Showing posts with label Weapons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weapons. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 May 2011

Photo-Etched 1/72 Weapons

I found a Czech manufacturer of 1/72 photo-etched weapons. Not cheap but ideal for those necessary Winter of '79 conversions. They also make photo-etched 1/72 hands which you can animate to hold/fire the weapons too.


Check out the Tracks & Troops webstore here (http://www.tracks-n-troops.eu/shop/).

Cheers
Mark

Monday, 6 December 2010

The Uzi......Freedom Fighters Friend

 
The sub-machine gun of choice for your ex-pat Mercenaries, criminal underworld and common or garden revolutionary in 1979 was the Uzi. Designed by Israeli general Uziel Gal in 1948, it's reliability and reputation in action saw it become the favoured weapon of the world's elite forces and terrorists alike.

The Uzi was considered accurate for a gas blow back operated sub-machine gun, plus good penetration and stopping power. Additional plus points were  low recoil, muzzle blast, climb, size, weight, cost, and minimal training time. All in all, making it an ideal for civilians turned freedom fighters.

Here we see Major Harry Burton leading a private 'security force' of ex-pat former servicemen and soldiers for hire on the Dixby Estate, home of  Sir Marcus Dixby MBE, Managing Director and senior shareholder of British Pastoid Chemical.

I must admit, I prefer the idea of British renegades and rebels armed with Uzi's (and Sterlings) in '79 rather than more hackneyed  AK47 and Armalite. East Riding Miniatures (Platoon 20)  have a variety of Uzi armed figures mixed into their post war Civilian/Freedom Fighter and IDF ranges. Rolf Hedges has a pack of Uzi armed civilians (code UrbUzi) in his Urban Terror range.

I recently bought a pack of Elheim Pakistani troops with H&K MP5 (code PAK05), My plan is to convert them to more civilian attire and use the h&K MP5 as a Uzi proxy. May just give them a headswop and use the figures as para-military or rebel militia types.

Cheers

Mark

Thursday, 8 July 2010

Brainstorming: The People Armed

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“If you go to Liverpool… they are coming in from Ireland. 
Somebody says from Poland, from Italy, from France, from Albania.”

A quick brainstorm on firearm ownership in the UK in the 70's and early 80's.

Progressive arms controls in the C20th denuded the rights of individuals to legitimately bear arms. The 1968 Firearms Act brought together all existing firearms legislation in a single statute and formed the legal basis for British firearms control policy until 1988 when the Firearms (Amendment) Act hurriedly came about in the wake of the 1987 Hungerford massacre.

The number of legally held firearms during the period we are gaming can be gathered from the following statistics:

In 1969, there were 216,281 firearms certificates held by private individuals in the UK; in 1986 the figure was 160,285. Despite the first ever controls imposed on shotguns by the 1968 Act, in 1969, 637,108 people were licensed shotgun owners (i.e. permitted to own any number of shotguns); and in 1986 there were 840,951. Virtually all these certificate holders were either members of gun clubs (for target shooting), engaged in hunting game for sport (largely an elitist past-time, even in the seventies the United Kingdom was increasingly urbanised with relatively few areas where game could be shot in the wild), or gamekeepers/farmers (for the control of vermin).

Out of interest, the weapons legally licensed and owned by Michael Ryan, the Hungerford Massacre gunman included:

    * Zabala shotgun
    * Browning shotgun
    * Beretta 92 semi-automatic 9 mm pistol
    * CZ ORSO semi-automatic .32 pistol
    * "Type 56" 7.62x39mm semi-automatic rifle (Chinese copy of the AK-47)
    * M1 Carbine .30 7.62x33mm semi-automatic rifle

The licensed arms dealer who sold these weapons to Michael Ryan is quoted as saying "I wouldn’t really like to say how many guns I’ve sold over the years, certainly tens of thousands".
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The number of illegally held firearms in the 70's probably numbered 250,000 including many ex-service weapons and WW2 trophies. In a 1965 gun amnesty a man in Royston, Hertfordshire, handed over an anti-tank gun, four service rifles, 12,000 rounds of ammunition, several live grenades and three booby traps.

The 1968 amnesty would net 25,000 illegal weapons and in 1988 a further 42,000 weapons plus 1.5 million rounds of ammunition were handed in to police.

Criminals had no problem in acquiring firearms for robberies: from 1974 to 1984 the number of robberies using firearms in England and Wales rose from 650 to 2,098. A survey of 80 gun related crimes determined that 16 used sawn off shotguns, 20 9mm pistols, 13 revolvers and 7 automatic rifles or sub-machine guns  (mostly Uzi and Mac-10). Most of these appear to have come in via Liverpool Docks and many had an Irish connection.

So we are looking at over 1 million shotguns, mostly single and double bore hunting/sporting models, between half and one million assorted firearms - everything from Brown Bess through Mauser pistol to AK47 and Bren gun in private ownership (legally or otherwise).

And that's before our heroic revolutionaries turn to arms dealers, hardened criminals, old boys networks, the IRA and foreign diplomats and revolutionary movements (ETA) for aid.

Cheers
Mark