±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: 633
Total: 633
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Community Forums
02: Community Forums
03: Downloads
04: Community Forums
05: Home
06: Community Forums
07: Member Screenshots
08: Member Screenshots
09: Community Forums
10: Member Screenshots
11: Supporters
12: Community Forums
13: Community Forums
14: Home
15: Photo Gallery
16: Community Forums
17: Community Forums
18: Community Forums
19: Member Screenshots
20: Community Forums
21: Community Forums
22: Home
23: Community Forums
24: Community Forums
25: Community Forums
26: Community Forums
27: Community Forums
28: Community Forums
29: Community Forums
30: Community Forums
31: Community Forums
32: Community Forums
33: Community Forums
34: Community Forums
35: Community Forums
36: Community Forums
37: Community Forums
38: Community Forums
39: Community Forums
40: Downloads
41: Photo Gallery
42: Photo Gallery
43: Home
44: Home
45: Community Forums
46: Downloads
47: Community Forums
48: Community Forums
49: Community Forums
50: Home
51: Community Forums
52: Community Forums
53: News Archive
54: News Archive
55: News Archive
56: Photo Gallery
57: Community Forums
58: Home
59: Photo Gallery
60: Community Forums
61: Home
62: Community Forums
63: Community Forums
64: Member Screenshots
65: Home
66: Home
67: News
68: Community Forums
69: Community Forums
70: Community Forums
71: Downloads
72: Home
73: Photo Gallery
74: Photo Gallery
75: Photo Gallery
76: Member Screenshots
77: Community Forums
78: Statistics
79: Community Forums
80: Member Screenshots
81: Downloads
82: Home
83: Community Forums
84: Home
85: Home
86: Photo Gallery
87: Search
88: Community Forums
89: Home
90: Photo Gallery
91: Photo Gallery
92: Member Screenshots
93: Community Forums
94: Photo Gallery
95: Community Forums
96: Community Forums
97: News Archive
98: Home
99: News
100: Community Forums
101: Home
102: Photo Gallery
103: Community Forums
104: Community Forums
105: Home
106: Home
107: Community Forums
108: Community Forums
109: Photo Gallery
110: Community Forums
111: Home
112: Home
113: Home
114: Community Forums
115: Home
116: Community Forums
117: Community Forums
118: Home
119: Community Forums
120: Community Forums
121: Downloads
122: Community Forums
123: Home
124: Member Screenshots
125: Member Screenshots
126: Photo Gallery
127: Member Screenshots
128: Photo Gallery
129: Home
130: Home
131: Member Screenshots
132: Home
133: Community Forums
134: Photo Gallery
135: Photo Gallery
136: Home
137: Community Forums
138: Community Forums
139: Community Forums
140: Home
141: Home
142: Home
143: Home
144: Home
145: Community Forums
146: News Archive
147: Photo Gallery
148: Home
149: Member Screenshots
150: Community Forums
151: Community Forums
152: Community Forums
153: Home
154: Community Forums
155: Photo Gallery
156: Photo Gallery
157: Home
158: Photo Gallery
159: Home
160: Photo Gallery
161: Home
162: Community Forums
163: Community Forums
164: Community Forums
165: Member Screenshots
166: Member Screenshots
167: Home
168: Downloads
169: Community Forums
170: Member Screenshots
171: Member Screenshots
172: Photo Gallery
173: Community Forums
174: Home
175: Community Forums
176: Community Forums
177: Community Forums
178: Community Forums
179: Community Forums
180: Photo Gallery
181: Home
182: Photo Gallery
183: Home
184: Community Forums
185: Community Forums
186: Community Forums
187: Home
188: Your Account
189: Community Forums
190: Home
191: Member Screenshots
192: Community Forums
193: Home
194: Community Forums
195: Community Forums
196: Photo Gallery
197: Home
198: Community Forums
199: Community Forums
200: Community Forums
201: Photo Gallery
202: Photo Gallery
203: Community Forums
204: Community Forums
205: Home
206: Photo Gallery
207: Home
208: Home
209: Home
210: Community Forums
211: Home
212: Home
213: Home
214: Community Forums
215: Photo Gallery
216: Community Forums
217: Home
218: Photo Gallery
219: Home
220: Home
221: Community Forums
222: Community Forums
223: Community Forums
224: Photo Gallery
225: Home
226: Community Forums
227: Community Forums
228: Community Forums
229: Community Forums
230: Photo Gallery
231: Member Screenshots
232: Photo Gallery
233: Community Forums
234: Community Forums
235: Community Forums
236: Community Forums
237: Home
238: Member Screenshots
239: Community Forums
240: Photo Gallery
241: Member Screenshots
242: Home
243: Home
244: Home
245: Community Forums
246: Photo Gallery
247: Home
248: Home
249: Photo Gallery
250: Home
251: Community Forums
252: Home
253: Community Forums
254: Community Forums
255: Community Forums
256: Home
257: Community Forums
258: Community Forums
259: Community Forums
260: Home
261: Community Forums
262: Community Forums
263: Home
264: Home
265: Member Screenshots
266: Community Forums
267: Home
268: Community Forums
269: Home
270: Member Screenshots
271: Community Forums
272: Home
273: Photo Gallery
274: Member Screenshots
275: Community Forums
276: Community Forums
277: Photo Gallery
278: Community Forums
279: Community Forums
280: Community Forums
281: Photo Gallery
282: Home
283: Downloads
284: Community Forums
285: Home
286: Community Forums
287: Community Forums
288: Community Forums
289: Home
290: Photo Gallery
291: Home
292: Community Forums
293: Community Forums
294: Member Screenshots
295: Downloads
296: Community Forums
297: Home
298: Photo Gallery
299: Community Forums
300: Photo Gallery
301: Community Forums
302: Member Screenshots
303: Community Forums
304: Community Forums
305: Member Screenshots
306: Community Forums
307: Community Forums
308: Community Forums
309: Member Screenshots
310: Community Forums
311: Member Screenshots
312: Community Forums
313: News
314: News Archive
315: Member Screenshots
316: Photo Gallery
317: Member Screenshots
318: Community Forums
319: Home
320: Community Forums
321: Home
322: Photo Gallery
323: Home
324: Community Forums
325: Community Forums
326: Community Forums
327: Home
328: Photo Gallery
329: Community Forums
330: Community Forums
331: Photo Gallery
332: Community Forums
333: Member Screenshots
334: Community Forums
335: Your Account
336: News
337: Community Forums
338: Community Forums
339: Community Forums
340: Community Forums
341: Community Forums
342: Community Forums
343: Home
344: Photo Gallery
345: Home
346: Community Forums
347: Home
348: Home
349: Community Forums
350: Home
351: Downloads
352: Member Screenshots
353: Community Forums
354: Community Forums
355: Community Forums
356: Community Forums
357: Community Forums
358: Photo Gallery
359: Community Forums
360: Community Forums
361: Photo Gallery
362: Home
363: Downloads
364: Community Forums
365: Community Forums
366: Member Screenshots
367: Photo Gallery
368: Photo Gallery
369: Home
370: Home
371: Community Forums
372: Home
373: Home
374: Community Forums
375: Home
376: Community Forums
377: Home
378: Photo Gallery
379: Community Forums
380: Community Forums
381: Home
382: Home
383: Photo Gallery
384: Community Forums
385: Community Forums
386: Home
387: Home
388: Community Forums
389: Community Forums
390: Home
391: Community Forums
392: Community Forums
393: Community Forums
394: Home
395: Community Forums
396: Photo Gallery
397: Home
398: Photo Gallery
399: Statistics
400: Community Forums
401: Photo Gallery
402: Community Forums
403: Member Screenshots
404: Home
405: Community Forums
406: Community Forums
407: Community Forums
408: Home
409: Community Forums
410: Member Screenshots
411: Community Forums
412: Home
413: Home
414: Community Forums
415: Member Screenshots
416: Photo Gallery
417: Home
418: Community Forums
419: Photo Gallery
420: Home
421: Member Screenshots
422: Community Forums
423: Community Forums
424: Home
425: Community Forums
426: Home
427: Home
428: Community Forums
429: Community Forums
430: Community Forums
431: Home
432: Community Forums
433: Home
434: Member Screenshots
435: Community Forums
436: Community Forums
437: Community Forums
438: Community Forums
439: Community Forums
440: News Archive
441: Community Forums
442: Community Forums
443: Community Forums
444: Home
445: Community Forums
446: Community Forums
447: Member Screenshots
448: Community Forums
449: Community Forums
450: Statistics
451: Community Forums
452: Community Forums
453: Photo Gallery
454: Home
455: Community Forums
456: Community Forums
457: Community Forums
458: Community Forums
459: Member Screenshots
460: Community Forums
461: Community Forums
462: Home
463: Member Screenshots
464: Community Forums
465: Home
466: Photo Gallery
467: Downloads
468: Community Forums
469: Community Forums
470: Home
471: Community Forums
472: Downloads
473: Home
474: Home
475: News
476: Community Forums
477: Community Forums
478: Community Forums
479: Community Forums
480: Downloads
481: Community Forums
482: Community Forums
483: Downloads
484: Community Forums
485: Community Forums
486: Community Forums
487: Community Forums
488: Community Forums
489: Community Forums
490: Photo Gallery
491: Community Forums
492: Photo Gallery
493: Member Screenshots
494: Statistics
495: Community Forums
496: Community Forums
497: Home
498: Home
499: Community Forums
500: Community Forums
501: Statistics
502: Community Forums
503: Home
504: Community Forums
505: Community Forums
506: Community Forums
507: Community Forums
508: Community Forums
509: Community Forums
510: Photo Gallery
511: Community Forums
512: Community Forums
513: Photo Gallery
514: Community Forums
515: Home
516: Photo Gallery
517: Home
518: Community Forums
519: Member Screenshots
520: Community Forums
521: Community Forums
522: Community Forums
523: Member Screenshots
524: Community Forums
525: Community Forums
526: Home
527: Member Screenshots
528: News
529: Photo Gallery
530: Community Forums
531: Community Forums
532: Photo Gallery
533: Community Forums
534: Community Forums
535: Photo Gallery
536: Community Forums
537: Community Forums
538: Community Forums
539: Photo Gallery
540: Member Screenshots
541: Home
542: Community Forums
543: Community Forums
544: Photo Gallery
545: Home
546: Community Forums
547: Member Screenshots
548: Community Forums
549: Community Forums
550: Community Forums
551: Home
552: Community Forums
553: Home
554: Community Forums
555: Photo Gallery
556: Community Forums
557: Member Screenshots
558: Community Forums
559: Community Forums
560: Community Forums
561: Home
562: Home
563: Home
564: Community Forums
565: Member Screenshots
566: Member Screenshots
567: Community Forums
568: Community Forums
569: Community Forums
570: Community Forums
571: Community Forums
572: Community Forums
573: Home
574: Home
575: Community Forums
576: Community Forums
577: Community Forums
578: Community Forums
579: Member Screenshots
580: Community Forums
581: Community Forums
582: Downloads
583: Home
584: Home
585: Community Forums
586: Home
587: Downloads
588: Home
589: Photo Gallery
590: Photo Gallery
591: Downloads
592: Community Forums
593: Downloads
594: Home
595: Home
596: Home
597: Community Forums
598: Home
599: Photo Gallery
600: Downloads
601: Photo Gallery
602: Community Forums
603: Downloads
604: Community Forums
605: Community Forums
606: Community Forums
607: Community Forums
608: Community Forums
609: Community Forums
610: Community Forums
611: Community Forums
612: Community Forums
613: Community Forums
614: Member Screenshots
615: Downloads
616: Home
617: Community Forums
618: Downloads
619: Community Forums
620: Photo Gallery
621: Home
622: Photo Gallery
623: Community Forums
624: Community Forums
625: Photo Gallery
626: Community Forums
627: Community Forums
628: Home
629: Downloads
630: Home
631: Community Forums
632: Photo Gallery
633: Community Forums

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
M113 #1?????
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
clausb
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 25, 2006
Posts: 146

PostPosted: Tue Feb 05, 2008 6:12 am
Post subject: Re: M113 #1?????

- bsmart
I'm gpoing to disagree with you here. "Quantity has a quality all it's own"

Within a class of weapons the ability to deploy enough items so that it is effective is important. The Sherman/T34 v Panther is a very good example of this. While neither one can match the Panther one on one they were able to compete because both could be produced in volume and deployed and supported so that they were always available in useful quantities while Panthers were never available in enough quantity to keep the units up to strength


The question is whether the qantity factor reflects qualities of the vehicle (ease of manufacture) or the production system building it. I'd guess that the US tank plants could build Panthers at about the same rate as they could build Shermans and vice-versa.

cbo
Back to top
View user's profile
bsmart
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 23, 2006
Posts: 2523
Location: Central Maryland
PostPosted: Tue Feb 05, 2008 12:51 pm
Post subject: Re: M113 #1?????

- clausb

The question is whether the qantity factor reflects qualities of the vehicle (ease of manufacture) or the production system building it. I'd guess that the US tank plants could build Panthers at about the same rate as they could build Shermans and vice-versa.

cbo


I'm not sure about that. From what I've read there were many parts of the panther that were desiigned to be 'massaged' into place. Also much of it was assembed as piecework.

The Sherman during it's development was worked over by automotive production engineers to tweak it for high volume series production. Everything from parts standardization to having a well developed 'Change Order' system for introducing changes to the production line had been well developed by the high volume production system used by the American automobile industry.

The big difference between the American and the European tank production was that The Americans decided that 35 ton tanks could be built on a true assembly line like passenger cars instead of by heavy engineering firms that were used to building locomotives and other heavy equipment.

It would have been interesting to see what a 'production engineered Panther' would have looked like after the American assembly line specialists had gotten done with it. It would also be interesting to see what a Panther fitted with some of the advanced features of the Sherman would have been (Like the constant speed hydraulic turret drive) but it would have been a much different beast that the standard Panther

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

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 25, 2006
Posts: 146

PostPosted: Tue Feb 05, 2008 5:18 pm
Post subject: Re: M113 #1?????

- bsmart
I'm not sure about that. From what I've read there were many parts of the panther that were desiigned to be 'massaged' into place. Also much of it was assembed as piecework.

The Sherman during it's development was worked over by automotive production engineers to tweak it for high volume series production. Everything from parts standardization to having a well developed 'Change Order' system for introducing changes to the production line had been well developed by the high volume production system used by the American automobile industry.

The big difference between the American and the European tank production was that The Americans decided that 35 ton tanks could be built on a true assembly line like passenger cars instead of by heavy engineering firms that were used to building locomotives and other heavy equipment.


You could be right about the design not being as fit for massproduction as the Sherman, but it seems that it was a good deal better than for earlier German tanks (which may not say much Smile )

I think the bottom line is that the number and types of parts that goes into a WWII tank of a given size are about the same. It needs an engine, transmission, armoured hull etc. What really governs output is access to rawmaterials, machinery, manpower etc. And here Germany was lagging behind the US. Add to that the fact that US plants, transport, etc. wasn'øt bombed every other day. In the bigger picture, improving the design for production may make some gain, but it cannot do much to change the basic production system and its flaws.

It would have been interesting to see what a 'production engineered Panther' would have looked like after the American assembly line specialists had gotten done with it. It would also be interesting to see what a Panther fitted with some of the advanced features of the Sherman would have been (Like the constant speed hydraulic turret drive) but it would have been a much different beast that the standard Panther


I think one problem would be that the Germans did not have the materials needed to make some of the features of the Sherman. The Sherman turret traverse, for example, used an electric motor for power and that togetherwith the required wiring might not have fitted well with Germanys precarious raw material situation. The mechanical-hydraulic system used in the Panther and Tiger used only steel.

cbo
Back to top
View user's profile
SHAWN
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 31, 2006
Posts: 484

PostPosted: Sat Feb 09, 2008 2:37 am
Post subject: Re: M113 #1?????

hello roy,
it may not seem like much, but much respect to you and doug for serving on/in the track. thank you. my dads war photos dont paint a nice combat picture of the track. i think there must be alot of comparisons of the M4 in WW2 to the M113 in Nam.
when i called it a frig, i mean cause it was made by FMC (Food Machinery Corp., they made refrigators){M2/M3 also made by FMC}. i work in an aluminum fab shop and i wouldnt place AL between myself and bullets no how (unless it is moved by pratt & whitney).
it justed seems that good praise and all, that the, say "bad" qualities as told by my dad, by roy, by doug, others combat vets, hang heavy over that track thus hindering it being that close to the top of the list. you had to sandbag the interior, you woudnt ride inside (let alone fight from inside it-- ifv??), you wouldnt hang your limps inside or outside of the thing, you pretty much just rode on top... (please, please forgive me, but this doesnt make me feel confident in this thing). all of the pics dad has from nam that show damaged tracks, it isnt like they were lost in a european armored conflict. (they were lost to some of the best light infantry the world has seen).
we took AL plate out to the range, it dont stop .308, .223, unless you stack it up pretty thick... we spaced it (hell, that made it worse). it melts much more so than steel...

the M2/M3 is AL with steel plates hanging all over it...
arent the improved armor upgrades for the current M113 basically along the same lines?
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
Roy_A_Lingle
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 24, 2006
Posts: 1997
Location: El Paso & Ft Bliss, Texas
PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2008 10:37 pm
Post subject: Re: M113 #1?????

Hi Shawn! Hi Folks!

The following post is done in the spirt of showing those who may not know there is more to the story.
Before I started hanging out here, I have a VERY bad impression of the Sherman tank during it's use in NWE. Thanks to others who have pointed out facts I didn't think about before, I now feel that tank was the right vehicle, for the right time, and POSSIBLE the best that could be fielded at that time.

- SHAWN

my dads war photos dont paint a nice combat picture of the track.


How's this Shawn for a bad picture? All four of us survived hitting a large land mine. I think my right gunner died later of pneumonia in a hospital on Oklinawa. My right gunner/Platoon Leader was returned to the field after a check up and an overnight stay at the 93rd Evac Hospital, my driver returned to the field after a month of light duty. I returned to duty after three months of light duty.


There is more to the story than bad pictures. What counts (to me anyway) is the number of people who survived after their AFV has been hit by something. In the case of my first ACAV, most of that damage happiened AFTER we were able to get out of and off of it.

Look at a picture of an Iraqi T72 that has been burned out (like my 1st ACAV) with it's turret blown off. One has to ask, was the crew able to get out after the first hit and before the secondary fire set off the remaining main gun ammo? Both pictures show you a burn out and total destoryed AFV. However they do not tell the story of the crew. It's the crew that counts, not the vehicle and how well it does or does not survive a hit.

- SHAWN

when i called it a frig, i mean cause it was made by FMC (Food Machinery Corp., they made refrigators){M2/M3 also made by FMC}. i work in an aluminum fab shop and i wouldnt place AL between myself and bullets no how (unless it is moved by pratt & whitney).


Don't forget, FMC also made the LVTP7/AAV7. I have never heard the armored vehicle department of FMC call "Frig" before.
Anyway, I am sure that the AFV plant was not the same one that made refrigators.

- SHAWN

it justed seems that good praise and all, that the, say "bad" qualities as told by my dad, by roy, by doug, others combat vets, hang heavy over that track thus hindering it being that close to the top of the list.


Name something, anything that is prefect.

- SHAWN

you had to sandbag the interior,


Not very crew did that. You could if you wanted to but there was no unit SOP requiring it. Nether one of my two ACAVs where sandbaged. In the case of the first one, sandbags would NOT have helped due to the size of the mine. That is just like the Sherman crews of WWII who put sandbags on the outside of their tanks just because they thought and hoped it MIGHT help. I for one didn't care for the idea of dirt being driven into my skin by an explosion.

- SHAWN

you woudnt ride inside (let alone fight from inside it-- ifv??)


The driver rode inside. Sure some units modified the driving controls so the driver could set on top of his hatch and above the armor. During my 18 months with the Army, I never saw a M113 modified like that.

As for fighting inside, the M60 gunner's had to get inside to fire their guns.

The difference is what the vehicle is doing.
If moving, the main threat was land mines under the vehicle. (Name a IFV/APC that IS prof against landmines) Therefore the best protection was riding on top the vehicle with both the bottom armor and the top armor between you and that landmine. It's a good thing the M113 had a top that had room for the M60 gunners to ride on top.

When contact was made, the vehicles stopped, ending the threat of land mines. The M60 gunner's then dropped inside the hull to take cover behind the side armor to operate their weapons. The driver of my second AFV came up with an SOP. When he saw a 50 cal ammo fly over the front of the hull, he came up out of his compartment and started firing his M16 to the front of the vehcile. When he saw the lid of a 50 cal ammo can fly over the front of the vehicle, he dropped back down inside. What was that all about? I was reloading the M2. The crew firing weapons while inside the vehicle? Sounds like an IFV to me.

- SHAWN

you wouldnt hang your limps inside or outside of the thing, you pretty much just rode on top...


When the main threat is landmine under a vehicle, you don't hang limps off the side of ANY, let me say that again ANY, AFV. That is not a problem with the vehicle or it's armor, it a problem with the blast wave moving up the side of the AFV that set it off.


- SHAWN

(please, please forgive me, but this doesnt make me feel confident in this thing).


Having never been there, no problem. As one who has had an ACAV blown apart under me, I for one, think very highly of the M113 and the FMC plant that build them.

- SHAWN

all of the pics dad has from nam that show damaged tracks, it isnt like they were lost in a european armored conflict. (they were lost to some of the best light infantry the world has seen).


It was a very good vehicle for the time and the threat is faced. It was used many times to do things it was never build to do. One example, used as a recovery vehicle to tow combat loaded Sheridans, estimated weight 25 tons, using a trailier hitch mounted in an aluminum ramp that was only rated at 7.5 tons for towing. Towed a number of Sheridans, never broke the hitch or the ramp it was mounted in.

- SHAWN

we took AL plate out to the range, it dont stop .308, .223, unless you stack it up pretty thick... we spaced it (hell, that made it worse).


Was that aluminum plate from refrigerators? Or was it 5083 aluminum alloy rolled armored plate?

Get yourself a M113 and shoot at it with your .308 and .223. I think you will find it will stop those rounds because the protection level it was designed for is a bit higher that those rounds.

- SHAWN

it melts much more so than steel...


True. So what?
No body is going to stay inside a burning AFV if it is at all possble to get out. The melting happiens long after the crew is out or dead, so it's doesn't matter one way or the other. This is just another one of those 'IT'S BAD' claims that has no merit in the real world of crew survival.

- SHAWN

the M2/M3 is AL with steel plates hanging all over it...
arent the improved armor upgrades for the current M113 basically along the same lines


Yes, the Bradleys and the M113s (the few that are being used) have been upgraded with steel armor.

You are however forgetting the threats that the original designs were layed out for, the threats in Vietnam that most M113s faced, and the current threats the vehicles face today. They are not the same and upgrades that help protect the crews against the current types of threat have been added.

Shawn, you feel the M113 is not a good vehicle. OK what would you suggest the U.S. Army have used during Vietnam in place of the M113? Keep in mind that the Army had no plans to use the M113 in Vietnam to start with.

Maybe the Army could have used the USMC's LVTP5s. That was about the only other Infantry carrier in the inventory at that time and they were made out of steel and not aluminum armor. Asks Older Top, I am sure he can tell a bunch of good and possible even more bad stories about those steel boxes.

Again, I say, I might not rate it as the best IFV/APC ever, but it would be very close.

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