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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Greenville, NC
Posts: 1,854
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Wow...great display and, man, would love to have that old mak!
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Kuwait
Posts: 1,340
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nice display. How is the axe used? looks odd to my eyes :-)
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,712
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Fascinasting display & subject of the post-modern ethnographic use of arms..
Love the grenades! Realy course looking! Thank you. Spiral |
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#4 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,272
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What a great display - thank you for sharing. Did not know that they used such an array of weapons.
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 385
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Thanks for the kind words guys. It was fun to put together. The Mak is awsome. It is swung, with the curved part of the handle pointing rearward. The cutting edge is on the inside of the blade curve. After you handle one, it feels pretty good in your hands. Early on, during the US involvement in SEA, a hodge-podge of weapons could be encountered. Many locally produced. After 1966, a steady stream of Chi-com, and European Com-bloc weapons were available. However, Anything, and everything was found in weapons caches till 1975. I've heard several accounts, of helicopters returning, riddled with crossbow arrows.
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Just to think of it, that is what they have used to defeat both the French and the American armies..... Sobering...
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#7 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,712
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Look what happend to the British empire once the "natives" came back from world war 2 fully trained, combat/war expierienced & armed with guns & bombs rather than just spears & arrows... We wernt so strong then...... ![]() Spiral |
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