Okay, I'm going to try and not come across as a dickhead...but I don't understand why the fact of EOD using the Barrett and the practice of shooting rounds is still under debate I am telling you, from a real-world, operational, first hand viewpoint, that it can and does happen.
I had EOD guys in my Sniper School class in '97. I've seen them use the Barrett downrange, as well.
They're also valuable for document recovery from safes and breaching large metal doors.
Most military EOD teams don't have these. Most likely they're at the EOD company-level and are brought out only when needed as EOD never seems to give a rat's ass about the guys out there on the cordon.
My platoon had to wait four hours one night when we found a cache of 306 assorted artillery rounds for EOD to make three trips with a tiny trailer instead of bringing out their one big trailer. Go figure.
That's a technique. Generally you wouldn't want to do that with a device like that. At least, I never saw EOD do it. I can email my buddy that became an EOD platoon leader if you really want to know.
But rounds are not loaded with Comp B and C-4. TNT, White Phosphorus, Smoke, Concrete, all different kinds of things. Propellant. Primers. Fuzes. There are a lot of parts to a round that will detonate from a bullet impacting.
This is the primary time that EOD uses the technique of shooting rounds. Rounds that have been armed and not detonated on impact, that is.
Originally posted by jester
Originally posted by jester
Originally posted by jester
My platoon had to wait four hours one night when we found a cache of 306 assorted artillery rounds for EOD to make three trips with a tiny trailer instead of bringing out their one big trailer. Go figure.
Originally posted by jester
Originally posted by jester
Originally posted by jester
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