cannister round video - Printable Version +- Forums (https://www.theblitz.club/message_boards) +-- Forum: The Firing Line (https://www.theblitz.club/message_boards/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Combat Mission (https://www.theblitz.club/message_boards/forumdisplay.php?fid=10) +--- Thread: cannister round video (/showthread.php?tid=49673) |
cannister round video - Mad Baron - 01-09-2009 Shotgun Tank Round The Tank Cartridge, 120mm, Canister, XM1028, is a tank round comprised of 1150 (est.) tungsten balls, which are expelled upon muzzle exit. There is no fuse on this round. http://shock.military.com/Shock/videos.do?displayContent=170421 RE: cannister round video - Der Kuenstler - 01-09-2009 pretty cool.... RE: cannister round video - raz_atoth - 01-09-2009 ...if you're not on the receiving end ;) RE: cannister round video - Soldier - 01-10-2009 Looks quite impressive. Must be very effective at the right distance/range. One round can take out an entire squad and even significantly damage a tight platton formation. RE: cannister round video - Ken F. (FGM) - 01-11-2009 Hi All, That's how the C-round in the CMBB T-34 is modeled, but from what evidence i saw posted at the battlefront-site, it was in fact a timed/fused round, and was NOT a coffe can full of buckshot. That's why I think all scenario designers should remove C-rounds from T-34's, and replace with a mix of AP and HE. ...And can anybody post an actual AAR or account of the Germans using C-rounds from AFV...? I know... technically these rounds were available, but are there any accounts at all of any C-rounds actually being used in combat...? Maybe Jason C. or some other Grog has some data... Sincerely, Ken RE: cannister round video - Extraordinarius - 01-11-2009 Ken F. (FGM) Wrote:That's how the C-round in the CMBB T-34 is modeled, but from what evidence i saw posted at the battlefront-site, it was in fact a timed/fused round, and was NOT a coffe can full of buckshot. What the Soviets were using was actually Shrapnel http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrapnel a round that was being phased out in other armies. There is now an added confusion in that the use of the term "shrapnel" has more recently come to mean any short of shell fragments, either bits of the casing or stone fragments thrown out by the blast. |