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altipueri

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Everything posted by altipueri

  1. Inn Fact (pun) you may find this of interest: http://www.daimler-fighting-vehicles.co.uk/DFV-File%20Part%20D006c-RAC-Yeomanary%20-%20Innes%20of%20Court.pdf
  2. Operation Windsor got under way I think.
  3. Oh well, at least this is giving me something to do whilst I slowly download the files to install version 4.03 Brigadier N W Duncan of 30th Armoured Brigade, 79th Armoured Division, watches the attack on Caen from beside his Humber scout car outside Beuville, 8 July 1944
  4. One previous owner, needs attention. Maultier near er, Avranches Bit like Warren Street really.
  5. Play CMx1 random battles PS - are you the Markshot that recommends 1830? and if so what is the best way to get it on a new machine? PPs my first return to CM forums for ages - I've just installed CMx1 games on a new PC and am revelling in nostalgia.
  6. Excellent, and it plays better on Windows 8.1 than 8.0 albeit with some jigging around tabbing trying to load twice etc. But still more fun for me than the CMx2 sims - even though I've just upgraded to v3.11 on CMBN.
  7. I think that is a good idea for increasing replay ability. I started to do something similar for myself with Command Ops where by just changing the value and location of some victory points I could have an almost new scenario with a different emphasis.
  8. Hmm, I never had log in probs or difficulty seeing threads that had been read and I find the black on white more searing on the eyes and I'm just about to buy a 30 year old car (a Morgan) so I guess that's that then.
  9. I've got the newer game (CMBN); it just isn't as much fun. I still loathe the new interface which I feel was crippled by trying to be RT and WEGO at the same time and by a feeble quick battle system. Over the years and a dozen or more PCs and laptops I've bought 3 copies of CMBO and two each of CMBB and CMAK. I think you have to be more of an enthusiast or sim specialist to play the newer game - but I've got too broad a range of game likes - switching eras and game systems. And I still visit the forum (don't like the new style do you Grandad?) for the sometimes interesting discussions and amusing rants that crop up.
  10. It's cheeky to charge for a product that can't run on Win 8 easily. Mine just about works on a Win 8 netbook (Asus T100). Alt - tabbing or going to the Fisher Price screen and back, but it seems a bit random.
  11. I think it is rubbish. I don't recall reading lots of people saying the old forum needed changing. I liked that link on an earlier post back to the old old site. Yes, CMBO still my game of choice on a Windows 8 netbook (Asus T100).
  12. Well done John, you commented on use of neotony by Womble before me. Frankly, I'm just refusing to grow up.
  13. I'm losing track of this but I am reading a biography of General Hackett who was commander of 4th Parachute Brigade. But if you are American try and get a copy of "Those Devils In Baggy Pants" by Ross S. Carter for a first hand view of the 82nd Airborne.
  14. One effect of HE, but a bit bigger, from 3AD site: The 3AD had begun a four-pronged attack on the city, which was heavily defended. Division armor were finally able to enter the city slowly after numerous concrete tank barriers were destroyed. With 3AD tanks fanning out, and 36th Infantry riflemen following, the Super Pershing reached an intersection and began to round a corner to its right. Unknown to its crew, a King Tiger had apparently been waiting in ambush at a distance of two blocks or roughly 600 yards away, and in the same direction that the Americans were turning into. At this distance, easily within its capability, the Tiger fired at the Super Pershing. But its infamous high-velocity 88mm shell, of the type that had destroyed so many American tanks and vehicles during the war, went high and was not even close. Gunner Cpl John "Jack" Irwin, only 18 years old, responded almost instantly with a round that struck the Tiger's huge angled glasis, or front plate. But the shot, a non-armor-piercing high explosive (HE) shell, had no effect. Ricocheting off the armor, it shot skyward and exploded harmlessly. The Super Pershing had been loaded with an HE only because Irwin had been expecting urban targets, such as buildings, personnel, and light anti-tank guns. "AP!", he shouted to his loader "Pete," which meant an armor-piercing shell would be next. Maduri and crew then felt a concussion or thud on the turret. It was never known if this shot came from the Tiger, or from some other anti-tank weapon. In any case, no serious damage was done - probably a lucky glancing impact. In the next instant, Irwin aimed and fired a second time, just as the royal monster was moving forward and raising up over a pile of rubble. The 90mm AP round penetrated the Tiger's underbelly, apparently striking the ammo well and resulting in a tremendous explosion that blew its turret loose. With near certainty, the entire crew was killed.
  15. Is there not a flaw in this line of reasoning?
  16. Here's another list, including the toggle rope ! http://www.1stairborne.com/webgear.html Oh, and you can buy a replica for 20 quid on the Soldier of Fortune website! (includes VAT!) As you can tell it's a quiet Sunday, but it is Remembrance Sunday.
  17. Of course, I could have googled it myself: "A toggle rope was part of the standard equipment of British commandos and the Parachute Regiment during World War II. It was 6 feet (1.8 m) long, and had a toggle at one end in a tightly fitting eye splice, with a larger eye at the other end. This enabled them to be fastened together to create an ersatz rope ladder, or to secure around a bundle for hauling, among other uses."
  18. If you go to a site called Arnhem Jim there's a picture of a para soldier's kit. Why would they carry a "toggle rope" each?
  19. None unless you want a touch screen. I'm tempted to buy a another new win 7 machine as a sort of legacy back up.
  20. I've three Win 8.1 laptop/notebooks. It works on one - an Asus T100. Also Civil War Generals 2 for those who like that. CMBB also works but not CMAK. Funny world. Also saw CMBO for sale on Good Old Games
  21. "During the Civil War, 24 percent of the 29,980 amputations performed by U.S. Army surgeons resulted in fatalities, a figure greatly exceeded during the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871), when fully 77 percent of the approximately 13,000 amputations performed by French Army surgeons resulted in death." (Cribbed from somewhere). I'm surprised the ACW survival rate was so high. Nowadays I think if you are alive when you reach the aid station there's a 90%+ chance you will live, hence there being so many multiple amputees from recent wars.
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