Ray
Unfortunately the pictures of the .30 and .50 cal mg's aren't to scale. For those of you who might not realize it, the sizes are opposite of what seems to be shown. The .50s are much bigger and heavier than the .30s. The bullet for the .30 is close to that used on the M60 (but NOT the same, I believe). I always had one word to differentiate between the 30 and the 50: BIG. Not that that helps anyone else to tell the difference!
BTW, a couple of posts ago, Andy provided a couple of photos including one showing expended brass on the Huey's floor. Generally anything to do with the guns was the door gunner's responsibility while mechanical matters were the crew chief's. So the gunner would be cleaning up the brass ‘etc' while the C.E. checked her out so she'd be ready to fly - or undertake maintenance. The gunner and C.E. worked with each other to get their jobs done. You pitched in as necessary.
During my tour the helicopter belonged to the C.E. and gunner, while the pilot and copilot rotated from ship to ship. They didn't explain much to us - it just was. As far as I knew, the Army intentionally didn't want us to grow too strong a bond between crew members so it was less traumatic when somebody was hit. It also kept a ‘distance' between the officers and us lowly enlisted men (EMs).
FYI in that photo of spent brass: there are also coiled dark steel ‘links' in that mess. Mission Models has a set of 50 cal rounds, including spent rounds and photoetch that has to be ‘curled' to create links. You slide your rounds thru the curls or loops, creating the disintegrating ammo belt, just like the real deal. With every spent brass expended a link was also expended. So if you really want to shoot for reality, your mess of expended brass should also have those expended links!
Thanks Andy for the ‘welcome home' - I don't want to claim more than my due though... The heroes are those who gave all. We all had different experiences depending upon when and where we were. More than anything I wanted to fly and am grateful to have had that opportunity and lived to tell about it. But my tales might put you to sleep compared to some of what you've read about! I don't know how ‘obvious' UK vets appear to the general public, but they're there. Their numbers are dwindling to a trickle from WWII but the UK was involved in quite a few ‘wars' during the last half of the last century, and war is war whether with Monty or Malaysian monsoons. I imagine your 'press' has been beating them up like ours has here over the War on Terrorism... Definitely give them their due!
Grandadjohn's point about the M-23 being on both sides when used, is one of the reasons I'm waiting to hear what Dragon has done with their new UH-1D release. Did they provide two M-23 mounts or is it like the Panda combo release with the DML figure set?
BTW - the photo of Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds is a good example of a replacement door - at some time this door replaced a previous one. The OD is darker, possibly a semi-gloss. A lot of Hueys were a patchwork of different shades of OD when a simple patch wouldn't do the trick and an entire panel or door would be replaced. And the Huey would keep on tickin...
I have to check out that site with the video you provided, Ray. Thank you!
Well, enough from me tonight!
Clear right!
Howie