Tag Archives: usmc

1955 Mercury Montclair

Videos by me:

On 21OCT2023, a big pre-Halloween car show/USMC Reserve’s Toys-4-Tots drive/Trunk or Treat was held in the Old Town area of Pocatello, Idaho.

Here’s my video from the June 2023, SAC show:

21OCT2023, USMC Toys for Tots: WAR-TIME POWER WAGON, WITH MODERN DIESEL MOTOR

War-Time Power Wagon, with modern Diesel motor

Modern Diesel motor.

Modern steering wheel and steering column.

Video by me:

On 21OCT2023, a big pre-Halloween car show/USMC Reserve’s Toys-4-Tots drive/Trunk or Treat was held in the Old Town area of Pocatello, Idaho.

Here’s my video from the June 2023SAC show:

21OCT2023, USMC Toys for Tots:1933 DODGE LO-LID, “WHEN SEX WAS SAFE!”

1933 Dodge Lo-Lid, “When sex was safe!”

Video by me:

On 21OCT2023, a big pre-Halloween car show/USMC Reserve’s Toys-4-Tots drive/Trunk or Treat was held in the Old Town area of Pocatello, Idaho.

21OCT2023:FORD YELLOWSTONE HACK, DON’T MISS YOUR TRAIN!

Chevy pick-em-up Truck

On 21OCT2023, a big pre-Halloween car show/USMC Reserve’s Toys-4-Tots drive/Trunk or Treat was held in the Old Town area of Pocatello, Idaho.

Video by me:

 

Video (by me, oops, no audio) of another/different Chevy pick-em-up truck from the 10JUN2023 SAC show, in Pocatello:

21OCT2023: SQUARE-BODIES 4×4 RED & ORANGE

CORABELLE, REFUGEE FROM THE ‘BRITISH INVASION’

Corabelle, refugee from the ‘British Invasion’

Corabelle is owned by Jay Goold. He has been collecting Morris Minors since 1972. Jay bought Corabelle about three years ago, and he says she is the best Morris Minor he has ever owned. He named the car after his grandmother Corabelle Woods Neustel.

On 21OCT2023, a big pre-Halloween car show/USMC Reserve’s Toys-4-Tots drive/Trunk or Treat was held in the Old Town area of Pocatello, Idaho.

Click here for video of Corabelle from the 23SEP2023 car show: MORRIS MINOR BRITISH INVASION OF POCATELLO

Here is video (by me) of other refugees from the 1960s ‘British Invasion’, during the SAC show in Pocatello, 10JUN2023:

21OCT2023:PRE-HALLOWEEN POKY TOYS FOR TOTS CAR SHOW, BOO!

Saylor Creek: USMC & Idaho Air Guard invades, preps JTAC for ‘Near Peer’ fight! With China?

“This is a world-class range that is run very well. The units here in Idaho, along with the range, OCTC [Orchard Combat Training Center], and Mountain Home communities have taken care of us every time we’ve come up here. If we find ourselves in a jam, or need something or don’t know this procedure or that procedure, we get nothing but help here.”-Master Sergeant Daniel Haack, JTAC manager for 11th Marine Regiment, 1st MARDIV

U.S. Marine Corps photo by Corporal Dean Gurule, 17APR2023.

In April 2023, the U.S. Marine Corps launched operation (Exercise) Garnet Rattler, seizing the U.S. Air Force’s gunnery range known as Saylor Creek, in Southern Idaho.

USMC photo by Corporal Dean Gurule, 17APR2023.

The use of the word ‘garnet’ is appropriate because Idaho is officially known as The Gem State.  Exercise Garnet Rattler is about training Joint Tactical Air Controllers (JTAC): “Garnet Rattler’s main objective is to take entry level joint terminal attack controllers, forward air controllers, air officers and joint fires observers, and put them in a live-fire environment that has a lot of maneuver flexibility, as well as aviation employment, in order to train realistic scenarios for their entry level controls in the fleet.”-Master Sergeant Daniel Haack, JTAC manager for 11th Marine Regiment, 1st MARDIV

U.S. Marine Corps video report by Corporal Dean Gurule, 29APR2023, note the Idaho Air National Guard’s 124th Fighter Wing/190th Fighter Squadron A-10Cs in action, also, a Mountain Home Air Force Base (AFB) F-15E pilot admits it is all about “…the Air Force and Marines are starting look to the Pacific and preparations for the Near Peer fight…”:

The following USMC videos, recorded (between 10-29APR2023) by Corporal Dean Gurule and Lance Corporal Juan Torres, have been edited by me.

“Rotors comin’ in!”:

Mountain Home AFB F-15E Strike Eagle:

USMC photo by Lance Corporal Juan Torres, 26APR2023.

Machine guns & mortars:

Idaho National Guard photo by Staff Sergeant Joseph Morgan, 25APR2023.

Idaho Air National Guard’s 124th Fighter Wing/190th Fighter Squadron’s A-10C Thunderbolt-2 (remember, the ‘woke’ USAF has been trying to get rid of this awesome aircraft):

Saylor Creek: IDAHO’S TACP/JTACs TRAIN WITH INFANTRY WEAPONS!

Vehicle I-D: What happened to the super impressive E-F-V?

Somewhere off the coast of California, date not known.

The U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) had an impressive, and expensive, replacement for its outdated Cold War era Amphibious Assault Vehicles (AAV).  It demonstrated incredible abilities for speed, range and firepower, and then was suddenly canceled in favor of a British empire (BAE Systems) offering that is lacking in performance.

In the mid-1990s, General Dynamics set about to create what the USMC always wanted (officially since 1985), a true ‘kick-ass’ AAV, one that could not only match the M1 Abrams performance on land, but set new standards for performance in water.  They called it the Advanced AAV (AAAV).

On 12OCT1995, the official newspaper of USMC’s Camp Lejeune, The Globe, reported that testing at the U.S. Army’s Aberdeen Proving Grounds proved that the AAAV’s suspension was more than adequate: “We’ve been running them through every wicked kind of test we could devise. We want to see what breaks and what doesn’t.”-Colonel Jim Feigley 

Photo of prototype published in the July 1996 edition of Marine Corps Gazette.

Photo published in March 1997, showing two prototypes in the water.

In the January 1998 issue of Leatherneck, it was optimistically stated that the “triple-AVs…will begin reaching the fleet in 2004.”

Photo published in July 1999.

In November 2002, sensing resistance in the U.S. Congress to the AAAV/EFV, Daniel Goure, vice president of the Lexington Institute, warned “…in order to execute such operations effectively the Marine Corps will need such systems as the AAAV…  it is absolutely essential to have such systems in place before the need arises. Otherwise it will be far too late.” 

In this USMC photo (date not known) from Camp Pendleton, you can see that the EFV is still referred to as the AAAV.

High speed run on Camp Pendleton, California. USMC photo, date not known.

In 2003, the name was changed to Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle (EFV).  Even though each phase of development was successful, there were many delays (as many as 14 years worth), and costs only skyrocketed (estimated at $22.3-million per EFV, in 2007).

2003 promotional video about the EFV.  The EFV had hit water speeds of 25-knots, it was able to do this by hydroplaning.  To achieve hydroplaning, the roadwheels are raised and special skirts are used (among other tricks):

This photo, date not known, shows you how crazy fast the EFV/AAAV is on water.

Crazy fast!

Loading onto a High Speed Vessel Swift, date not known.

Testing on the U.S. Army’s Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia, date not known.

A land speed of 45-miles-per-hour could be obtained.

Testing on the U.S. Army’s Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia, date not known.

EFV testing in Del Mar Boat Base, Camp Pendleton, California. U.S. Navy photo by Journalist Second Class Zack Baddorf, 05DEC2005.

Shock testing the armor. USN/USMC photo, date and location unknown.

Ballistic protection can defeat rounds up to 14.5mm, or fragments from exploding 155mm artillery projectiles.

From a photo of a demonstration for the Secretary of the Navy, Camp Pendleton, California, 08MAY2006. USN photo by Journalist Chief Petty Officer Craig P. Strawser.

U.S. Secretary of the Navy, Donald C. Winter, checks out the EFV’s extended bow. USN photo by Journalist Chief Petty Officer Craig P. Strawser, 08MAY2006.

In 2007, the USMC reported that it was delaying production due to suspension reliability problems. Those problems were remedied, but also in 2007, a Congressional subcommittee required the addition of armor protection against ‘roadside bombs’ (IED).

EFV gets loaded aboard a hovercraft, on Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, 30OCT2009. U.S. Marine Corps photo by Staff Sergeant Danielle Bolton.

Random USMC video (by Staff Sergeant Sean McCollum) of EFV hovercraft/landing ship loading operations, 30OCT2009:

Emerging from the turret of the EFV. USMC photo by Gunnery Sergeant Bryce Piper, 30OCT2009.

In May 2010, USMC Colonel Keith Moore stated that the EFV could “generate never-before-realized operational tempo across warfighting functions” and that it is “the most capable infantry fighting vehicle that will exist in the U.S. inventory at the time it will get fielded. It is a very robust, survivable infantry fighting vehicle that has to meet the Marines’ unique requirements.”

By June 2010, the EFV was handed to the USMC for ‘real-world’ testing.

Notice the ‘skirt’ lifted to reveal a raised roadwheel. Camp Pendleton, California. USMC photo by Sergeant Marcy Sanchez, 12JUL2010.

However, then U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates had already made hints (before the the USMC began EFV testing) that he was going to cancel the project.  Another problem is that the U.S. Navy was considering new amphibious landing ‘rules’ which basically required zero military opposition from the enemy, of course rendering the need for a super amphibious tank unnecessary.

This is a video interview by California newspaper The Orange County Register (OCR), released in August 2010:

Not even five months after The OCR published the above video interview, in January 2011 it published an article announcing the cancelation of the successful kick-ass EFV!  The OCR article has some great ‘walk-around’ detail photos of the EFV.

Even after impressive USMC testing results, in January 2011 the DoD cancelled the EFV, and the 35th Commandant of the Marine Corps, General James F. Amos, supported the decision.

25JAN2011General Dynamics Makes Final Argument for Keeping EFV Alive)

The decision to cancel the EFV was blamed mainly on placating several taxpayer organization calling for an end to spending on long-running development programs, that included the F-35 Lightning-2 and V-22 Osprey.  Leadership within the Department of Defense seemed more intent on keeping the aircraft, thus sacrificing the EFV on the alter for concerned taxpayers.

It should be noted the the USMC eventually decided to get rid of its M1A1 Abrams units, as part of their Force Design 2030 reorganization, yet another reason not to have an AAV that could match the M1 in performance.

However, cancelling the EFV did not result in saving money for taxpayers as the rest of the EFV funding went to upgrading the aged AAV7s, which benefited United Kingdom based BAE Systems as BAE took control of the AAV7’s manufacturer United Defense, and on buying a new ‘AAV’ of much less capability, which also just happened to be created by the company BAE Systems. It is called the Amphibious Combat Vehicle (ACV).

Vehicle I-D: NO MORE AAV, SAY HELLO TO THE ACV, FINALLY?

2018: USMC AAV7 VIDEO-FEST

Vehicle I-D:

CANADA’S BRITISH EMPIRE M113, NOT YOUR UNCLE SAM’S M113

ULTIMATE GUN-TRUCK, 20MM VULCAN, why was it rejected?

Vehicle I-D: King of the Stallions stampedes Idaho!

At least 50 wild horses roam the Saylor Creek Herd Management Area. Photo via the BLM.

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is always complaining about the wild Mustangs that roam across Idaho, but this new King of the Stallions actually flies!

U.S. Marine Corps graphic by Corporal Lauren Salmon.

During the month of August 2022, the U.S. Marine Corps conducted the first ever live-fire ‘wargame’ for its new CH-53K King Stallion, over the Saylor Creek bombing/gunnery range in South-Central Idaho.

USMC photo by Corporal Adam Henke, 11AUG2022.

Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron (HMH) 461 had the honors, and launched out of the U.S. Air Force’s Mountain Home Air Force Base, in Southwestern Idaho.  HMH-461 in based in North Carolina, they chose Idaho to test their new mount, because Idaho is geographically and climatically different from North Carolina.

USMC photo by Corporal Adam Henke, 17AUG2022.

USMC video, by Corporal Adam Henke, HMH-461 gets their King Stallion acquainted with the High Desert terrain of Idaho, 08AUG2022:

The USMC, and Lockheed-Sikorsky, claim the new-build CH-53K is more powerful, can fly higher, can stay airborne longer, is safer and easier to maintain than the older CH-53E Super Stallion.

USMC Corporal Adam Henke video of heavy lift operation, 17AUG2022:

In my opinion, the King Stallion is different enough that it should be considered its own helicopter family, apart from the CH-53 lineage.

USMC Corporal Adam Henke video of GAU-21 .50-cal ‘door-gunner’ live-fire, 17AUG2022:

USMC music video, by Corporal Adam Henke, of the first ‘exercise’ of the King Stallion, 30AUG2022:

March, 2021: CH-53K KING STALLION UPDATE

Weapon I-D, 2021: DOOR GUNNER .50 CAL

Idaho, Saylor Creek Range: 4TH TIME IS THE CHARM, IDAHO ‘HAWGSMOKES’ THE COMPETITION, AGAIN!

Idaho, OCTC: IDAHO INVADED BY APACHES FROM ARIZONA & SINGAPORE?

Cold War to Ukraine Crisis: USAF SENDS 27 BLOCK-25 FALCONS TO THE BONEYARD!

Vehicle I-D:  SUKHOI-75, THE CHECKMATE, WILL THEY OR WON’T THEY?

JORDANIAN COBRAS الكوبرا الأردني, OR HOW TO REBUILD (and then sell) YOUR U.S. FUNDED AH-1S/F.

Idaho now premiere site for War-Fighter training! National Guard the new Quick Reaction Force!

August 2022:

More than 600 National Guard personnel deploy, again, from Idaho!

In 2022, National Guard combat units from California, Idaho, Iowa, North Carolina, Texas, Utah and Washington, assaulted the Orchard Combat Training Area (OCTC) in Southwestern Idaho.

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Master Sergeant Becky Vanshur, 26AUG2022.

Between July and August 2022, the Arizona Army National Guard and the Republic of Singapore Air Force joined forces to shoot-up the OCTC with their AH-64 Apaches.

In July 2022, Oregon Army National Guard’s 3rd Battalion, 116th Cavalry Regiment conducted light machine gun training on the OCTC. Video by Major W. Chris Clyne (you’ll notice a paddle being held up that reads OTA, the OTCT used to be known as the OTA [Orchard Training Area] about 15 to 20 years ago):

Idaho Army National Guard promotional video about multi-state war game Western Strike 2022:

TACTICAL TOILETS, June 2022:

CALIFORNIA, IOWA, NORTH CAROLINA, TEXAS, UTAH, WASHINGTON INVADE REBEL IDAHO!?

In this Utah Army National Guard video explainer, from 16JUN2022, it is revealed that National Guard combat units are now the new Quick Reaction Force (QRF) for the U.S. Army, required to deploy within 90 days of activation:

In May 2022, Idaho’s 116th Brigade Engineer Battalion trained for demolition and explosive breaching, Idaho Air National Guard video by Master Sergeant Becky Vanshur:

Idaho Army National Guard photo by Thomas Alvarez, 19MAY2022.

Also in May 2022, the Idaho 116th Cavalry Brigade Combat Team’s Cavalry Scouts took part in the usual annual training (what we old timers used to call Summer Camp).  The unit later deployed to The Middle East in support of Operation Spartan Shield.

Idaho Army National Guard photo by Thomas Alvarez, 11MAY2022.

Idaho Army National Guard photo by Thomas Alvarez, 11MAY2022.

Idaho deploys, again, June 2022: IDAHO, MONTANA, OREGON STUCK IN A DEPLOYMENT LOOP!

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Master Sergeant Becky Vanshur, 21APR2022.

In April 2022, U.S. Marines JTAC (Joint Terminal Attack Controller) invaded Orchard Combat Training Center (OCTC). It was part of wargame Garnet Rattler, and the OCTC was described as being a premier training site, along with Idaho’s aerial gunnery range called Saylor Creek.

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Master Sergeant Becky Vanshur, 28APR2022.

Idaho Army National Guard photo by Thomas Alvarez, 30MAR2022.

Towards the end of March 2022, Idaho Army National Guard 2-116th Combined Arms Battalion’s Bravo Company conducted live fire with their M1A2 Abrams, Golf Company (attached) provided the meals.  The 2-116th Combined Arms Battalion was preparing for deployment to The Middle East.

Idaho Army National Guard photo by Thomas Alvarez, 29MAR2022.

USA photo by Captain Kyle Abraham, 17MAR2022.

Also in March, the U.S. Army’s 1-229 Attack Battalion, 16th Combat Aviation Brigade (aka Tigersharks) sent their AH-64 Apache gunships (based on Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington) to shoot-up Orchard Combat Training Center.

U.S. Army Photo by Captain Kyle Abraham, 17MAR2022.

February 2022:

IDAHO’S GOWEN FIELD UNDER GAS ATTACK!

OCTC-MATES:

IDAHO SHOWS YOU HOW TO ENGINE SWAP A 1:1 SCALE M113

Idaho Artillery 2021: GETS ‘SMART’ ARTILLERY ROUNDS, REVEALS “UPCOMING MOBILIZATIONS”

OCTC 2021: IDAHO HOME TO FIRST EVER NATIONAL GUARD D-A-G-I-R!

OCTC 2019:

M1A2-V2-SEP ABRAMS IDAHO LIVE FIRE

April 2018: Idaho Air & Army National Guards once again recognized as ‘Top Guns’

June 2017: “NEAR PEER THREATS”, CODE FOR RUSSIA & CHINA AND THE COMING 3RD WORLD WAR? “We’re going to continue to ask the……..Army National Guard to continue to make those sacrifices…..”-General Robert B. Abrams

Vehicle I-D: USS America LHA-6, do they make a model kit of it?

USS America LHA-6 began sea trials in 2014.  LHA-6 is the lead ship of the new America class assault ships, replacing the older Tarawa class.  Do not confuse USS America LHA-6 with the scuttled aircraft carrier USS America CV-66.

22FEB2020, Laem Chabang Port, Thailand, Cobra Gold 2020.

USS America is the current home of the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit.

Video, fast roping on USS America, 18FEB2020:

Countermeasure Washdown System

Time lapse video of USS America ops, Philippine Sea, 10FEB2020:

Video,  birds-eye view of USS America, April 2016:

Time lapse silent video of launching:

Aircraft seen operating from USS America:

More info on USS America: Underway on USS America

Orange Hobby makes a 1:700 scale resin USS America LHA-6, U.S. suggested retail price $95.

VEHICLE I-D: USN’S NEW ROBOT GUN BOAT, OR CUSV

CVN-71