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I've driven a lot of Abrams (was not a DAT) and I've never seen one of those.
Must be some new fangled doohickey. |
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Yeah seriously, as a former 19K I have no idea what I'm looking at besides something sitting on top of an Abrams hull.
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Um it has no gun. So what will it flatten stuff with? Harsh language?
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Its a fully functional turbo encabulator!
MICLICs are cool btw |
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View Quote Neat. Thanks. |
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Quoted: Um it has no gun. So what will it flatten stuff with? View Quote Negative. 350 foot charge with 5 pounds of C-4 per linear foot=1,750 lbs of C-4 per charge. Someone correct me if those specs are off. MICLIC Explosions • M58 Mine Clearing Line Charge Skip to 2:20 for pure awesomeness |
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View Quote The Izzys should use them on their violent armed “protestors”. |
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Quoted: The Izzys should use them on their violent armed “protestors”. View Quote I was just thinking what if you added some ball bearings to the rope and launched it down a troublesome street in urban warfare. Dont think that street would be an issue any more a few hundred yards at a time. |
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Quoted: Um it has no gun. So what will it flatten stuff with? Harsh language? View Quote USMC Clearing IED's with MCLC (Mine Clearing Line Charges) Kajaki, Afghanistan |
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Quoted: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326343/IMAG0018__2__2_jpg-2577504.JPG You set a minefield? That's cute. View Quote Nicknamed "Shredder" |
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View Quote Hmm ok disregard my previous message this is the first I've heard of it |
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Quoted: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326343/IMAG0018__2__2_jpg-2577504.JPG You set a minefield? That's cute. View Quote I have no idea what it's called, but I remember seeing a video of a mine clearing vehicle with a giant hammer flail on the front, or something similar. Those drivers have to be crazy! |
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It will never get out of the driveway unless someone removes the track blocks. A chunk of 4x4 ??
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Quoted: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326343/IMAG0018__2__2_jpg-2577504.JPG You set a minefield? That's cute. View Quote The M1150 fucks. Like some kind of giant, armored, angry, insectoid-alien thing, that spits long-ass cobwebs of high-order detonation when you piss it off. |
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Quoted: The Russians have used their version(UZ-77 Meteorit) on Ukrainians positions: (High Order Detonation @1:38) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c7MOu1HQPCc UZ-77 Meteorit: https://i.imgur.com/kyiQDDsl.jpg https://i.imgur.com/n0fFyFdl.jpg There's also footage of some of Bashar Al Asad's boys in Syria, leveling a bunch of buildings with all kinds of visible Terry's running around inside and out with one. Can't find the vid though. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: The Izzys should use them on their violent armed “protestors”. The Russians have used their version(UZ-77 Meteorit) on Ukrainians positions: (High Order Detonation @1:38) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c7MOu1HQPCc UZ-77 Meteorit: https://i.imgur.com/kyiQDDsl.jpg https://i.imgur.com/n0fFyFdl.jpg There's also footage of some of Bashar Al Asad's boys in Syria, leveling a bunch of buildings with all kinds of visible Terry's running around inside and out with one. Can't find the vid though. Wow, crazy delay. Nice to know you’d have time to Run Like Hell!!! |
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It’s transitioning.
Stop deadnaming it and respect its pronouns, you bigots. |
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Must not be a secret if you were able to just drive by, stop, and take a bunch of photos of it, with no one saying anything about it.
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Quoted: Wow, crazy delay. Nice to know you’d have time to Run Like Hell!!! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: The Izzys should use them on their violent armed “protestors”. The Russians have used their version(UZ-77 Meteorit) on Ukrainians positions: (High Order Detonation @1:38) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c7MOu1HQPCc UZ-77 Meteorit: https://i.imgur.com/kyiQDDsl.jpg https://i.imgur.com/n0fFyFdl.jpg There's also footage of some of Bashar Al Asad's boys in Syria, leveling a bunch of buildings with all kinds of visible Terry's running around inside and out with one. Can't find the vid though. Wow, crazy delay. Nice to know you’d have time to Run Like Hell!!! I'd think these and other line charge throwers would be command detonated. Could be wrong though. Any M58 MICLIC/ M1150 ABV operators on ARF that want to chime in? There's gotta be! |
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I saw the Grizzly prototype (the engineer version) once.
Grizzly There are also two different bridge layer versions on an M1 chassis. |
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So, an Army M-1 based version of something the USMC has been using for over 30 years?
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Quoted: Negative. 350 foot charge with 5 pounds of C-4 per linear foot=1,750 lbs of C-4 per charge. Someone correct me if those specs are off. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KgP_EkuTpeI Skip to 2:20 for pure awesomeness View Quote Impressive BOOM |
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Quoted: I'd think these and other line charge throwers would be command detonated. Could be wrong though. Any M58 MICLIC/ M1150 ABV operators on ARF that want to chime in? There's gotta be! View Quote You’re correct. You align the vehicle to orient on the minefield, raise the rocket, fire the rocket, the rocket pulls out the line charge out of the crate and pulls it taught across the minefield. The rocket motor burns out and the line charge falls to earth in a straight line. It is comprised of a big fat rope (technical term) surrounded by 5lb. C4 blocks as you described above. At this point the crew command detonates the line charge which creates a HUGE big badda BOOM that either detonates the mines via overpressure or hopefully throws them clear of the lane to either side. The lane is then proofed (checked to make sure there are no mines left) with either a roller or plow. Those used to be separate tanks, so here it integrates into one system that is ready to go as soon as the line charge goes off. To the person that suggested launching and detonating this down a street and needing ball bearings - you have no idea of the amount of force this thing releases. It is awesome.???? IIRC the SDZ/surface danger zone is around a mile, and even there you feel it in your chest when it goes off. 62m away, it rocks the track. It would destroy the buildings and kill anyone nearby from overpressure. - Old 21B/12A. Man I miss those days! |
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Quoted: I was just thinking what if you added some ball bearings to the rope and launched it down a troublesome street in urban warfare. Dont think that street would be an issue any more a few hundred yards at a time. View Quote Canister rounds from an actual cannon would be better. We hit streets and buildings in Baghdad from like 50 feet with 120mm canister, it was pretty devastating. The last thing you want in a minefield is anything that adds more metal in case you need to deliberately clear the entire thing. Metal detectors will be useless at that point. APOBS used to have metal in it and it was a nightmare as units tried to use it to clear trails of IEDs, and it just made everything worse, you had no way to proof it outside of hand probing, which you could have done in the first place. |
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That's the Air Force version. Has a bar and hot tub and Starbucks in the box on the back
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Quoted: Quoted: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326343/IMAG0018__2__2_jpg-2577504.JPG You set a minefield? That's cute. Nicknamed "Shredder" Yup.... fuk yo' minefiled |
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Quoted: You’re correct. You align the vehicle to orient on the minefield, raise the rocket, fire the rocket, the rocket pulls out the line charge out of the crate and pulls it taught across the minefield. The rocket motor burns out and the line charge falls to earth in a straight line. It is comprised of a big fat rope (technical term) surrounded by 5lb. C4 blocks as you described above. At this point the crew command detonates the line charge which creates a HUGE big badda BOOM that either detonates the mines via overpressure or hopefully throws them clear of the lane to either side. The lane is then proofed (checked to make sure there are no mines left) with either a roller or plow. Those used to be separate tanks, so here it integrates into one system that is ready to go as soon as the line charge goes off. To the person that suggested launching and detonating this down a street and needing ball bearings - you have no idea of the amount of force this thing releases. It is awesome.???? IIRC the SDZ/surface danger zone is around a mile, and even there you feel it in your chest when it goes off. 62m away, it rocks the track. It would destroy the buildings and kill anyone nearby from overpressure. - Old 21B/12A. Man I miss those days! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I'd think these and other line charge throwers would be command detonated. Could be wrong though. Any M58 MICLIC/ M1150 ABV operators on ARF that want to chime in? There's gotta be! You’re correct. You align the vehicle to orient on the minefield, raise the rocket, fire the rocket, the rocket pulls out the line charge out of the crate and pulls it taught across the minefield. The rocket motor burns out and the line charge falls to earth in a straight line. It is comprised of a big fat rope (technical term) surrounded by 5lb. C4 blocks as you described above. At this point the crew command detonates the line charge which creates a HUGE big badda BOOM that either detonates the mines via overpressure or hopefully throws them clear of the lane to either side. The lane is then proofed (checked to make sure there are no mines left) with either a roller or plow. Those used to be separate tanks, so here it integrates into one system that is ready to go as soon as the line charge goes off. To the person that suggested launching and detonating this down a street and needing ball bearings - you have no idea of the amount of force this thing releases. It is awesome.???? IIRC the SDZ/surface danger zone is around a mile, and even there you feel it in your chest when it goes off. 62m away, it rocks the track. It would destroy the buildings and kill anyone nearby from overpressure. - Old 21B/12A. Man I miss those days! I'm curious if they put pressure sensors in any of the crew's helmets and collected data. I'd bet the risk of TBI to the crew is pretty high, especially after repeated firing. Being close to explosives is hard on the body and that thing looks like it has a heck of a shock wave. Looks like it takes a lot of work for two shots to clear 750 feet. I'd love to see one fire in person though. |
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Quoted: You’re correct. You align the vehicle to orient on the minefield, raise the rocket, fire the rocket, the rocket pulls out the line charge out of the crate and pulls it taught across the minefield. The rocket motor burns out and the line charge falls to earth in a straight line. It is comprised of a big fat rope (technical term) surrounded by 5lb. C4 blocks as you described above. At this point the crew command detonates the line charge which creates a HUGE big badda BOOM that either detonates the mines via overpressure or hopefully throws them clear of the lane to either side. The lane is then proofed (checked to make sure there are no mines left) with either a roller or plow. Those used to be separate tanks, so here it integrates into one system that is ready to go as soon as the line charge goes off. To the person that suggested launching and detonating this down a street and needing ball bearings - you have no idea of the amount of force this thing releases. It is awesome.???? IIRC the SDZ/surface danger zone is around a mile, and even there you feel it in your chest when it goes off. 62m away, it rocks the track. It would destroy the buildings and kill anyone nearby from overpressure. - Old 21B/12A. Man I miss those days! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: You’re correct. You align the vehicle to orient on the minefield, raise the rocket, fire the rocket, the rocket pulls out the line charge out of the crate and pulls it taught across the minefield. The rocket motor burns out and the line charge falls to earth in a straight line. It is comprised of a big fat rope (technical term) surrounded by 5lb. C4 blocks as you described above. At this point the crew command detonates the line charge which creates a HUGE big badda BOOM that either detonates the mines via overpressure or hopefully throws them clear of the lane to either side. The lane is then proofed (checked to make sure there are no mines left) with either a roller or plow. Those used to be separate tanks, so here it integrates into one system that is ready to go as soon as the line charge goes off. To the person that suggested launching and detonating this down a street and needing ball bearings - you have no idea of the amount of force this thing releases. It is awesome.???? IIRC the SDZ/surface danger zone is around a mile, and even there you feel it in your chest when it goes off. 62m away, it rocks the track. It would destroy the buildings and kill anyone nearby from overpressure. - Old 21B/12A. Man I miss those days! @Eagle46 Ah, thanks for the inside scoop. So how often were these used in an anti-personnel role? BTW, I found the vid of the Syrian Army(?) using the Russian version against some Terry's. Looks like some of the dudes got some serious, serious, record hang time: Failed To Load Title Quoted: I'm curious if they put pressure sensors in any of the crew's helmets and collected data. I'd bet the risk of TBI to the crew is pretty high, especially after repeated firing. Being close to explosives is hard on the body and that thing looks like it has a heck of a shock wave. Looks like it takes a lot of work for two shots to clear 750 feet. I'd love to see one fire in person though. I too, was also wondering about the blast effects that the crew would have to deal with long term... |
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