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From: Frank Gilliland on Aug 21, 6:25 pm
On 21 Aug 2005 13:19:18 -0700, wrote in Robeson couldn't even name the very common all-service small-unit radio of his early time, the AN/PRC-25 or PRC-77. I wouldn't call it "small" -- those puppies get mighty heavy on a forced march. A "small" radio would be the PRC-68. But the RT-841 (the RT used for the PRC-77) was the bread and butter of ground radio comm. True, but "small" in weight depends on the era of use. The PRC-8, -9, -10 that the PRC-25 replaced were fully backpack carry while the -25 and -77 are not. The -25 was first and had one vacuum tube in the final amplifier (everything else solid state). The -77 was ALL solid-state plus some other minor changes. For about a 1965 design start it was state-of-the-art then. BTW, the first REAL "walkie-talkie" of WW2 was the SCR-300 (with BC-1000 R/T) of WW2. The full-on assembly weighed in about38 pounds and the handset was cobbled from a standard telephone handset having a push-to-talk lever. Far from the H-33 and its descendents still in the inventory. I've got a little paper on that SCR-300 at Harold Hallikainen's website for history. A plateau-jump in design in its time. http://kauko.hallikainen.org/history/equipment/ Click on Motorola to get the TheFirstWalkieTalkie.pdf. Appendix C is kind of interesting, a "horse mobile" transceiver that Motorola produced in 1943 but didn't design...battery-powered radio-on-a-guidon-pole that fit into a military cavalry saddle guidon socket. Only problem was that, by 1943, there was NO MORE horse cavalry in the U.S. Army! :-) Infantry and others used this HF-only set, an addition of a vehicle mount was done for Jeeps and trucks. unspecified authority. Medical discharges are given for a variety of reasons, not always due to physical disabilities. [that's in Google archives] A medical discharge is an administrative, or "general", discharge "under honorable conditions". They are not changed to "honorable" unless there were mitigating circumstances that led to the original discharge being incorrect. But there is no way he would have been granted retirement benefits without serving the full 20 years. (And BTW, the rank of Gy.Sgt. is pretty low for retired enlisted.) GySgt was an E-7 (same as SFC in Army)...USMC enlisted ratings go to E-9, Sergeant Major. I don't think Stebie would con anyone on saying he was that other E-9, Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps! :-) I was Honorably Discharged in April 1960 as an E-5. Curious thing with Army insignia for about a decade: They dropped the "buck sergeant" three chevrons, no rockers, insignia and began all NCOs with rockers. They also dropped the "recruit" rank in favor of Private-1 (no stripe), elevated to Private-2 on passing Basic Training (Army and Air Force don't have "boot camp"), then began PFC as E-3 with one chevron. Corporal was E-3, two chevrons. The enlisted insignia changed once again around the mid 1960s, restoring the "buck sergeant" sans rockers. Hmmmm...the only time I have a medical discharge now is blood work twice a year. I DO study for that test and pass it each time. :-) Robeson has consistently tried to make fun of others' military assignments, claiming his (classic) been in "seven hostile actions." I can't find that post. I've seen it, Brian Burke has seen it. I know he wrote it as clearly as he wrote his classic "Sorry, Hans, MARS IS amateur radio!" :-) A classic "rebuke" in newsgroups is "show me where I said that!" in terms of great outrage. :-) Anyone who falls for that has to go back to archives (we used to have DejaNews but Google bought them), search for the post, copy it out, paste it on the return post...and find that the "outraged" will not respond, say it is "false", or rationalize it saying "he meant something 'else.'" :-) First of all servicemenbers don't have any choice of what they do, they go and do whatever they are assigned, wherever commanded. Upon completion of MOS training, some are allowed to request a particular duty station at first. Sometimes that request is granted. After that it's a crap shoot. Some of the military experts in here never served. They think not being assigned to a combat area was somehow a negative moral attribute, cowardice implied of course. :-( They've read all the books, seen all the movies, watched all the TV shows and KNOW WHAT IT WAS LIKE! :-) This fierce warrior, self-promoted "seven hostile action" implied hero can't even swear like a Marine among other veterans? Highly unlikely. :-) In all fairness, I knew quite a few Marines that didn't swear. OK, we differ. :-) Phrases and euphemisms identified with the USMC are easy to get in literature and from TV and movies (tons of that material). Very easy. What's missing from his stories are unique experiences. Them we ain't got yet. Not in six-plus years. :-( What we get instead is a constant barrage of personal insults directed at us...but no definite answers of his. He's got a CON going and loves that too much. shrug con gam |
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