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Posted: 8/8/2005 1:29:52 AM EDT
Petty Officer 1st Class Bert Bath, a corpsman with Iraqi Interdiction Force Platoon, Echo Company, 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, scans the area while on a patrol during an operation in Al Anbar province. With more than 18 years in the Navy, Bath has spent 14 of them attached to a reconnaissance unit. Photo by: Lance Cpl. Evan M. Eagan BIG hi-res HK magazine and what looks like an home made tac latch. |
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wonder what he is using for a sling?
maybe a single-point (for lefties)? but it looks attached forward the receiver and what can you make out about his back-up magazine? Don't believe it is the HK - may not be a mag I am seeing at all - not sure. curious that a recon Marine uses a CQB optic. He must also take care of the business he reconnoiters! great photo. |
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They can use red-dot CQB optics out to 800 yd. That's hardcore! |
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guy's a navy fmf corpsman, not a marine. hey, credit where credit's due; he'd be the first one to correct ya!
kinda looks like a 20rd mag in the pouch... man, someone needs to send that squid a toothbrush!!! hahahahaha |
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Nice pic. Navy corpsman are a different breed and serve in all branches, if I'm not mistaken.
That rifle is so anti-ARFCOM. |
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Notice the HK mag. (at least I think it is with those markings)
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While I served in the army there were several occasions where Navy Corpmen served with out unit. Usally to provide extra support, for special "events"
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Yeah, it is an HK mag, Lumpy pointed that out in his post. |
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He is with the Marines. Marines do not have medics, they are all Navy corpsman. |
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For the love of all things holy someone send that man an Alumablack pen from brownells......
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So that's where my NFA M4 went. After the tragic boating accident, I wondered what may have happened to it. I guess this Corpsman was scuba diving below my boat when it landed on his air tank.
The serial numbers match perfectly. Then he takes my M4 to the sandbox. I always wanted some real world testing. HS1 |
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you are right, sir corpsman- corps·man [ káwrmən, káwrzmən ] def.- soldier able to give first aid: in the U.S. armed forces, an enlisted person with training in giving first aid and basic medical treatment |
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It's a Marine rifle, so you know it's going to be beat to hell. |
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Lumpy always has the best firearms pictures.
I also take pleasure in noting he has an EOTech 552.... |
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Boat accident?!?! |
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That picture can't be real. Every AK owner I know tells me that an AR won't operate when it is dirty.hinking.gif
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The unit the Doc is from is a reserve unit, activated and attached to II MEF for the war. He is one of active component (Inspector-Instructor Staff) attached to the unit, to train and provide support to the reservists.
The Marine Corps bought a couple thousand EO-Techs for its M4A1s used in CQB as the NSN 1240-01-492-5264 HDS/ECOS. |
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Never saw any Navy medical personnel serving with Army units, but the Air Force Forward air controllers always had cool gear!
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I'm digging the 100 MPH tape. |
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Pretty substantial looking tac latch. . . it probably works pretty well.
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We got Corpsmen out here in NW Iraq - see 'em in the chowhall from time to time. Not sure where they work or who with - but we have no Marines anywhere near here, the MEF has the AO below us. |
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Is that a free float RAS? Or is deemed cool now to mount optics on a non-free float... Just wondering b/c my MI handguards lock up tight but I don't know if it's stable enough for an optic...
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That is the standard issue M4 RAS, no free floating and although most on this site would consider it a sin, its good enough for government work.
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Good pic. First time I have seen an absolute co-witness with a removable carry handle. I guess you do what works, and work with what you have. |
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Is that an issue charging handle latch? Hard to make out, but I don't think it is standard.
ETA: Almost looks like they welded a piece metal on it to extend it. |
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Some NCO has obviously failed to communicate the importance of weapons maintenance.
He needs to clean his weapon. |
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He is an NCO, and I'm quite sure he is well aware of the importance of a clean weapon. However, if you're opertating anywhere near a saltwater environment, a worn M4 can look like that in a matter of hours. |
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As has been point out the HM1 is an NCO (E6) and since he is serving with a Marine unit, he would be considered a SNCO. Since he is a SARC (Special Amphibious Reconnaissance Corpsmen) and spent most of his time with the Marines I am sure he knows a bit about what it takes to keep his weapon up.
What is shocking is most troops know how to clean a weapon for an inspection, but not for serviceability. Prior to the war, it was not unusual to have half a day or more of weapons cleaning on the schedule every week, no matter if the weapons hadn’t left the armory for months other than for cleaning. This lead to the bad habit of troops scrubbing the finish off the weapons, which created the spiral of you now have to clean the weapon every week for preservation purposes. |
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Done any time in the sandbox? If you did you would know a weapon can look like that less than an hour after being cleaned. Especially if you're actually out there humping around as opposed to sitting on your ass in an FOB. Besides, riding in the back of a Hummer, which he is doing, will turn your weapon into a dust magnet in less than 10 minutes. If you're going to criticize, know what you're talking about first.........Sheeeesh... ETA: To my fellow Doc: HOOYAH! GIT SOME!! |
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his Colt sling adapter is right where it should be- up front attached to the front sight base. I don't know that I see enough of a delta ring to call it a delta ring or a non-FF forend. someone's welding latches, that's for sure. |
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Lumpy, thanks, and keep posting the high-resolution photos of M4 carbines. For some reason, my computer cannot access the Army or Marine photos through their respective websites.
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Are you on dial up? Im on cable and they still load incredibly slow for me. |
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Yeah, I'm on dial-up (21K), but the problem is that when I go to a site like army.mil, for example, and click on the "images" tab. I get a webpage saying that the page cannot be displayed. It is some sort of setting on my computer (Windows XP) that is keeping my from accessing them, and I haven't been able to figure out how to rectify the situation. I can see the high-res photos when you link to them like you did above, but no other way. I'd like to get a nice collection of high-res M4 carbine photos from Iraq and Afghanistan, but until I figure this out, I have to rely on posts such as yours. |
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I'm on wireless and it was pretty fast for me, not the site, sure of that.
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Nope. They provide medical care for the Navy and Marine Corps. No one else. |
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Actually, I have been seeing that combo quite a lot lately. It gives hope to all of us A2 die-hards. |
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Sorry Lumpy, just seeing a RED X.
ETA: DUH, got the big picture - thanks. Was that link there last night? |
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[homer voice on] DoH!!!!!! [homer voice off] sorry missed that part. |
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