That's what I was thinking as well. I'm thinking Korean also. Will check with my DIL she knows Korean, Japanese, and some Mongolian dialects.I believe those are Taiwanese soldiers unless someone knows for sure? I had to guess based on the characters of the language posted.
They can, if they wanted. (the edge of it anyway).If it is Taiwan, maybe they can hit mainland Chiiiina......
Boy, the sound of that shell whistling off into the great blue yonder... I can't imagine how terrifying that sound would be on the receiving end.
They are kept in bunkers with tracks that go back in granite rock. A large nuke would struggle to get them in the retracted position.Sadly the chicoms will probably never hear it. Fixed position stuff like that gun is going to get a heavy rocket or two on the opening shots of the Taiwan invasion.
Big ones are.. slow to loadseems to be really slow to load and fire. Maybe just for demonstration purposes, or are these big ones that slow to load?
1 round per minute (maximum) |
You don't have to take the guns out, just remove the ability to pull them out to operate. When the dust clears you can come back to dig them out and use them yourself...They are kept in bunkers with tracks that go back in granite rock. A large nuke would struggle to get them in the retracted position.
In Korea in the late 90's we routinly used Powder for our 155's from 1944. Shot just fine...weird smell. I also blew 25lb shape charges from 1943. Worked perfectly, but the carrying strap had disintigrated.Wonder how old that ammo is they are shooting? I can’t imagine it is being made anymore?