Re: Dry sponging?
Gents,
Tom Holbrook at Gettysburg NPS does require the 10 minutes, but not the dry sponge. I agree with Mr. Bartsch that it adds little safety, but does add quite a bit of inauthenticity. Another thing that adds to the decrease in safety, barring horses (boy wish we had them) is units that do not have a full carraige/ammo box/limber. We nearly suffered personnel and equipment damage as another crew attempted to "help" us remove a piece from the field to save it from being over run. Because they did not have a limber, just the box set upon the ground, they had practiced virtually none of the limber/unlimber drill hence in their zeal to remove our piece they failed to understand the command for 'limber to the rear' thus causing a collision between the trail of the piece and the limber pole. The impact nearly broke the latter and injured personnel. The gun drill itself is one part of the whole for artillerists.
We have had more accidents loading our pieces onto the trailers due to slippery decks or footwear. We try to be safe, accurate, realistic and professional. The one incident that I can recall is during a LH at Gettysburg NPS where we had a 'guest' #4. The individual was a serving artilleryman, and we had drilled with him as th #4 howver when it came to the real event he fired when he heard the command, "prepare to fire". The good thing is that we were all in the proper firing positions and were just surprised at the sound of the report, no injuries. Needless to say we refrain from guests.
The moral to the story, is drill, drill, drill and when you are getting complacent drill more and toss in some immediate action or reduced crew drill.
The turret explosion on Iowa was due to an error in the drill, not some failed homosexual love affair.
I'm sure that the safety-nicks would absolutely geek if they really read how a round is supposed to be rammed.
s/f
DJM
Gents,
Tom Holbrook at Gettysburg NPS does require the 10 minutes, but not the dry sponge. I agree with Mr. Bartsch that it adds little safety, but does add quite a bit of inauthenticity. Another thing that adds to the decrease in safety, barring horses (boy wish we had them) is units that do not have a full carraige/ammo box/limber. We nearly suffered personnel and equipment damage as another crew attempted to "help" us remove a piece from the field to save it from being over run. Because they did not have a limber, just the box set upon the ground, they had practiced virtually none of the limber/unlimber drill hence in their zeal to remove our piece they failed to understand the command for 'limber to the rear' thus causing a collision between the trail of the piece and the limber pole. The impact nearly broke the latter and injured personnel. The gun drill itself is one part of the whole for artillerists.
We have had more accidents loading our pieces onto the trailers due to slippery decks or footwear. We try to be safe, accurate, realistic and professional. The one incident that I can recall is during a LH at Gettysburg NPS where we had a 'guest' #4. The individual was a serving artilleryman, and we had drilled with him as th #4 howver when it came to the real event he fired when he heard the command, "prepare to fire". The good thing is that we were all in the proper firing positions and were just surprised at the sound of the report, no injuries. Needless to say we refrain from guests.
The moral to the story, is drill, drill, drill and when you are getting complacent drill more and toss in some immediate action or reduced crew drill.
The turret explosion on Iowa was due to an error in the drill, not some failed homosexual love affair.
I'm sure that the safety-nicks would absolutely geek if they really read how a round is supposed to be rammed.
s/f
DJM
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