Posted on Apr 30, 2015
Did you go through mortar fire unit evaluation at Wildflecken training area? If so how many times?
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During the Cold War, I went with 1/52 IN Bn to Wildflecken twice for gunnery training including mortar training and evaluation. Wildflecken training area was significantly different from Graf. I remember Dead Man's Curve with the multiple white crosses displayed along the roadside and the nearby Monastery where the monks served a great beer.
Edited >1 y ago
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 17
LTC Stephen F., I became an 11C (Indirect fire infantryman-mortars) while at AIT at Fort Jackson, SC from JAN70 to MAR70. I then went to the Weapons NCO Supervisor Candidate Special Forces Course at Fort Bragg, NC late MAY70 through AUG70. The last half of the SF course was all heavy weapons, with tremendous emphasis on the M30, 4.2" mortar during the week long FTX at the end of heavy the weapons portion of the course. Photo is of me hanging a round at the actual SF heavy weapons FTX at Fort Bragg in JUL-AUG70! COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Ivan Raiklin, Esq. SGM Gregory Tarancon IV CPT (Join to see)
SFC William Farrell PO3 Phyllis Maynard SGT Robert Pryor SGT Mark Anderson
SFC William Farrell PO3 Phyllis Maynard SGT Robert Pryor SGT Mark Anderson
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LTC Stephen C.
LTC Stephen F., never had a hang fire, but did have a short round once out of a 4.2. Someone took off too many charges, and it barely puffed out of the tube and went about 300 yards down range. Everyone could see the round just lazily floating in the air! Soldiers were running away like crazy! For some reason it didn't detonate, but we were all scared to death! As I write this, it sounds crazy, but I think that's what happened!
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen Curlee, I know that several indirect rounds need to travel a certain minimal distance before the fuse arms. Timed detonation rounds clearly fit into category. It has been a long time since IMPOC and mortar live fires.
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LTC Stephen C.
LTC Stephen F., I did have some great trips to Germany. I'll try to find where I posted them on RP and tag you.
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LTC Stephen F., I thought I had posted these photos on another discussion thread, but I could not find it. So here they are on this thread, if that's OK with you. It may be interesting, in any event.
When we made our trips to the FRG to support the various NATO exercises, we were attached to VII U.S. Corps at Kelley Barracks in Stuttgart. During our numerous trips there, we became good friends with a lieutenant colonel, who was in the USAR program in the FRG which was very impressive. He met and married a baroness, more specifically a freiherran. My last trip over I took my wife and so with one other couple we spent a few days with them in their castle in the village of Thüngen, which is about 25 km NW of Wurzburg.
Here's an aerial photograph of Schloss der Freiherren von Thüngen, home of LTC James L., Freiherr (Baron) von Thüngen. The castle was protected by a hillside to the rear (left) and a dry moat to the front (right). According to Jim, records showed that the rectangular block building to the right of the castle dates back to the time of Charlemagne (742-814 A.D.)!
The second photo is a detail of the castle and the third photo is a detail of the "Charlemagne" building. What looks like a bay window is really an early version of indoor plumbing! The color photos were from JUL85. COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Ivan Raiklin, Esq. CPT (Join to see) PO3 Phyllis Maynard SGT Robert Pryor SPC Woody Bullard
Here’s the FRG tag I mentioned, SFC William Farrell.
My travels don’t compare to yours SGT Mark Anderson, but I thought this little story might interest you.
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel, your shared link about "How Germans remember World Wars" put me in mind of this little tale from my trips to the FRG. Thought you might be interested.
When we made our trips to the FRG to support the various NATO exercises, we were attached to VII U.S. Corps at Kelley Barracks in Stuttgart. During our numerous trips there, we became good friends with a lieutenant colonel, who was in the USAR program in the FRG which was very impressive. He met and married a baroness, more specifically a freiherran. My last trip over I took my wife and so with one other couple we spent a few days with them in their castle in the village of Thüngen, which is about 25 km NW of Wurzburg.
Here's an aerial photograph of Schloss der Freiherren von Thüngen, home of LTC James L., Freiherr (Baron) von Thüngen. The castle was protected by a hillside to the rear (left) and a dry moat to the front (right). According to Jim, records showed that the rectangular block building to the right of the castle dates back to the time of Charlemagne (742-814 A.D.)!
The second photo is a detail of the castle and the third photo is a detail of the "Charlemagne" building. What looks like a bay window is really an early version of indoor plumbing! The color photos were from JUL85. COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Ivan Raiklin, Esq. CPT (Join to see) PO3 Phyllis Maynard SGT Robert Pryor SPC Woody Bullard
Here’s the FRG tag I mentioned, SFC William Farrell.
My travels don’t compare to yours SGT Mark Anderson, but I thought this little story might interest you.
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel, your shared link about "How Germans remember World Wars" put me in mind of this little tale from my trips to the FRG. Thought you might be interested.
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen C., thanks for posting the pictures. It sounds like it must have been a wonderful trip. I remembered to watch out for chamber pot dumping areas in some of the older German towns. While rarely used they filled a need.
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LTC Stephen C.
The double entendre is not lost on me, LTC Stephen F.! The chamber pots "filled" a need?! Very clever! Very funny!
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LTC Stephen C.
SPC Woody Bullard, this is the comment that I wanted you to see about Schloss der Freiherren von Thüngen.
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I went to Wildflecken with 2 11 cab in 81 and a whole bunch of times after that. Was Battalion Commo Chief of 54th Engineer Bn stationed at Wildflecken from 90 until 93 when we shut the unit down.
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