Well I have had a full beard since the 1970's...and got fatter than a 30 pound robin in the last fifteen years.... But that old pic does kind of look like me as a 21 year old paratrooper... I got along fine with the Yards. Partied with them down in the ville and spent lots of time in the field with them. You could tell if there was gonna be some shooting if they just disappeared into the trees and began moving like a slight breeze. When they were grabbing ass and shooting birds out of trees for kicks..it was safe. Tough men. Strong and near fearless. I liked them just fine.
The pic above with Yards boarding the C130 Herky Bird was a Mobile Indigenous Strike Force or, MIKE Force, heading out for a 40 day operation along the 'trail. I sat in the back, with a load strap as a seatbelt with my guys, instead of up front in a jump seat. Them guys would get sick and blow breakfast into a zip lock bag before the Herk even left the ground...with the cargo door open and that smelly turbine exhaust and heat blowing in....I almost burped too.
1965 M151 in VN
Moderators: rickf, raymond, Mr. Recovery
-
- 1st Sergeant
- Posts: 474
- Joined: September 4th, 2009, 4:06 pm
- Location: The Great White North of N.E. Ohio
Re: 1965 M151 in VN
NRA Life Member. Class 7 FFL/ SOT
1964, M151-A1
1950, US M-38 Jeep. Serial # 36.
1952,US M-38 Jeep
1965, Willys M-274 Mule
1945, CCKW, closed cab, 353
416 Trailer
M100 Trailer
US Army 5 year RA. RSVN 1968-1970
1964, M151-A1
1950, US M-38 Jeep. Serial # 36.
1952,US M-38 Jeep
1965, Willys M-274 Mule
1945, CCKW, closed cab, 353
416 Trailer
M100 Trailer
US Army 5 year RA. RSVN 1968-1970
Re: 1965 M151 in VN
Very interesting thread here.
Back to the original question: Back in the 70s in Germany, my unit was responsible for tactical fuel distribution in our part of VII Corps. I never saw "Combustible" painted on any vehicle. "Flammable" was the warning on all Army fuel tankers regardless of which fuel was being transported. We also had "Feurgefehrlich" on our tankers, a misspelling of the German for "Flammable."
I'm sure the locals rolled their eyes whenever we were on the road.
I went internet-looking for a photo of a fuel tanker from back in those days. Didn't find one, but I did find these M151 shots on an 11th ACR site:
Back to the original question: Back in the 70s in Germany, my unit was responsible for tactical fuel distribution in our part of VII Corps. I never saw "Combustible" painted on any vehicle. "Flammable" was the warning on all Army fuel tankers regardless of which fuel was being transported. We also had "Feurgefehrlich" on our tankers, a misspelling of the German for "Flammable."
I'm sure the locals rolled their eyes whenever we were on the road.
I went internet-looking for a photo of a fuel tanker from back in those days. Didn't find one, but I did find these M151 shots on an 11th ACR site:
Last edited by LTDan on August 13th, 2014, 12:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
LTDan
Commanding Officer
Company A
95th Supply & Service Battalion (Direct Support)
VII Corps Support Commmand
1970-73
Fürth, Germany
Commanding Officer
Company A
95th Supply & Service Battalion (Direct Support)
VII Corps Support Commmand
1970-73
Fürth, Germany
- richard
- Command Sergeant Major
- Posts: 620
- Joined: August 10th, 2011, 5:52 am
- Location: Lower Saxony, Germany
- Contact:
Re: 1965 M151 in VN
Dan,
From my native speaking and understanding of "feuergefährlich" I would translate it to "flammable", too. From the seventieth to now the sytem changed. We have now orange plates on a vehicle with a system of numbers on it which shows the police and fire fighters which stuff is aboard.
From my native speaking and understanding of "feuergefährlich" I would translate it to "flammable", too. From the seventieth to now the sytem changed. We have now orange plates on a vehicle with a system of numbers on it which shows the police and fire fighters which stuff is aboard.
European Distributor for CMD Body Panels: http://www.M151BodyPanels.eu
1978 M151-A2
1978 M416-A1
1972 M561
1964 M35-A2 w/winch & shelter
1978 M151-A2
1978 M416-A1
1972 M561
1964 M35-A2 w/winch & shelter
Re: 1965 M151 in VN
Thank you for sharing.