I've forgotten so much useless shite...Etranger wrote: ↑Tue Oct 01, 2019 6:39 amwe've nattered about it on various threads. i think you told me about the Kiwi carriers in the first place! http://www.mapleleafup.net/forums/showthread.php?t=1672
Indian Pattern Carriers
Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
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Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
Hmmm... Not sure I agree with a lot of that. While the process of Indianisation had begun and was accelerating (with some Bn COs being Indian by 1941, as mentioned above and well-documented in Burma), there were still an awful lot of British Platoon Commanders in the Indian Army. They didn't suddenly get commissioned as Majors, so how else did they learn their trade?bangorstu wrote: ↑Tue Oct 01, 2019 6:48 pm https://toofatlardies.co.uk/forum/viewt ... 35&t=12012
might be of some use?
At the nitty-gritty end of a peacetime army, let alone a wartime army, VCOs had extremely limited powers under the Indian Army's equivalent of the Army Act and King's Regulations, as they weren't classed as 'Officers Commanding', so each platoon ideally required a KCO to command it and to adjudicate disciplinary matters.
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Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
British Pathe footage of IPCs, Marmon Herringtons, and 2 pdr portees in the desert here.
https://www.britishpathe.com/video/indi ... long+range
Despite the caption thought to be the Guides Cavalry rather than LRDG (Indian Long Range Squadron). Includes mortars firing from inside the vehicles.
The sub unit is B Squadron, the British officer with the splendid moustache is Randall Plunkett, and the suggestion is it is post Alamein as this was when they first received any armoured cars.
https://www.britishpathe.com/video/indi ... long+range
Despite the caption thought to be the Guides Cavalry rather than LRDG (Indian Long Range Squadron). Includes mortars firing from inside the vehicles.
The sub unit is B Squadron, the British officer with the splendid moustache is Randall Plunkett, and the suggestion is it is post Alamein as this was when they first received any armoured cars.
You can never have too much of something you never needed to start with
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Some of my blogs:
http://vintagewargaming.blogspot.co.uk/
http://findthatfigure.blogspot.co.uk/
http://tankdevelopment.blogspot.co.uk/
http://georland.blogspot.co.uk/
Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
Nice! An interesting little force in it's own right.
Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
Bugger. Now I want to whip my 15mm desert stuff out and get it painted.
Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
That must be a euphemism
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Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
Euphemisms would have got too hot to play in the desert in summer.
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Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
And they get full of sand
I know when to go out
I know when to stay in
Get things done
I know when to stay in
Get things done
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Re: Indian Pattern Carriers
Yup, it takes 4 litres of water to flush it out.