Posted on 11/07/2007 3:17:47 PM PST by SandRat
U.S. NAVAL BASE GUAM, Guam, Nov. 7, 2007 Ann Brown gripped the handle of a .50-caliber machine gun that appeared to be larger than her slight frame. Peering down the sights, she squeezed off a five-round burst in less than a second. Taken aback by the sudden burst, Brown, president of a graphic design company in Colorado, looked up as if shocked and then laughed, almost embarrassed. She said she didnt realize it would fire that many rounds so fast.
Theres a jolt from it, but more than that, I was amazed at how quickly I could shoot out five shots. That really shocked me. Plus, when I realized that each shot can go 3,000 feet, thats really scary, Brown said. Brown is one of nearly 40 civilians who traveled here as part of the JCOC on the first stop of a week-long expedition to U.S. Pacific Command. Today is their second day on the island, and it has been packed with hands-on, adrenaline-pumping activities that would make many civilians envious. The day started with an overview of U.S. Naval Forces Marianas, which oversees the Navys largest island base in the Western Pacific. The island is home to more than 160,000 residents and 12,000 servicemembers and families. The brief was the only static part of the day. Afterward, participants were treated to machine-gun firing, a security demonstration complete with a mock would-be suicide bomber, an explosives demonstration using a high-tech robot, and a boat ride zipping across the bay. |
It’s good to expose civilians to the military.
I took my brother on a “Tiger Cruise” aboard an aircraft carrier. He was in shock, especially after we watched F-14’s launch and land from “Vulture’s Row”.
Seventeen years later, he still talks about it.
Cool article.
The most fun I had ever was shooting the 7.62mm front mounted turret mini-gun on a AH-1G Cobra heliocopter.
If I remember right the low rate of fire is 2500 rds/min, high rate is 3000 rds/min...FUN!!
I did something similar. Back in the late 70’s I was able to take my parents down into my “home” Titan II site for a tour. They were one of the last visitors to get to go out into the Launch Duct and actually stand beside the missile next to the RV.
Until they did that they had no idea what I did nor how my life was wrapped up with that weapon system.
After I received my commission I took them on a tour of my “home” Minuteman LCF. They were impressed but still said the Titan II site and experience was one they would never forget.
My brother was on a guided missle cruiser (USS Chicago). I took my 11 year old nephew out on this thing for 10-12 hrs of sea trials. This was 30 years ago and I still talk about it. What a wild ride and interesting trip.
I have had that pleasure.
That and other operations make me wish we could expose that little sawed-off mooslim, Amanutjob and similiar idjits, like Chavez, to those, so that they would realize the awesome power and capabilities we possess.
They might just sit down and shut up.
Working in the pharmaceutical industry, I was fascinated by the parallel development programs of Atlas, Titan I, Titan II and Minuteman, where a failure of any of them, had they been developed serially, would have resulted in a disastrous gap of missile coverage. Hence the need to develop them in parallel/overlap, at enormous expense and with relatively short service lives for Atlas and Titan I.
Big pharma works in the same way, because so many drugs fail, that the expense is huge and so too must be the payoff from the successful drugs. What is really amazing is that ALL of the missile systems worked! If only every drug worked!
Thanks for your service, you were literally a sitting duck if the balloon had gone up. The mighty Titan II (I've dubbed it "The City Destroyer") was truly a fearsome weapon and an awesome peace-keeper......
“The mighty Titan II (I’ve dubbed it “The City Destroyer”)”
We always called it the “Crowd Pleaser.”
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