Monday, May 23, 2016

Gift 1: Bazooka and Machine Gun

    The final Marine is an anti-tank team member armed with the M9A1 Bazooka issued in June 1944 (the original M1 Bazooka was first used in North Africa in 1942). The weapon weighed 15.87lbs unloaded with a maximum range of 250 yards. As a back-up weapon he is armed with a Colt 1911 .45 caliber pistol in his leather holster. He wears the P42 camouflage utility uniform, brown side out. On his olive drab webbing he has an army style canteen pouch, k-bar, first aid kit, and a Mk. II fragmentation hand grenade, commonly known as a “pineapple” grenade. On the ground is Bazooka ammunition pack and a M6A3 HEAT round. Each round weighed 3.4 pounds, traveled at 265 feet per second, and could penetrate up to 4 inches (102mm) of armor plating at 90 degrees. The miniature is based on gravel taken from Kiyamu-Gusuku Ridge where the 1 st Marine Division, to include 1st and 3rd Battalions 8th Marines, wiped out the remnants of the 62nd Division of the Imperial Japanese Army in the last major action by Marines on 21 June 1945.Kiyamu-Gusuku Ridge is the ridge line running east to west from Heiwasozonomori Park on the southern tip of the island; the gravel was collected in March 2016.











    The final Japanese soldier is a machine-gunner armed with a Type 99 light machine gun. The machine-gun fires 7.7x58mm Arisaka, the same round as used in the standard Type 99 infantry rifle. The gas operated machine-gun is fed through a 30 round box magazine on the top of the weapon and is capable of firing 700 rounds per minute at 2,400 feet per second. The weapon weighs a staggering 23 pounds and while the bayonet could be affixed it was rarely used. The machine-gun could also utilize a 2.5X telescopic sight with a 10 degree field of view on the right side of gun, allowing top marksmen to act as snipers and machine-gunners. The machine-gunner carries extra magazines in the large pouch on his left and also has an Imperial Japanese Navy style canteen (round) on his right. The miniature is based on sand from Okinawa’s Red 3 beach, where 1st Battalion 4th Marines came ashore on 1 April 1945.  Red 3 is just north of Blue 1 and runs north along Tori Station beach until hitting the coral wall at Red 2; the sand was collected in March 2016.




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