here you go...
The British Army in Italy 1944. Sexton 25pdr self-propelled gun of 1st Royal Horse Artillery, operating as part of 'Porter Force' on the Adriatic coast near Ravenna, 1 December 1944. (IWM via Wikipedia http://media.iwm.org.uk/ciim5/47/772/large_000000.jpg)
and a biography of a gunner in a Sexton RA regiment in Italy https://www.custermen.com/AtTheFront/Bi ... sworth.htm although there are some silly errors in the entry.
Italy, 1944
Re: Italy, 1944
That's a splendid looking game, Donald.
Re: Italy, 1944
Funny you should write this Fred, because the speed of the Cromwells in the game might have been a game winner. I was able to spring various ambushes with Recce & infantry & then rush the Cromwells up to deal with them. In the BKC rules it goes 3 times as fast as a Churchill. It was the bad luck of losing both FAC & FAO in the first moves that cut off my air & artillery support: both vital to my plan.
So thanks for all the good information, canny comments & interest.
I don't really know much about WW2.......I'm not sure I had to write that.
donald
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- Grizzly Madam
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Re: Italy, 1944
I remember reading about the incident, they were astonished at the bullet marks a 20mm aa gun had left on it, so maintenance checked the serial number and found it was a training tank, but he refused as troop commander to let them swap it out.
He also commented on Comets, from their change over period, they took them out to a disabled panther and found the new gun (vickers 77mm (actually 76.2mm but not same ammo, hence different designation)) no better than the old 75mm cromwell gun.
He also commented on Comets, from their change over period, they took them out to a disabled panther and found the new gun (vickers 77mm (actually 76.2mm but not same ammo, hence different designation)) no better than the old 75mm cromwell gun.
Re: Italy, 1944
IIRC the 20mm round was embedded in the 'armourplate'. It's in Bill Bellamy's "Troop Leader" https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obit ... 82676.htmlFreddBloggs wrote: ↑Mon Jun 29, 2020 11:08 am I remember reading about the incident, they were astonished at the bullet marks a 20mm aa gun had left on it, so maintenance checked the serial number and found it was a training tank, but he refused as troop commander to let them swap it out.
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- Grizzly Madam
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Re: Italy, 1944
That's the one, could not remember if it was him or Steel Brownlie.
Re: Italy, 1944
Git
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Re: Italy, 1944
Life is a game.
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- Grizzly Madam
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Re: Italy, 1944
And I have lost the rule book, the dice are loaded and all my betting chips are in another dimension.