The only time that I had the honor of throwing frags was during basic training, being a tanker I was disappointed at the results from detonation, sound was rather disappointing also. What really was surprising to me for the grenade type category would have to go to the Thermite grenade, I actually had to use a couple on a Type 69 that the Iraqis had abandoned, we threw one in the turret and placed one under the engine deck grill, the Thermites did a good job gutting that tank out from the fire, really nasty buggers.Ever thrown one? Tell your grenade storys. Or list what you think is the best grenade ever.
I got to throw two live ones in the Army (basic). I threw two M67 Frags.
One that doesn't kill/injure the thrower (beware white phos!)Or list what you think is the best grenade ever.
I threw one during Basic Military Training. In Singapore they are the Standard Fragmentation Grenade SFG78. Prefragmented body and also 2,200 steel ball bearings. The one I threw had a safety clip (or jungle clip) on top of the safety pin. Apparently the newbies report the safety clip is no longer there these days.One that doesn't kill/injure the thrower (beware white phos!):
Thrown many and conducted plenty of grenade practices. I remember being quite disappointed the first time I saw an M26 go off - just a very loud noise, and ugly orange flash and some smoke.
Then you get to see the targets and how many of them have got nasty jagged little holes peppering them (and strangely how some have escaped virtually untouched).
Sharp as a bowling ball your mate. He's lucky he didn't end up a Darwin Award recipient.he stood up to take a photo of the blast. He was hit by one or two pieces of shrapnel or pellets that pierced his body. He was probably more than 20m from the blast.
He was hospitalized for half a year and several years later was the pale, skinny bag of bones I met on the street.
Definitely a candidate.Sharp as a bowling ball your mate. He's lucky he didn't end up a Darwin Award recipient.
He was a recruit instructor - and he still didn't realise the fragmentation effects of a grenade? What kind of grenade practices do you guys run anyway - don't you explain the tabulated data on the weapon (ie the filling of the grenade, the fragmentation effects etc), also don't you bother putting out some sample targets? At the completion of a grenade practice they should be virtually matchwood - I'm struggling to understand how it was that he wasn't aware of what a grenade can do - I'm betting he decided to try his luck (smart boy that) trying to impress some recruits about how tough he was. Oh well, at least he was an excellent safety example to the other recruits - what can happen if you don't listen to your bay safety officers.Definitely a candidate.
But like some other people also mentioned, the blast didn't seem at first impressive.
For me it was different. As my platoon waited our turns in a wooden zinc roofed hut BEHIND the raised throwing bay, something hit the zinc roof with a loud twack as one of the thrown grenades exploded. We must've been more than 50m away from the impact, and sited behind a raised knoll.
We had no illusions after that.
Please... The actions of one Darwin candidate cannot be used to justify your critiscism.What kind of grenade practices do you guys run anyway ...
No, the actions of one individual can't, but an 18 - 19 year old bay safety officer? Who is furthermore an instructor of recruits? At least the CO will have a shot at another career - given that going on this trend he'd be what, 23 years old?Please... The actions of one Darwin candidate cannot be used to justify your critiscism.
Furthermore, 18 or 19 year-old males in uniform doing really stupid things is hardly unexpected.
Duh...Now he's a "safety officer"?No, the actions of one individual can't, but an 18 - 19 year old bay safety officer? Who is furthermore an instructor of recruits? At least the CO will have a shot at another career - given that going on this trend he'd be what, 23 years old?![]()
Yeah, righto, an assumption by me - I assumed instructor would mean he was instructing on the grenades, and therefore probably one of the bay safety officers.Duh...Now he's a "safety officer"?
Man, can you stop letting your over-developed imagination run wild? Where did I say he was a safety officer?
I don't know where you want to take this but cut the crap and pack it up.
Well it still fires grenades....I think....And has to do what with handgrenades?![]()
I don't have any funny stories to tell, I just remember that everibody was scared to death on his way to the first live grenade of his life...![]()
Be nice Waylander.Well it still fires grenades....I think....
The first smoke I threw was during a uphill assault, in tropical forest of Singapore.Funniest story regarding this type of weopon involves a smoke... and the indervidual in question poping the spool and keeping hold of the canister after swapping hands like a fool and gassing the fire team.... well played that man