In the days before explosive resistant seats, we had folding steel benches in the M113s. Gunner tracks were rarely full of people. As a FOO I rarely had more than 4 folks in my team counting myself. And yet the first thing to go were those steel seats to be replaced by vehicle long storage boxes with padded tops as seats in order to hold even more crap. It's amazing how much shit we had on board - definitely all that Cheez Whiz, no water bottles - all ours water came in plastic 5 gal Jerry Cans, and food - so much extra food. I always felt sorry for the grunts we supported who were squeezed in like sardines - especially when in winter gear - and that's without all the ammo used on real ops.No being judgy, but the APCs I recall seeing sometimes were full of kit and it was hard to shove troops in between the rucks, piles of ammo cans, jars of Cheez Whiz and palettes of bottled water.
I wonder how many you could pack in there if you just had fighting order, first line ammo, CSupps and weapons, and backloaded all the other gear (except the Cheez Whiz of course) to A/B Ech etc..
In the days before explosive resistant seats, we had folding steel benches in the M113s. Gunner tracks were rarely full of people. As a FOO I rarely had more than 4 folks in my team counting myself. And yet the first thing to go were those steel seats to be replaced by vehicle long storage boxes with padded tops as seats in order to hold even more crap. It's amazing how much shit we had on board - definitely all that Cheez Whiz, no water bottles - all ours water came in plastic 5 gal Jerry Cans, and food - so much extra food. I always felt sorry for the grunts we supported who were squeezed in like sardines - especially when in winter gear - and that's without all the ammo used on real ops.
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Did I ever tell you how our track was the only one with a dismounted RCR company on a winter exercise and how my crew fed the whole company for a day with fried egg and bologna sandwiches using the extra fresh rations our battery cooks had given us when the battalion couldn't feed them . . . and then towed all of their toboggans behind our track on a five kilometre night withdrawal?Gunners be like...
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Did I ever tell you how our track was the only one with a dismounted RCR company on a winter exercise and how my crew fed the whole company for a day with fried egg and bologna sandwiches using the extra fresh rations our battery cooks had given us when the battalion couldn't feed them . . . and then towed all of their toboggans behind our track on a five kilometre night withdrawal?
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Which is a stupid idea. It was realized very quickly in the history of armoured warfare that 2 isn't enough for Cav/tank troops. It's impossible to fight the vehicle effectively, command the truck and run comms whilst simultaneously playing gunner.In 2017 the M1296 Dragoon came out with its 30mm unmanned remote turret. Interestingly it is still designated an ICV, ICVD in fact, with a crew of 2 and 9 dismounts. There are some places where it is erroneously referred to as being in the class of an IFV. That said, it did not enter into general service in SBCTs, but was limited to one cavalry regiment.
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Which is a stupid idea. It was realized very quickly in the history of armoured warfare that 2 isn't enough for Cav/tank troops. It's impossible to fight the vehicle effectively, command the truck and run comms whilst simultaneously playing gunner.
Except life happens and often the fight comes to you.But there was no intention to fight the Stryker. It was a bus. With a self-defence system. Exactly equivalent to an M113 with a pintle mount on the CCs hatch.
The Dragoon was one of the those options.Now the Dragoon, a different story. Likely came from the same shop that brought us the Booker.
Not on this one, but remember many others, "Hey tank, any hot coffee!"Did I ever tell you how our track was the only one with a dismounted RCR company on a winter exercise and how my crew fed the whole company for a day with fried egg and bologna sandwiches using the extra fresh rations our battery cooks had given us when the battalion couldn't feed them . . . and then towed all of their toboggans behind our track on a five kilometre night withdrawal?
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Except life happens and often the fight comes to you.
The Stryker got GWOT’d as it was quickly realized the wheels provided rapid mobility on the roads in Iraq to support COIN efforts.
However because it is effectively road bound, it’s easy to ambush given the limited routes.
RWS options didn’t give very good SA, so various options were attempted.
The Dragoon was one of the those options.
Hey if the Booker was completed 25 years ago, it would have been a GWOT Hero with the Dragoon…
Unfortunately a lot of stuff is done ‘last war’ or worse pulled out of some idiots ass.
The first one happens, that second one though, that's on the crew commander haha. Sidesloping in mud, woof.Ah! Wheeled LAVs in Latvia.
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They had the MGS. It did what the Booker was supposed to but on wheels. Most of them did work. It still wasn't a hero. It's a funny thing, but a light to medium direct fire vehicle should have some merit to it but in the end it innately doesn't. I've come to the conclusion that the right direct fire support vehicle for dismounted troops is the tank.Hey if the Booker was completed 25 years ago, it would have been a GWOT Hero with the Dragoon…
No. But only as it's aging out and doesn't hold a full section. I think the solution is an IFV for "armoured infantry," a Senator-like battle taxi vehicle for "mech infantry" and a ISVF for specialized "light infantry."If we are going to maintain all the add-ons that the Stryker accumulated, rather than return them to their original configuration and use, does that mean that the up-armoured HMMWV should be retained?
Probably had the edge fall from weight. We had it happen on roads in some training areas. Of course we got to those training areas because we could drive the LAVs in the roads to get there but that’s another topic.The first one happens, that second one though, that's on the crew commander haha. Sidesloping in mud, woof.
They had the MGS. It did what the Booker was supposed to but on wheels. Most of them did work. It still wasn't a hero. It's a funny thing, but a light to medium direct fire vehicle should have some merit to it but in the end it innately doesn't. I've come to the conclusion that the right direct fire support vehicle for dismounted troops is the tank.
No. But only as it's aging out and doesn't hold a full section. I think the solution is an IFV for "armoured infantry," a Senator-like battle taxi vehicle for "mech infantry" and a ISVF for specialized "light infantry."
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I've said it before, I'll say it again. Return to cavalry and infantry tanks at our peril haha.