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New Avatar for Submunitions

US-Subs

ORDNANCE APPROVED/Premium Member
Ordnance approved
Premium Member
Thanks Bolo!

How many recognise the piece? - You two in the back keep your mouths shut, you know who you are.
 
Not on my car, we can try it on yours if you like.
 
Not too much more, its a fairly small sub.
 
Here is a better photo, I'll check back in the morning and see if we have any winners.
 

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No, but you are on the correct side of the ocean (either).
 
That wouldn't by chance be an American magnetic under water sub munition to harass Soviet submarines with would it? Pat
 
No, though it does look a little similar. Nice try Pat, its not US.
 
Time to finish this one off and move on -

The submunition on the avatar is Dutch in origin, known simply as a PLP (Plaatladingprojectiel). It was an experimental series of submunitions from the mid 1960s that never saw service. At least 20 veriations have been seen, with differences in size and stabilisation most common.

Although it never entered use, the inert examples were well distributed. I saw my first one in Arizona in the late 1980s, the thought then was that it had probably come out of Yuma Proving ground, maybe related to the M42 program - way off. I saw a couple more over the years, and finally when arriving in the NL the facts came out.

I offered this one as the avatar, first because it had good lines and would show up well in a small photo, but also because it represented something typical of submunitions - its weird, unusual and looks like nothing else (except, perhaps, an ice-scaper).

Here are a couple of shots of some variants in my collection, followed by a few documents.
 

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And the paper stuff.
 

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............ The submunition on the avatar is Dutch in origin, known simply as a PLP (Plaatladingprojectiel). It was an experimental series of submunitions from the mid 1960s that never saw service. At least 20 veriations have been seen, with differences in size and stabilisation most common.................

US-Subs,
Thank you for the information you posted.
(I am a fish out of water on anything post WW2 !! )

I find it intresting to see how submunitions evolved in the post war period.

regards
Kev
 
Yeah, its an area I love, but so much of the history is lost or hidden - much of the US stuff in Viet Nam, what the Russians were doing before Afghanistan - there's still a lot that we cannot find in open sources - yet.
 
I had the same problem, the response from Bolo was:

"You maybe looking at cached page, try pressing CTRL + R to refresh the page and see if it appears."

Worked for me.
 
Cached page

cached page, cached page !?!
Should it be for security !?!
"Keep your secret secret", "My job is so secret that I don't known what I do !" :hahaha: :laugh:
 
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