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I've always wondered this... why? Isnt he from like the thirties anyways?

2007-04-21 18:09:34 · 4 answers · asked by Louie Anderson 2 in Entertainment & Music Comics & Animation

4 answers

I hit him with a chunk of wood in the eye.

2007-04-21 18:17:22 · answer #1 · answered by xoLoveMaexo 2 · 0 0

shrapnel from the bazooka and no he is not from the thirties since they didnt make the bazooka until 1942

It had an effective range of 100m and could fire out to 400m. It had a penetration of about 80mm and required two crew, a gunner and loader.

During the late 1930s the US government acquired shaped charge warheads from the Swiss, but at that point had no concept for a delivery system. It was decided to put the warheads into production and some testing was done with them in the form of a rifle grenade, but it proved too heavy.

So with a growing stockpile of excellent anti-tank warheads there was still no suitable delivery system. Enter Colonel Skinner, a US Army officer at the Ordnance Proving Ground, an enthusiastic proponent of rockets. He soon suggested carrying the hollow charge at the tip of a high-speed rocket.

He built a rocket to carry a grenade body, and using a modified 60mm mortar tube successfully demonstrated the destructive force of his new weapon in front of high-ranking Generals in an impromptu demonstration. The officers who had gathered to see the official demonstrations of other weapons were suitably impressed and Skinners weapon was ordered into production immediately.

The new weapon was soon modified for production and month later in May 1942 General Electric had built 5,000 ready for combat. This first model was known as the Rocket Launcher M1. The calibre of 60mm or 2.36in was determined by the grenade used as the warhead, which were already in production.

This first model had a wooden shoulder stock and pistol grips, though later models saw steel and Bakelite fittings as well. The weapon was electrically fired when a circuit between the rocket and batteries in the shoulder stock was completed by squeezing the trigger. Unfortunately, once the battery was installed, it was always live and that could leave the battery flat at an inconvenient moment.

The next batch of Bazookas in 1943 incorporated several changes. Known as the M1A1 this Bazooka lost the forward pistol grip and added a muzzle blast guard. It now also included an on/off switch to increase battery life expectancy.

2007-04-21 18:21:18 · answer #2 · answered by Mungujacombamatagimba-the-4th??? 3 · 0 1

Bazooka accident

2007-04-21 18:12:20 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Maybe he accidentally shot himself with his bazooka?

2007-04-21 18:12:17 · answer #4 · answered by scruffycat 7 · 0 0

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