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SPEMack618 01-17-2012 04:06 PM

Yeah, but a SAC E-nothing would be wearing a fatigue cap, an OD ball cap, a squadron ball cap, or one of those horrendous colored flight line ball caps.

AdAstra2009 01-17-2012 05:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SPEMack618 (Post 33905)
Yeah, but a SAC E-nothing would be wearing a fatigue cap, an OD ball cap, a squadron ball cap, or one of those horrendous colored flight line ball caps.

I haven't read anything that says that the SAC beret was a rank related item.

SPEMack618 01-17-2012 08:26 PM

Yeah, but it was SAC Security exclusive.

Generally, Sky Cops don't drive trucks in the Air Force. Truck drivers do that.

AdAstra2009 01-17-2012 09:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SPEMack618 (Post 33911)
Yeah, but it was SAC Security exclusive.

Generally, Sky Cops don't drive trucks in the Air Force. Truck drivers do that.

Is there even a truck driver mos in the Air Force.

SPEMack618 01-17-2012 10:15 PM

I know there is a heavy equipment operator job code.

Jcordell 01-20-2012 02:57 PM

Well better late than never. My father was a SAC sky cop back in the mid sixties (63-66). He wore a blue beret here in the states. He was issued a Smith & Wesson Model 15 4" and at first carried an M2 carbine. They were the first branch to get AR-15 rifles. He does not recall blue paint on the furniture.

When he was stationed at Bien Hoa Air Force Base (South Vietnam) in 65 he carried a Winchester 1897 "Trench Gun", a Smith & Wesson Model 15 snubbie in a shoulder holster (yes he was issued a snub-nosed revolver in a combat zone gents) and a 1911A1 on his belt. His last couple of months in Vietnam the Air Force took away the shotgun and issued him an M16. He continued to carry the Model 15 and the 1911A1. In Vietnam he either wore a steel pot or a style of fatigue cap known as a Ridgeway.

The lieutenant in charge of his ......... well I was Army so I don't know what his immediate unit would have been. I would call it a platoon.....carried an M2 carbine and a 4" S&W Model 15 when he was in Vietnam. My father said that things were a little looser in the early days, but by the time he rotated back to the states early in 66 they were tightening up and (at least for the Air Force sky cops) the M16 rifle was becoming commonplace and the hodgepodge of firearms was being reduced.

SPEMack618 01-21-2012 03:16 PM

Checkman, I think it would be called a Flight.

That's cool. When my Dad in SEA, from '73-75, he carried a hodgepodge as well.

A Model 15, an M-1911A1, an Ithaca 37, and an XM-117.

The Wierd It 01-24-2012 03:07 PM

OK, I'm starting to get this reaction as a result of people I RP with. If you're told to stick to weapons from 1995 or earlier that means you're not allowed a 2006 vintage LWRC M6A2, or a 1999 SAR-21, or a 2003 S&W500.

Excalibur 01-24-2012 07:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The Wierd It (Post 34019)
OK, I'm starting to get this reaction as a result of people I RP with. If you're told to stick to weapons from 1995 or earlier that means you're not allowed a 2006 vintage LWRC M6A2, or a 1999 SAR-21, or a 2003 S&W500.

People somethings have no imagination when it comes to RPs. Hell, I'd get creative with certain eras that I am stuck with. Just because I can't use more modern guns, doesn't mean I get nothing to work with.

So what kind of RP are you doing?

The Wierd It 01-24-2012 10:51 PM

We were doing a rehash of Neon Genesis Evangelion with our own characters.


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