By January 1967, many 155mm and some 109mm Self Porpelled Guns in 2nd Field Artillery Group, FMF Atlantic, Camp Lejuene, N.C. required towing to position them for training exercises Vieques Island P.R. The self propelled fuction required more maintence than the artillery pieces value in the field. Marines are all about mobility!
Had the Six-Day war in June 1967 lasted long enough for 2nd FAG to deploy to the Middle East these long range field pieces may have shown a temporary value to the Corp.
Artillerymen fired: 105mm and 155mm field guns; 155mm and 175mm SPGs (Self Propelled Guns). US Tankers fired: 90mm cannons (M48 Patton tank main gun) and 152mm cannons (M551 Sheridan tank main gun). Australian tankers used Centurian tanks which fired 84mm main guns (20 pounders). South Vietnamese tankers used the M41 Walker Bulldog light tank, which fired a 76mm main gun. North Vietnamese Army (NVA) tankers used the PT76 light tank which fired a 76mm main gun and the T54 medium tank which fired a 100mm cannon.
1. Battleship USS New Jersey, 16" guns 2. US Navy heavy cruisers armed with 8" guns 3. US Navy light cruisers armed with 6" guns 4. US Navy destroyers armed with 5" guns 5. US Artillery: 175mm self propelled guns 6. US Artillery: 155mm self propelled guns 7. US Artillery: M56 SPAT 90mm self propelled anti-tank gun 8. US Artillery: M42 Duster; twin 40mm pom-pom guns 9. US Artillery: 8" inch guns 10. US Artillery: split trail 105mm and 155mm field guns (towed pieces) 11. USMC: M50 Ontos (six 106mm recoilless rifles)
During the Vietnam War era, "Gun" meant artillery. Small arms meant machine guns, rifles, pistols, etc. Today's "Gun's" in the US Army are hi-tech using smart projectiles and are mostly light weight improved versions from the Viet War. Mostly 105mm's and 155mm. During the Vietnam War the US Army fielded: 175mm self propelled guns; 8 inch self propelled guns; 155mm self propelled guns; 40mm Dusters (WWII pom pom guns AAA); towed 105mm field guns, towed 155mm field guns (referred to as "Split Trails") because the towing portion of the guns were split to support it when firing; put together for towing. US Army tank guns were the 90mm on the M48 Patton tank; 152mm for the M551 Sheridan tank. The US Army infantry in Vietnam initially fielded the M14 rifle, then transitioned onto the M16 rifle. The standard pistol for all GIs was the standard model 1911 .45 automatic. Recoilless rifles operated by the US Army were the 90mm and 106mm. Standard mortars were the 81mm and 4 deuce (4.2 inch mortar).
US Army artillery used in Vietnam primarily consisted of : 1. 175MM Self propelled guns 2. 155MM Self propelled guns 3. 8 inch Self propelled guns 4. 40MM M-42 Dusters (twin barrels), built on an M-41 Walker Bulldog light tank hull 5. 155MM Field gun, split trails 6. 105MM Howitzer, split trails 7. 4.2 inch Mortar 8. 81MM Mortar 9. 106MM Recoilless Rifle 10. 90MM Recoilless Rifle With the exceptions of COMPUTERS and SMART WEAPONS (Smart Shells), and new light weight cannon for transport purposes, there is probably little physical difference between the artillery of Vietnam and today. The recoilless rifles have been replaced by medium & heavy anti-tank missile systems, the 175MM and 8 inch Self Propelled Guns have probably been retired, and the M-42 Duster is now a museum piece.
Firebases acted as Forts during the Vietnam War. Firebases normally had a battery (6 guns back then) of 105mm, 155mm Self Propelled Guns (SPG), or split trailed 155mm field guns. Some firebases had M42 Dusters and 175mm SPG.
There's two types: The SPG (Self Propelled Gun) and the split trail (towed field gun). Both were used extensively in Vietnam. Any website on artillery will show the two. If you want to see some photos of the 155mm field pieces in action, search for Firebase Vandergrift in 1971, during the Lam Son 719 operation (invasion of Laos). Firebase Vandergrift (also called FSB for Fire Support Base) had a battery of 155mm field guns there (6 guns). Post Vietnam US Army batteries contain 8 guns.
For GI's, originally tents; later wooden "hootches" (wooden huts (plywood) with inverted "V" shaped roofs, made of sheet metal), the bases of which were surrounded by shoulder high sand-bags. At firebases, housing consisted of dug in dirt bunkers, then supplanted with sand-bags; then the compound was surrounded by dirt berms, built by bull-dozers, and/or simply rolled barbed wire (concertina wire) which surrounded the firebase. Firebases normally had one battery of guns emplaced within it; 105mm and 155mm field guns (towed field pieces), or 155mm SPG's (Self Propelled Guns); during the Viet War, a US battery consisted of 6 guns.
I think you mean "Rifle"- the M16. Guns are machineguns, cannon, or shotguns.
Yes, I believe they do. They use systema airsoft guns, which are the best you can get. The marines used to train with paintball guns several years ago, but they switched to airsoft because airsoft is more realistic.
Because they are being propelled by compressed air and not an explosion.
machine guns, bolt action rifles, pistols, snipers, rifles, rocket propelled grenades, morters, grenades, and howitzers!
Chaos Space Marines have a Ballistic Skill of 4