![Twin Bren | Gun Wiki | Fandom]not all
guns are of era
![AO-36 | Weapon Wiki | Fandom] in: Multiple Barrel Firearms, Assault Rifles
in fact many are too modern but so cool
movie red scorpion
Could you actually sit down and explain your ideas instead of just dumping a bunch of random pictures and leaving?
should have put it in the mess room
was listening to a pod cast episodes and mor hours in of 52 episode
after over 5hours of rp through rule they had a no win battle
party was laid out about to be killed
many popular npcs killed
when two jedi showed up
bad guys ran away
quit the series that moment
i harte no win battles in rpg’s
but yeah next time mess room
just meant to be fun while the glider tanks is more an april fools event
Done.
thanks
lol these are great tbh idk if it real or not but i love it
define real i question this `
this is a prop
but the rest are real, or as real as most of the internet
Delicious!
Finally, some good fkn assault gun on BR5
Need .45 Remington–Thompson version.
“Tommy” was a slang term for British soldiers during World War I and World War II. The term is thought to have originated from the name of Private Tommy Atkins, a British soldier who inspired the Duke of Wellington in 1794. The term was also associated with the equipment of British soldiers, such as the “Tommy Cooker”, a portable stove used by British troops in World War I
never too many tommie’s
The “Tommy Cooker” was also slang used by the Germans in WWII to describe the M4 Sherman, which due to to its use of petrol (gasoline for our American cousins), was prone to catching fire when under attack. Other nicknames were “Ronson” and “Zippo” because “they light every time”.
That’s what I remembered as well
It’s interesting to see both interpretation for the same term.
Although today, the br3 Sherman is the one doing the cooking! (Those new shells, owiiie!) Panzers 3 & 4 are now Sauerkraut cookers!
that is not the entire truth, the British has a habit of storing extra ammo in places that they should not. This extra ammo would often detonate setting of fires, thus not being error in design or Contruction but of use.
- After WW2, British Operations Analysts concluded that ammo fires wrecked hundreds of tanks , more than fuel fires.-
having more ammo at had was more important than it being protected, ;‘first hit is often either lethal or debilitating’ like self sealing rubber fuel tanks when the US added wet storage ammo lockers fires plummeted-
they were also far less common on American crewed tanks because us crews kept ammo where it belonged.