Sergei Posted June 19, 2007 Share Posted June 19, 2007 Originally posted by Nidan1: Don't laugh...you could be absolutely right, maybe the Russians learned from Afghanistan...change the tracer color on all exported munitions to mitigate confusion on any future battlefield. Do they also supply Chechen rebels with red tracer ammunition? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
unsobill Posted June 19, 2007 Share Posted June 19, 2007 Originally posted by c3k: Hmmm, Jippo's experience may be a cause for concern. Since it seems that all his actual "Russian tracers are red" statements are based on being a FINN. I postulate the following: real Soviet/Russian/CIS forces use GREEN tracers. The factories which supply export items to, oh, say Finland, are under strict guidelines to CHANGE the color of the tracers. This is obviously needed since any future Russo-Finn war would be confusing because they use similar weapons. Brilliant! That's how you can tell a Russion T-72 from a Finnish T-72 in combat conditions. I have solved the conundrum. Carry on. Ken yea i was confused first as well thinking what "real" russian battalion would use red tracers until i've seen flag on the tank of his screens - i guess he also represent russian side along finnish on these forums, due the fact most of "average" americans consider everything that cold and snowy as "Russia". 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChrisND Posted June 19, 2007 Share Posted June 19, 2007 Originally posted by unsobill: </font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by c3k: Hmmm, Jippo's experience may be a cause for concern. Since it seems that all his actual "Russian tracers are red" statements are based on being a FINN. I postulate the following: real Soviet/Russian/CIS forces use GREEN tracers. The factories which supply export items to, oh, say Finland, are under strict guidelines to CHANGE the color of the tracers. This is obviously needed since any future Russo-Finn war would be confusing because they use similar weapons. Brilliant! That's how you can tell a Russion T-72 from a Finnish T-72 in combat conditions. I have solved the conundrum. Carry on. Ken yea i was confused first as well thinking what "real" russian battalion would use red tracers until i've seen flag on the tank of his screens - i guess he also represent russian side along finnish on these forums, due the fact most of "average" americans consider everything that cold and snowy as "Russia". </font>No That's Denver. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
unsobill Posted June 19, 2007 Share Posted June 19, 2007 Originally posted by Normal Dude: </font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by unsobill: </font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by c3k: Hmmm, Jippo's experience may be a cause for concern. Since it seems that all his actual "Russian tracers are red" statements are based on being a FINN. I postulate the following: real Soviet/Russian/CIS forces use GREEN tracers. The factories which supply export items to, oh, say Finland, are under strict guidelines to CHANGE the color of the tracers. This is obviously needed since any future Russo-Finn war would be confusing because they use similar weapons. Brilliant! That's how you can tell a Russion T-72 from a Finnish T-72 in combat conditions. I have solved the conundrum. Carry on. Ken yea i was confused first as well thinking what "real" russian battalion would use red tracers until i've seen flag on the tank of his screens - i guess he also represent russian side along finnish on these forums, due the fact most of "average" americans consider everything that cold and snowy as "Russia". </font> 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jippo Posted June 20, 2007 Share Posted June 20, 2007 Originally posted by unsobill: yea i was confused first as well thinking what "real" russian battalion would use red tracers until i've seen flag on the tank of his screens.Sure they would change the color as the SU industrial system insisted on using the same components on everything they produce from helicopters to tanks (Mi-8 has some same instruments as T-72)! I really don't think they would bother about that kind of things with the tiny FDF order. i guess he also represent russian side along finnish on these forums, due the fact most of "average" americans consider everything that cold and snowy as "Russia". Sure, not a problem. AK vs AR fight anyone??? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jippo Posted June 20, 2007 Share Posted June 20, 2007 Couple of related videos: http://youtube.com/watch?v=qK6OP8I_VsE&mode=related&search= It seems that the tracers don't change color when crossing a border. I think the lesson here was not to trust tracer color judging who's your enemy or not. Remember: friendly fire isn't. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
unsobill Posted June 20, 2007 Share Posted June 20, 2007 jippohere is wiki on tracers - it has some facts regardless of what color of tracers you've seen in Finland or on youtube. i'm out of this thread before i lose patience ;D 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jippo Posted June 20, 2007 Share Posted June 20, 2007 So I should trust wikipedia instead of my own eyes. Btw. Did you notice that wiki-page you gave has links Degtyaryov plant promotional videos where they shoot (guess what) tracers. Actually second of my videos is from the same shooting as their advertisements. http://youtube.com/watch?v=8imIgaFTfLI [ June 20, 2007, 01:22 AM: Message edited by: Jippo ] 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flanker15 Posted June 20, 2007 Share Posted June 20, 2007 Hello I'm back, I did some snooping on all those youtube sites and found all of the Russian MGs use red while the Chinese MGs are green (not that there are many videos of them)! Here's some guys firing at a range in china they appear to be using the green tracers. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nidan1 Posted June 20, 2007 Share Posted June 20, 2007 Originally posted by Sergei: </font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Nidan1: Don't laugh...you could be absolutely right, maybe the Russians learned from Afghanistan...change the tracer color on all exported munitions to mitigate confusion on any future battlefield. Do they also supply Chechen rebels with red tracer ammunition? </font> 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sergei Posted June 20, 2007 Share Posted June 20, 2007 Originally posted by Nidan1: </font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Sergei: </font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Nidan1: Don't laugh...you could be absolutely right, maybe the Russians learned from Afghanistan...change the tracer color on all exported munitions to mitigate confusion on any future battlefield. Do they also supply Chechen rebels with red tracer ammunition? </font> 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jippo Posted June 21, 2007 Share Posted June 21, 2007 By the way, do you really think it makes a difference if you & your opponent use the same or different tracer color? I mean that although it may ease the situation a little bit when deciding what to do, but you can't base any judgement on that thing alone. You should always be aware of who is the enemy by some other means not just tracer color alone. That means visual ID on the most cases, and in most others somebody else is already shooting at you so it is ok to shoot back. So in which way does the difference in tracer color help to make identification? I'f you are going to shoot the first round you must ID the target, if the target is already shooting at you he's the enemy. If two other parties are fighting with each other, then you should be already having a pretty good idea who's who just by looking at their respective locations. On top of that there shouldn't be that many tracers flying in normal infantry combat anyways, at least not in this part of the world there isn't. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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