Thursday, May 31, 2018

Thurs Funny. The cat rang the doorbell....


Battle of Midway

Babcock Team 31 Arrowhead (vid)

SuperAV ACV 1.1 (vid)

Thanks to Tasso for the link!

Armor Porn. 120-mm self-propelled artillery gun 2S31 “Vienna”.


A Belly Gun for the V-22 Osprey? No rant but this doesn't make sense!


via Military.com
The desired gun would retract and extend to provide suppressive fires as extra protection on landing or takeoff. The caliber is still to be determined, Gehler said.

"I'd take it right now if we could figure it out. But I'd rather have one that actually works, that's good, that meets the mission requirements. Rather good than fast," said Air Force Col. Tom Palenske, commander of the 1st Special Operations Wing.

Military.com interviewed Palenske earlier this month as part of Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson's recent trip to Air Force Special Operations Command at Hurlburt Field, Florida.

"When we go out there, and we bring enough force to put on the ground to make sure we own that [space], we turn that little patch of whatever country we're in into a little patch of America. That way, our guys get in and get out safely," he said, adding the service's version of the aircraft, the CV-22, came in handy during his deployment to Afghanistan seven years ago.

"Some of the times when we'd go in there, we'd get into a gunfight. We weren't welcome in their neighborhood, I guess," said Palenske, referencing how the V-22 faced Taliban fire. He deployed to Afghanistan in 2011 and 2012.

But "we did 107 assaults in 120 days," he added. "At the end of the day, this is a combat airplane. The challenge is, gunfights in the past, you'd have to turn away from it because your gun is on the tail," he said of the .50 cal machine gun on the aircraft's back ramp.

"Now if we put a gun that could do forward firing, if we get engaged, we could continue [to] forward target the guys" enough to clear the area, he said.

Palenske, who enlisted in the Army and was a door gunner on the UH-1N Huey and UH-60 Black Hawk prior to flying the HH-60 Pave Hawk and MH-53 Pave Low in the Air Force, said he was "blessed" to fly the Osprey.

The Osprey's range reduces the requirement for additional refueling. It has a combat radius of 500 nautical miles with one internal auxiliary fuel tank, according to the Air Force.

But its speed -- 200 miles per hour in some cases -- is its major selling point, said Palenske, who trained on the aircraft in 2008.

He said it makes sense to bring in smaller helicopters, depending on mission set, especially in an urban environment. But "if you want to put mass on the objective ... [the Osprey] goes twice as fast if not two-and-a-half times as fast" in comparison to its counterparts.

"I would take this thing into combat 10 times over any helicopter that's available out there," he said of the tiltrotor aircraft.
Story here. 

This appears to be a story focused on USAF Special Ops folks but I'm applying it to the entire V-22 fleet.

My problem with this? 

I don't understand the push to arm the V-22.  Quite honestly both the Air Force and Marine Corps are all over the place with their thinking when it comes to this platform.

What do I mean?


Remember the MUX for the Marine Corps?  The UAV that's suppose to provide escort for the V-22, close air support for Marines on the ground and even act as a picket for the fleet for anti-air duties?

Why take away valuable cargo lift to replace it for a gun (either belly or forward firing) if we're getting this?

Remember the news we got not too long ago about the USMC being interested in the USAF light attack program?

How about the other news from the Wing about looking for a replacement for the AH-1Z?

No rant but this doesn't make any sense!

We're seeing an uptick in procurement of aircraft with no end in sight but the ground side continues to be starved of funding.

I could easily be wrong though.  Is this simply the evolution of the airplane and other items should be taken separately or is this a case of chasing the new/flashy instead of fulfilling real needs?


Armor Porn. Leopard 2A7DK







Swedish Army @ Exercise VÄreld 18 via Bmashine Tumblr Page.








Open Comment Post. May 31, 2018


The 7 Habits: Put First Things First via The Art of Manliness Blog.


via AoM.
Covey’s first two habits are big picture and abstract.

Habit #1 — “Be Proactive” — is about changing your mindset from someone who is acted upon to someone who acts. It’s about reminding yourself that you are in charge of your life and how you respond to it.

Habit #2 builds off of the first. It instructs you to marshal the power of personal agency and “Begin With the End in Mind” — the “end” here being nothing less final than the grave. When you look back on your life from your deathbed, what do you want to see and how do you want to feel? Once you know that, you create a personal mission statement based on timeless principles and your own core values that helps you develop and practice these “eulogy virtues.”

Habit #3 is where the rubber meets the road.

As Covey argues, Habits 1 and 2 are about personal leadership — figuring out where you want to go and what you want to do in life — while Habit #3 is about personal management. It’s about taking the big picture, the abstract, the idealistic, and turning them into the day-to-day, the concrete, the practical. It’s about taking external actions that match your internal convictions.
Story here. 

Interesting isn't it.

Covey packaged up knowledge that is known and made big bucks off it.  What do I mean?  Take Marine Corps Leadership Traits for example (here), ignore the fact that the USAF packaged it on their education site without the usual fluff on it making it the most useful, but concentrate on its tenets.

Now compare it to what Covey came up with.

Long story short?

Our creator gave us all the natural instincts to get it done.  We all know what needs to be done, have an inkling of how to go about what it is we each desire to do, and laid the groundwork assuming you have the determination to crush your goals.

My personal belief is that society and lack of personal confidence is the limiting factor.

Society sets artificial roadblocks on individuals and people as a rule lack the personal confidence/courage to either hurdle or trample those roadblocks to get what they want (assuming its legal of course...if it isn't then those roadblocks need to be tall and strong!).