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Improvised Munitions Combined with OPERATOR'S MANUAL FOR RIFLE, CALIBER .30, AUTOMATIC, BROWNING, M1918A2, W/E

Author U.S. Army, Delene Kvasnicka of Survivalebooks, DOD U.S. Department of Defense, U.S. Military, Special Operations, U.S. Government, Pentagon U.S. Military
Publisher www.survivalebooks.com, www.armytechnicalmanuals.com, www.armymilitarymanuals.com
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Book Details
ISBN / ASINB005ERPHN4
ISBN-13978B005ERPHN7
Sales Rank2,441,586
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Improvised Munitions Combined with OPERATOR'S MANUAL FOR RIFLE, CALIBER .30, AUTOMATIC, BROWNING, M1918A2, W/E

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Purpose and Scope

In Unconventional Warfare operations it may be impossible or unwise to use conventional military munitions as tools in the conduct of certain missions. It may be necessary instead to fabricate the required munitions from locally available or unassuming materials. The purpose of this manual is to increase the potential of Special Forces and guerrilla troops by describing in detail the manufacture of munitions from seemingly innocuous locally available materials.

Manufactured, precision devices almost always will be more effective, more reliable, and easier to use than improvised ones, but shelf items will just not be available for certain operations for security or logistical reasons. Therefore the operator will have to rely on materials he can buy in a drug or paint store, find in a junk pile, or scrounge from military stocks. Also, many of the ingredients and materials used in fabricating homemade items are so commonplace or innocuous they can be carried without arousing suspicion. The completed item itself often is more easily concealed or camouflaged. In addition, the field expedient item can be tailored for the intended target, thereby providing an advantage over the standard item in flexibility and versatility.

The manual contains simple explanations and illustrations to permit construction of the items by personnel not normally familiar with making and handling munitions. These items were conceived in-house or, obtained from other publications or personnel engaged in munitions or special warfare
work. This manual includes methods for fabricating explosives, detonators, propellants, shaped charges, small arms, mortars, incendiaries, delays, switches, and similar items from indigenous materials.

Table of Contents
Section 0 — Introduction
0.1 Purpose and Scope
0.2 Safety and Reliability
0.3 User Comments
Section 1 — Explosives and Propellants (including igniters)
1.1 Plastic Explosive Filler
1.2 Potassium Nitrate
1.3 Improvised Black Powder
1.4 Nitric Acid
1.5 Initiator for Dust Explosions
1.6 Fertilizer Explosive
1.7 Carbon Tet – Explosive
1.8 Fertilizer AN-Al Explosive
1.9 “Red or White Powder” Propellant
1.10 Nitric Acid/Nitrobenzene (“Hellhoffite”) Explosive
1.11 Optimized Process for Cellulose/Acid Explosives
1.12 Methyl Nitrate Dynamite
1.13 Urea Nitrate Explosive
1.14 Preparation of Copper Sulfate (Pentahydrate)
1.15 Reclamation of RDX from C4
1.16 TACC (Tetramminecopper (II) Chlorate)
1.17 HMTD



Book 2


OPERATOR'S MANUAL FOR RIFLE, CALIBER .30, AUTOMATIC, BROWNING, M1918A2, W/E

Scope
This appendix lists basic issue items, items troop installed or authorized, repair parts and special tools required by the crew/operator for operation and required for the performance of organizational maintenance of the rifle M1918A2.


CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION
Section I. General 1-1 - 1-3 1
II. Description and data . 1-4 - 1-5 1
CHAPTER 2. OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS
Section I. Controls . 2-1 - 2-2 3
II. Operation under usual conditions . 2-3 - 2-10 3
III. Operation under unusual conditions . 2-11 - 2-16 6
CHAPTER 3. OPERATOR AND ORGANIZATIONAL MAINTENANCE
INSTRUCTIONS
Section I. Service upon receipt of materiel. 3-1 - 3-2 9
II. Repair parts, special tools and equipment 3-3 - 3-4 9
III. Operators lubrication instructions . 3-5 - 3-6 9
IV. Preventive maintenance services . 3-7 10
V. Troubleshooting 3-8 11
VI. Operator maintenance. 3-9 - 3-12 12 - 15
VII. Organizational maintenance procedures. 3-13 20
CHAPTER 4. MAINTENANCE OF MATERIEL USE IN CONJUNCTION
WITH MAJOR ITEM 4-1 25
CHAPTER 5. AMMUNITION 5-1 - 5-6 27, 28
CHAPTER 6. DESTRUCTION TO PREVENT ENEMY USE. 6-1 29
APPENDIX A. REFERENCES. A-1 - A-3 31