using 147-gr. sub-sonic 9mm loads from several manufacturers — loads always accurate, it seems — groups of 1.5″ or a tad bigger at 25 yards were amazingly easy to shoot. A careful trigger press is the order of the day here, and a consistent sight picture. I have no doubt this is a true 1″ gun in a Ransom rest, and I’d call it more of a “one ragged hole” I’m betting. This is the sort of gun you can shoot at 50 and 100 yards and have some real fun with it.

All of the loads shot well and I honestly didn’t find a bullet weight the Hellcat X2 seemed to like over the others. I settled on the 147’s for accuracy testing due to habit, but I think the “124 and heavier” stuff would all work fine. It’s honestly a moot point with today’s ammo, so just buy what you like and then practice. You’ll be fine, especially with the Hellcat X2.

The delightful, crisp trigger weighs in right at 3.5 lbs. — an ounce or two either way from pull to pull on the digital gauge. The great ergonomics, bold sights and sure-footedness the gun delivers makes the Hellcat X2 a shooting machine at every level.

At about $3,895 you get a level of build quality seen only at the very top of the craft. There’s an undeniable sureness and poise in the X2, obvious when the gun is in-hand — and pride of ownership would be over-the-top. Oh, you also get a pistol built by hand — and backed with Guncrafter’s Lifetime Satisfaction Assurance.

Before you wring your hands at the price, keep in mind that’s about the cost of three “decent” quality factory guns of one sort or another — guns you’d likely see in every gun store and at every range you go to.

Why not be different — and better for it?

For more info: www.guncrafterindustries.com, Ph: (224) 321-5044, info@guncrafterindustries.com