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Sniper takes out Taliban one and half mile consecutive shots/kills
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle7113916.ece
damn. BRITISH Army sniper has set a new sharpshooting distance record by killing two Taliban machinegunners in Afghanistan from more than a mile away. Craig Harrison, a member of the Household Cavalry, killed the insurgents with consecutive shots ? even though they were 3,000ft beyond the most effective range of his rifle. ?The first round hit a machinegunner in the stomach and killed him outright,? said Harrison, a Corporal of Horse. ?He went straight down and didn?t move. ?The second insurgent grabbed the weapon and turned as my second shot hit him in the side. He went down, too. They were both dead.? The shooting ? which took place while Harrison?s colleagues came under attack ? was at such extreme range that the 8.59mm bullets took almost three seconds to reach their target after leaving the barrel of the rifle at almost three times the speed of sound. The distance to Harrison?s two targets was measured by a GPS system at 8,120ft, or 1.54 miles. The previous record for a sniper kill is 7,972ft, set by a Canadian soldier who shot dead an Al-Qaeda gunman in March 2002. |
daaaayum!! thats some seriously accurate shooting!
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At that range you have to account for...
THE FUCKING PLANET SPINNING UNDERNEATH THE BULLET! :bowdown The British Armed Forces are the best in the world. No conscription and training to a very high level makes it what it is. |
Outstanding...I salute the man. The verticle and horizontal Kentucky windage on those two shots is amazing.
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wow thats some serious skills ...
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that blows targets
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Those records dont really hold much water as they have been broken tiime and again just never had a way to confirm them as fact of distance. but with the GPS and sats thats going to change.
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There have been longer shots, they just don't publicize all of them...
And when you're firing with a .50 cal you don't even have to hit your target in order to kill them :P |
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The earth is a closed system, that is to say, the planet, its atmosphere, etc, rotates at the same velocity [~1600KM/h] A bullet, no matter how far it travels, is still subject to the same parabolic arc as any other propelled object. Ask yourself: When you drop a pen, does it land 5cm away from where you dropped it? More information: http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/que...php?number=546 |
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And yes, with a .50 cal fired from a sniper rifle you don't have to hit the target. The velocity and size of the round will rip someone apart even when the round passes near them. Also, there's a lot of luck involved with shots at that distance. Calculating the wind'age for a distance that size is only good for the moment you calculate it. A strong breeze anywhere in between the sniper and the target during the time of firing will throw the round off target. That's why the guy was aiming center mass on his mark... usually you'd aim for the brain box. |
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I'm not even going to bother debunking your physics, I'll let someone else do it ;) (start at ~ 1:50) Summary: 50 cal, fired from less than 10 feet away, sailing past a 2 rows of glassware less than 2" from the bullet - they don't even move, let alone explode. Your USMC friend is ficticious, or taking the piss. |
once in 5th grade i shot a spitball and took out a teacher 3 miles away in another school.
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You mean I can't curve bullets?! Fuck.... :1orglaugh
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What a 'record' :upsidedow ...
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Snipers don't play.
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Thats some crazy shit.
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incredible shot
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http://www.army.mod.uk/equipment/sup...pons/1459.aspx Quote:
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I shot a guys arm off over a mile away on COD4
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I still remember this story
The Real Miss America This 19 year old ex-cheerleader (now an Air Force Security Forces Sniper) was watching a road that led to a NATO military base when she observed a man digging by the road. She engaged the target (I.e., she shot him). It turned out he was a bomb maker for the Taliban, and he was burying an IED that was to be detonated when a US patrol walked by 30 minutes later. It would have certainly killed and wounded several soldiers. The interesting fact of this story is the shot was measured at 725 yards. She shot him as he was bent over burying the bomb. The shot went through his butt and into the bomb which detonated; he was blown to pieces. The Air Force made a motivational poster of her: |
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I've taken many shots at that distance, I know the fucking drill, I know how a spotter works and what their job is... I was an 0311, 8531, and 8541 in the USMC. And ANY sniper will tell you that beyond the MAX effective range for your weapon is a whole lot of luck... Sure there's skill involved, you still have to be an EXCELLENT shot to even stand a chance of hitting your target but at that level the skill is a given. So to me, it's all luck... I'm much more impressed by someone that can hit a point target within the max effective range of his weapon repeatedly without missing, while wind conditions are changing. THAT is a solid two man team. Not to mention stalking/tracking skills. Firing a weapon is really a very small part of what a sniper does. Positioning for the shot so you aren't seen when taking the shot... now THAT is all skill ;) |
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The Bayonet Charge The battle began when over 100 Mahdi army fighters ambushed two unarmored vehicles transporting around 20 Argylls on the isolated Route Six highway near the southern city of Amarah. Ensconced in trenches along the road, the militiamen fired mortars, rocket propelled grenades, and machine gun rounds. The vehicles stopped and British troops returned fire. The Mahdi barrage caused enough damage to force the troops to exit the vehicles.The soldiers quickly established a defensive perimeter and radioed for reinforcements from the main British base at Amarah ? Camp Abu Naji. Reinforcements from the Princess of Wales?s Royal Regiment assisted the Argyles in an offensive operation against the Mahdi militiamen. When ammunition ran low among the British troops, the decision was made to fix bayonets for a direct assault. The British soldiers charged across 600 feet of open ground toward enemy trenches. They engaged in intense hand-to-hand fighting with the militiamen. Despite being outnumbered and lacking ammunition, the Argylls and Princess of Wales troops routed the enemy. The British troops killed about 20 militiamen in the bayonet charge and between 28 and 35 overall. Only three British soldiers were injured.This incident marked the first time in 22 years that the British Army used bayonets in action. The previous incident occurred during the Falklands War in 1982. II. Why the Bayonet Charge Was a Tactical Success The bayonet charge by British troops in Basra achieved tactical success primarily because of psychological and cultural factors. It also shows that superior firepower does not guarantee success by either side. In this case, the value of surprise, countering enemy expectations, and strict troop discipline were three deciding characteristics of the bayonet charge. Surprise as a Weapon The Mahdi fighters likely expected the British convoy to continue past the attack. Previous convoys of British vehicles had driven through ambush fire. British military sources believe the militiamen miscalculated the response of the convoy and expected the Scots to flee. Enemy Expectation that Coalition Troops Would Avoid Combat Propaganda by Sunni and Shiite jihadists regularly advertised the perception that American and British soldiers were cowards. Similar rhetoric increased after the battles of Fallujah in April2004, perhaps to steady the resolve of militia fighters in the face of aggressive coalition attacks. "I wanted to put the fear of God into the enemy. I could see some dead bodies and eight blokes, some scrambling for their weapons. I?ve never seen such a look of fear in anyone?s eyes before. I?m over six feet; I was covered in sweat, angry, red in the face, charging in with a bayonet and screaming my head off. You would be scared, too." Corporal Brian Wood Princess of Wales?s Royal Regiment "There was a lot of aggression and a lot of hand-to-hand fighting. It wasn?t a pleasant scene. Some did get cut with the blades of the bayonet as we tumbled around, but in the end, they surrendered and were controlled. I do wonder how they regard life so cheaply. Some of these Iraqis in those trenches were 15 years old ? against trained soldiers." Colonel Mark Byers Princess of Wales?s Royal Regiment Strict Discipline A crucial distinction during the bayonet charge was the professional discipline of the British troops in contrast to the disunity and confusion of the militia fighters. Irregular militia often fight with passion and benefit from knowledge of the local terrain. Professional soldiers, however, formally trained in tactics and squad unity can often overcome these and other obstacles. During the bayonet charge, the soldiers rarely lost their nerve and not a single soldier lost his life. |
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There are so many hardcore guys in this thread it makes me wonder why you're all wasting your time and incredible talent here and not out being mercenaries.
The pay is much better and when you don't like someone, rather than flame them on a keyboard, you get to kill them. Oooh-Rah! |
Corporal of Horse? Household Cavalry?
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA |
2 seconds in the air is a long way :BangBang:
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:ak47::helpme |
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