±Recent Visitors

Recent Visitors to Com-Central!

±User Info-big


Welcome Anonymous

Nickname
Password

Membership:
Latest: HighestAce
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 6648

People Online:
Members: 0
Visitors: 390
Total: 390
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Community Forums
02: Member Screenshots
03: Home
04: Home
05: Home
06: Home
07: Community Forums
08: Photo Gallery
09: Home
10: Photo Gallery
11: Photo Gallery
12: Downloads
13: Community Forums
14: Community Forums
15: Home
16: Home
17: Member Screenshots
18: Home
19: Home
20: Downloads
21: Member Screenshots
22: Community Forums
23: Member Screenshots
24: Community Forums
25: Community Forums
26: Home
27: Home
28: Home
29: Community Forums
30: Home
31: Community Forums
32: Home
33: Community Forums
34: Home
35: Community Forums
36: News
37: Photo Gallery
38: Home
39: Photo Gallery
40: Community Forums
41: Community Forums
42: Community Forums
43: Community Forums
44: Photo Gallery
45: Community Forums
46: Community Forums
47: Home
48: Home
49: Home
50: Home
51: Community Forums
52: Home
53: Community Forums
54: Home
55: News Archive
56: Home
57: Home
58: Home
59: Community Forums
60: Community Forums
61: Home
62: Home
63: Community Forums
64: Community Forums
65: Community Forums
66: Downloads
67: Community Forums
68: Community Forums
69: Community Forums
70: Community Forums
71: Downloads
72: Home
73: Photo Gallery
74: Photo Gallery
75: Home
76: Photo Gallery
77: Home
78: Home
79: Home
80: Home
81: Home
82: Home
83: Home
84: Home
85: News Archive
86: Photo Gallery
87: Home
88: Home
89: Community Forums
90: Community Forums
91: Photo Gallery
92: Home
93: Community Forums
94: Community Forums
95: Home
96: Home
97: Home
98: Photo Gallery
99: Community Forums
100: Home
101: Home
102: Community Forums
103: Community Forums
104: Community Forums
105: Home
106: Community Forums
107: Community Forums
108: Community Forums
109: Home
110: Community Forums
111: Community Forums
112: Member Screenshots
113: Community Forums
114: News Archive
115: Member Screenshots
116: Home
117: Community Forums
118: Community Forums
119: Community Forums
120: Home
121: Community Forums
122: Photo Gallery
123: Home
124: Community Forums
125: Community Forums
126: Community Forums
127: Community Forums
128: Photo Gallery
129: Home
130: Photo Gallery
131: Home
132: Home
133: Community Forums
134: Community Forums
135: Home
136: Home
137: Home
138: Home
139: Home
140: Home
141: Home
142: Community Forums
143: Community Forums
144: Community Forums
145: Community Forums
146: Community Forums
147: Photo Gallery
148: Home
149: Downloads
150: Home
151: Downloads
152: Community Forums
153: Community Forums
154: Home
155: Community Forums
156: Community Forums
157: Member Screenshots
158: Community Forums
159: Photo Gallery
160: Community Forums
161: Community Forums
162: Photo Gallery
163: Community Forums
164: Community Forums
165: Home
166: News Archive
167: Community Forums
168: Home
169: Community Forums
170: Community Forums
171: Community Forums
172: Community Forums
173: Home
174: Your Account
175: Member Screenshots
176: Home
177: Photo Gallery
178: Home
179: Community Forums
180: Community Forums
181: Community Forums
182: News Archive
183: Community Forums
184: Photo Gallery
185: Community Forums
186: Home
187: Community Forums
188: Home
189: Community Forums
190: Home
191: Community Forums
192: Community Forums
193: Community Forums
194: Community Forums
195: Photo Gallery
196: Home
197: Home
198: Home
199: Home
200: Home
201: Community Forums
202: Member Screenshots
203: Home
204: Home
205: Home
206: Home
207: Downloads
208: Home
209: Community Forums
210: Home
211: Home
212: News
213: Home
214: Home
215: Community Forums
216: Home
217: Home
218: Home
219: Home
220: Home
221: Home
222: Community Forums
223: Home
224: Community Forums
225: Home
226: Home
227: Home
228: Community Forums
229: Photo Gallery
230: Home
231: Community Forums
232: Home
233: Home
234: Home
235: Home
236: Home
237: Member Screenshots
238: Community Forums
239: News Archive
240: Community Forums
241: Home
242: Home
243: Member Screenshots
244: Community Forums
245: Community Forums
246: Community Forums
247: Community Forums
248: Photo Gallery
249: Home
250: Community Forums
251: Home
252: Home
253: Home
254: Home
255: Photo Gallery
256: Your Account
257: Home
258: Home
259: Home
260: Home
261: Home
262: Statistics
263: Community Forums
264: Statistics
265: Downloads
266: Community Forums
267: Member Screenshots
268: Member Screenshots
269: Home
270: Home
271: Home
272: Member Screenshots
273: Home
274: Home
275: Community Forums
276: News Archive
277: News Archive
278: Community Forums
279: Community Forums
280: Community Forums
281: Photo Gallery
282: Community Forums
283: Member Screenshots
284: Home
285: Home
286: Community Forums
287: Community Forums
288: Community Forums
289: Community Forums
290: Downloads
291: Downloads
292: Community Forums
293: Community Forums
294: Statistics
295: Community Forums
296: Community Forums
297: Member Screenshots
298: Member Screenshots
299: Home
300: Community Forums
301: Home
302: Community Forums
303: Downloads
304: Home
305: Home
306: Community Forums
307: Community Forums
308: Home
309: Member Screenshots
310: Community Forums
311: Home
312: Community Forums
313: Community Forums
314: Home
315: Photo Gallery
316: Community Forums
317: Community Forums
318: Home
319: Community Forums
320: Home
321: Community Forums
322: Community Forums
323: Member Screenshots
324: Home
325: Member Screenshots
326: Downloads
327: Community Forums
328: Member Screenshots
329: Community Forums
330: Member Screenshots
331: Home
332: Home
333: Community Forums
334: Home
335: Home
336: Community Forums
337: News Archive
338: Home
339: Community Forums
340: Home
341: Community Forums
342: Home
343: Community Forums
344: Community Forums
345: Community Forums
346: Community Forums
347: Downloads
348: Member Screenshots
349: Community Forums
350: Home
351: Community Forums
352: Community Forums
353: Home
354: Community Forums
355: Community Forums
356: Home
357: Member Screenshots
358: Photo Gallery
359: Home
360: Community Forums
361: Community Forums
362: Home
363: Community Forums
364: Home
365: Photo Gallery
366: Member Screenshots
367: Home
368: News Archive
369: Downloads
370: Photo Gallery
371: Community Forums
372: Home
373: Community Forums
374: Home
375: Member Screenshots
376: Community Forums
377: Photo Gallery
378: Home
379: Member Screenshots
380: Community Forums
381: Statistics
382: Downloads
383: Photo Gallery
384: Community Forums
385: Community Forums
386: Photo Gallery
387: Home
388: Home
389: Community Forums
390: Community Forums

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war
The AFV ASSOCIATION was formed in 1964 to support the thoughts and research of all those interested in Armored Fighting Vehicles and related topics, such as AFV drawings. The emphasis has always been on sharing information and communicating with other members of similar interests; e.g. German armor, Japanese AFVs, or whatever.
Go to page Previous  1, 2
Post new topic    Reply to topic    Printer Friendly Page     Forum Index ›  AFV News Discussion Board

View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
L.Delsing
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Feb 10, 2006
Posts: 960

PostPosted: Mon Sep 06, 2010 9:52 pm
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

There was also a lot of former Dutch Waffen SS serving in the Netherlands Indies after the war. Some veterans have a double set of medals, a German one from service on the Eastern front and a set of fighting the so called (in that time) ''peloppers'' in the Netherlands Indies. Once spoke to some who were at the Eastern front and then the jungles of Indonesia. Interesting stories and different times...
Back to top
View user's profile
Maple_Leaf_Eh
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 24, 2006
Posts: 517

PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 12:02 am
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

I had a look at the DLA map catalog for series L7014 TLM50 sheets of Vietnam. Most are editions 1,2 and 3. Considering the production effort, it looks like DMA issued the sheets on the last day of the month, running between 1963 and 1973. One sheet is 1976, and the remaining dates are in the '80's.

TLM50 sheets conform to the NATO specification MGRS grid reference with a 1000m grid and a two-letter 100,000m grid zone designator. What still needs clarification is what is the grid and projection?

Doug, when you look at the surround, what is the datum and projection?
Back to top
View user's profile
C_Sherman
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 24, 2006
Posts: 590

PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 12:21 am
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

- TrevorLarkum
- L.Delsing
In one of the museums there were Kar 98 rifles with waffen ambt markings which were supplied by the USSR and used by the Vietnamese in the war over there.
Regards,
Lesley


That's interesting - I remember being surprised when I read up on the large numbers of ex-Wehrmacht who served in Indo-china for the French.


Hi,

My dad has two of them on the wall at home. One is in fabulous condition (considering the Germany-USSR-North Vietnam-Ho Chi Minh Trail-Tay Ninh path it took) and was taken from a cache near Tay Ninh. The second is in worse condition, having apparently been used by the VC for some time. My Dad traded a modified M16 to a ROK Ranger buddy, who had obtained it when he divided the former owner by 40mm. Both came home in a footlocker (oh, how times have changed!) in 1970. Both still work, although the headspace is really iffy and one badly shows the effects of years of corrosive ammo.

Chuck

_________________
A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it
will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
-Herm Albright

Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc!
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
Doug_Kibbey
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 23, 2006
Posts: 4678
Location: The Great Satan
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 1:20 am
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

- Maple_Leaf_Eh
I had a look at the DLA map catalog for series L7014 TLM50 sheets of Vietnam. Most are editions 1,2 and 3. Considering the production effort, it looks like DMA issued the sheets on the last day of the month, running between 1963 and 1973. One sheet is 1976, and the remaining dates are in the '80's.

TLM50 sheets conform to the NATO specification MGRS grid reference with a 1000m grid and a two-letter 100,000m grid zone designator. What still needs clarification is what is the grid and projection?

Doug, when you look at the surround, what is the datum and projection?


The 1:250,000 JOG is a transverse mercator and I only have the sheets cobbled together from the sixteenth-to-seventh parallels. I have a full border copied and pasted but no datum is given, only projection. Year is 1972.

I only have sheets for our AO in MRI (most of it) in 1:50,000 and have only assembled a fifteen minute "box" centered just below Hue because on 8.5x11" sheets, that's all that's accommodated by the biggest frame that is economical to buy "off the rack". I have 81 similar sheets in jpg format for the region, but not the margins like for the JOG map.

Likewise, I have a much smaller area for MRIII in 1:100,000, about 25km square and no margin data. Just an immediate AO from about Tay Ninh east to Bien Hoa. Much less complete than the "I"Corps maps.

Both of the above are from scans sent me by sources that prefer not to be identified. Would but that I had the originals, but "I" corps in 50K would be enough to paper two walls with. Rolling Eyes

Thankfully, there is sufficient data on some sheets that I can find coordinates or extrapolate to approximate areas from sheet-to-sheet. I have only printed out those areas most important to me on five framed maps. Everything else I resign myself to viewing electronically (which I can at least magnify as the scans are of good quality).
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website Photo Gallery
bsmart
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 23, 2006
Posts: 2523
Location: Central Maryland
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 9:54 am
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

- TrevorLarkum
- L.Delsing
In one of the museums there were Kar 98 rifles with waffen ambt markings which were supplied by the USSR and used by the Vietnamese in the war over there.
Regards,
Lesley


That's interesting - I remember being surprised when I read up on the large numbers of ex-Wehrmacht who served in Indo-china for the French.


And don't forget the Panther tanks that were used there also Rolling Eyes Although I am sure that there were a fair number of ex Wehrmact and even some ex Waffen SS who fought in indochina I believe the numbers and role have been overstated in several popular 'histories'. Weapons yeas, they show up on second and third hand markets for years but if you believe some of the books that came out there were entire SS battalions employed in Indochina and they would have won the war if it hadn't been for the incompetency of the French high command

_________________
Bob Smart ([email protected])
Back to top
View user's profile Send e-mail
TrevorLarkum
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Sep 16, 2007
Posts: 1596
Location: Northampton, England
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 8:48 pm
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

- bsmart

And don't forget the Panther tanks that were used there also :roll: Although I am sure that there were a fair number of ex Wehrmact and even some ex Waffen SS who fought in indochina I believe the numbers and role have been overstated in several popular 'histories'. Weapons yeas, they show up on second and third hand markets for years but if you believe some of the books that came out there were entire SS battalions employed in Indochina and they would have won the war if it hadn't been for the incompetency of the French high command


Understood, but the book I was reading was Martin Windrow's epic (700 page) 'The Last Valley' about Dien Bien Phu. On page 198 he writes:

"Legion infantry had a reputation as slightly ponderous but rock-solid troops: ... The belief that their ranks were largely filled with German ex-Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS veterans recruited straight from French prison camps with few questions asked lent them a sinister glamour in the eyes of journalists. This legend had been more credible in 1945-50, but by 1953 [just before Dien Bien Phu] the majority of the original post-war enlistees had departed after serving their five-year contracts, and it was only among senior NCOs that Wehrmacht veterans were found in any concentrated numbers - though these very capable soldiers certainly underpinned the overall quality of many units. Perhaps 50 per cent of the legionnaires in Indochina were still
Germans, but their average age was only 20-23, and Legion commanders often lamented the lack of military experience, training, and even of physical fitness among the later intakes.
"The remainder were of dozens of other nationalities, the Legion tried to limit the proportion of Frenchmen in any unit to perhaps 10 per cent..."

I highly recommend the book, and to anyone who doesn't know the story of Dien Bien Phu it's a heroic, exciting but ultimately tragic tale. The highlight from our point of view would of course be the unique event of M24 'Bison' tanks being flown in to the airstrip and being assembled by hand resulting in the appearance of a significant tank force in the middle of nowhere. The low point being the eventual surrender of the majority of the French force and the withdrawal of part of the garrison all the way back to the border on foot, and losing the majority en route.



Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...n_Bien_Phu

A number of the Chaffees are still there, left in situ.

_________________
Trevor

Dr Trevor Larkum
Preserved Tanks: PreservedTanks.com
Armour Archive: ArmourArchive.co.uk
EVs
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website
Doug_Kibbey
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 23, 2006
Posts: 4678
Location: The Great Satan
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 8:59 pm
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

- TrevorLarkum

"Perhaps 50 per cent of the legionnaires in Indochina were still
Germans, but their average age was only 20-23, and Legion commanders often lamented the lack of military experience, training, and even of physical fitness among the later intakes."


I'm guessing employment opportunities back in the fatherland were still not all that encouraging 8-9 years post-war.
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website Photo Gallery
TrevorLarkum
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Sep 16, 2007
Posts: 1596
Location: Northampton, England
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 9:12 pm
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

Exactly my thought. Of course many of the original intakes would have become soldiers straight from school, with no trade to fall back on. Soldiering was all they knew.

_________________
Trevor

Dr Trevor Larkum
Preserved Tanks: PreservedTanks.com
Armour Archive: ArmourArchive.co.uk
EVs
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website
Dennis_Smith
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Mar 17, 2006
Posts: 192

PostPosted: Wed Dec 18, 2013 6:49 pm
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

Sorry to bring back such an old thread, but I saw this book on Amazon and it reminded me of this thread.

It explains the map grid system in use during the Vietnam war. The book includes a number of 1:50,000 maps of Vietnam and directions on where to acquire others.

Where We Were in Vietnam

I linked to the Kindle version because it has the best "Look Inside" preview. Hardcover book version is also available.
Back to top
View user's profile
Roy_A_Lingle
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 24, 2006
Posts: 1997
Location: El Paso & Ft Bliss, Texas
PostPosted: Wed Jan 08, 2014 9:00 pm
Post subject: Re: OT - Grid system in use during Vietnam war

Hi Folks!

- TrevorLarkum
- L.Delsing
In one of the museums there were Kar 98 rifles with waffen ambt markings which were supplied by the USSR and used by the Vietnamese in the war over there.
Regards,
Lesley


That's interesting - I remember being surprised when I read up on the large numbers of ex-Wehrmacht who served in Indo-china for the French.


I remember reading something a very long time ago about the ex-Wehrmacht in French service. They were WWII POWs of the French and where drafted into the French Army. It was a form of get out of jail option.

Sgt Scouts out!

_________________
"You can never have too much reconnaissance."
General G.S. Patton Jr.
Back to top
View user's profile Send e-mail
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic    Reply to topic    Printer Friendly Page    Forum Index ›  AFV News Discussion Board
Page 2 of 2
All times are GMT - 6 Hours
Go to page Previous  1, 2



Jump to:  


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You cannot download files in this forum