ghost said:Soldiers through the ages have been notorious for their avoidance in firing their weapons. Remember all the CW battlefield pickups with the barels filled with charges?
Disease killed 50% of the CW troops, artillery was the biggist killer on the battlefield and gunfire a distant third. Bayonet and sword wounds counted for only 3%.
ghost said:Disease killed 50% of the CW troops, artillery was the biggist killer on the battlefield and gunfire a distant third. Bayonet and sword wounds counted for only 3%.
ghost said:Soldiers through the ages have been notorious for their avoidance in firing their weapons. Remember all the CW battlefield pickups with the barels filled with charges?
This tendency was known and is the reason for the strict battle drill, firm control of the officers and the reliance on the bayonet long after it was technically obsolete.
Disease killed 50% of the CW troops, artillery was the biggist killer on the battlefield and gunfire a distant third. Bayonet and sword wounds counted for only 3%.
Only about half the GIs in WWII actually fired their weapons when engaged in combat. It is further estimated that only one out of ten would actually AIM the weapon when they did fire. It seems that the fighters of the Great Generation were actually not that anxious to "mix it up". Movies and war stories have altered our preception.
(That means that weapons prior to the end of WWII had a 50% chance of not being fired in combat even if they were carried into combat)
During Viet Namn our entire training program was altered due to this discovery.
Modern weapons training is done at human shaped targets to accustom the soldier to shooting at the human form. Snap shoting and reflex actions are now stressed, along with aimed fire.
Target acquisition and fire discipline are still problems of every small unit commander. Spray and pray is the new life saving technique.
I once saw 27 men empty one mag. each at a fleeing enemy as he covered 300 yards of open ground and entered the tree line without a scratch!
kologha said:Can anyone make an educated guess as to the minimum number of shots an original Civil War revolver would have fired during the war?
kologha
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