"Honey, did you keep those letters from your old girlfriend?!"
---"no, but I kept her Howitzer!"
Thanks for the info. I don't even know how old that model is or who made it. Like I said I found it in a shoe box with two other models, but the parts of the other two are mixed together with no instructions or other information. I can't remember where I got them.Yep, that's an M109A1. It differs from the baseline M109 mainly by having a much longer barrel. There's also the M109A2 and -A3, which are much the same but upgraded (the -A2 being newly built as such while the -A3 was converted from earlier vehicles), the M109A4 and-A5 that were slight upgrades of the previous, and the M109A6 and -A7, AKA "Paladin", which are attempts to keep an aging vehicle up-to-date.
I am thinking it is a 1/72 scale just from the looks. Who made it will probably always be a mysteryIt looks 1:72 scale or thereabouts? But I can't find anything that looks like this on Scalemates. It's not the 1:87 Roco Minitanks model, as the details are clearly different, and all 1:72 scale kits shown on the site are far too new to be this crude. It's also not the ancient 1:48 Aurora kit, because they never made anything but the baseline M109, with the short gun barrel.
Absolutely. I never served but my Uncle Dwight was a redleg in Korea and Vietnam. Served 3 tours in Vietnam on a 105. ended his 3rd as a gun captain (not sure if that the right title, his final rank was 1st Sgt.Redlegs forever
Easy enough to find outI am thinking it is a 1/72 scale just from the looks.
He may have been the acting commander during that 3rd tour. I've actually spent most of my artillery career on 105mm, the M119. Bit different from the piece he was on. He was either on the M101 or M102. I've been deployed three times, but only once as actually doing artillery stuff.I am thinking it is a 1/72 scale just from the looks. Who made it will probably always be a mystery
Absolutely. I never served but my Uncle Dwight was a redleg in Korea and Vietnam. Served 3 tours in Vietnam on a 105. ended his 3rd as a gun captain (not sure if that the right title, his final rank was 1st Sgt.
No disagreement here because I just don't know. Thanks for the info, what I know about artillery and the crews is very little.He may have been the acting commander during that 3rd tour. I've actually spent most of my artillery career on 105mm, the M119. Bit different from the piece he was on. He was either on the M101 or M102. I've been deployed three times, but only once as actually doing artillery stuff.
Artillery is the God of War.
(possibly attributed to Stalin correctly, maybe not)