Soviet Manufactured Forward Area Aircraft. GTA 44-2-13
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Army, 1990. Revised Edition. 3.5" x 2.5", 75 cards, deck of 75 cards sealed in original plastic wrapping, illus. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Army, 1990. Revised Edition. 3.5" x 2.5", 75 cards, deck of 75 cards sealed in original plastic wrapping, illus. More
Washington, DC: GPO, 1978. Revised Edition. Quarto, approx. 300, wraps, illus., maps, figures (some fold-out), appendices, references, glossary. More
Washington, DC: GPO, 1983. Revised Edition. Approx. 200, wraps, 3-hole punched, stapled, illus. (fold-out), glossary, references, appendices, index, covers somewhat worn and soiled. More
Washington, DC: GPO, 1981. Revised Edition. Quarto, approx. 240, plastic looseleaf binder (camouflage design), text 3-hole punched, illus, fold-out chart, glossary, references, appendices. More
Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Army, 1977. Approx. 350, wraps, 3-hole punched, covers somewhat worn and soiled. More
Fort Monmouth, NJ: Army Commun-Electronics Comm, 1984. Quarto, 13, wraps, xerox copy, pages stapled in upper left corner. More
Fort Campbell, KY: U.S. Department of the Army, c. 1980? Approx. 300, wraps, illus., maps, diagrams, covers somewhat worn and soiled. More
Washington DC: United States Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1979. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus, Supersedes FM 6-13E1/2, 25 April 1977. Wraps. Three-hole punched and staplebound. Format is approximately 7.875 inches by 10.25 inches. Various paginations (approximately 570 pages). Illustrations. References. Cover hass ome wear and soiling. Back cover held by one staple. A Cannon Fire Direction Specialist is a member of the Army’s field artillery team. Artillery are weapons that fire large ammunition or missiles and are used by the Army to support infantry and tank units in combat, as well as protect land and sea forces from air attack. The Cannon Fire Direction Specialist is primarily responsible for leading, supervising or serving as a member of a field artillery cannon unit. This Field Manual reflects the state of the art, the state of knowledge, the state of practice, and the standards of proficiency after the Vietnam War, during the period of the Panama and Grenada operations, and prior to the Persian Gulf wars. More
Washington DC: United States Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1977. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Wraps. Three-hole punched and staplebound. Format is approximately 7.875 inches by 10.25 inches. This material was intended to be separated and inserted into FM 6-13E3, April 1977 to create FM 6-13E4 for Skill Level 4 soldiers. Thus, in this format this is NOT a stand alone document but does provide focus and detail on what in addition to Skill Level 3 was required to qualify for Skill Level 4 Various paginations (approximately 70 pages). Illustrations. References. Index. Questionnaire. Cover has some wear and soiling. Ink notation on front cover. Back cover held by one staple. A Cannon Fire Direction Specialist is a member of the Army’s field artillery team. Artillery are weapons that fire large ammunition or missiles and are used by the Army to support infantry and tank units in combat, as well as protect land and sea forces from air attack. The Cannon Fire Direction Specialist is primarily responsible for leading, supervising or serving as a member of a field artillery cannon unit. More
Washington DC: United States Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1977. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Wraps. Three-hole punched and staplebound. Format is approximately 7.875 inches by 10.25 inches. This material was intended to be separated and inserted into FM 6-13F1/2, April 1977 to create FM 6-13E3 for Skill Level 3 soldiers. Thus, in this format this is NOT a stand alone document but does provide focus and detail on what in addition to Skill Level 1/2 was required to qualify for Skill Level 3. Various paginations (approximately 90 pages). Illustrations. References. Index. Questionnaire. Cover has some wear and soiling. More
Washington DC: United States Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1977. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus, Wraps. Three-hole punched and staplebound. Format is approximately 7.875 inches by 10.25 inches. Various paginations (approximately 400 pages). Illustrations. References. Index. Cover has some wear and soiling. Ink name on front cover. A Cannon Fire Direction Specialist is a member of the Army’s field artillery team. Artillery are weapons that fire large ammunition or missiles and are used by the Army to support infantry and tank units in combat, as well as protect land and sea forces from air attack. The Cannon Fire Direction Specialist is primarily responsible for leading, supervising or serving as a member of a field artillery cannon unit. This Field Manual reflects the state of the art, the state of knowledge, the state of practice, and the standards of proficiency after the Vietnam War, during the period of the Panama and Grenada operations, and prior to the Persian Gulf wars. More
W: U. S. Department of the Army, 1985. Supersedes GTA 3-6-2, June 1975. Ephemera. Single sheet, printed on both sides, 10 inches by 12 inches. Folded and re-folded so that there are 16 panels, eight on each side. Two panels are for notes and is almost completely blank space. Illustrations. Pencil erasure residue on title panel. The primary means of warning units of an actual or predicted CB hazard is the NBC Warning and Reporting system (NBCWRS). It is a key in limiting the effects of attacks. The NBCWRS allows units to determine required protective measures and plan operations. Units take action depending on the mission and type of hazard present. Affected units alter plans to avoid the hazard. The units can upgrade protective measures and occupy or cross the hazard area. The NBCWRS consists of six reports. Each is standardized. The six standard reports are— NBC 1-Initial report, used for passing basic data compiled at unit level. NBC 2-Report used for passing evaluated data. NBC 3-Report used for immediate warning of predicted contamination and hazard areas. NBC 4-Report used for passing monitoring and survey results. NBC 5-Report used for passing information on areas of actual contamination. NBC 6-Report used for passing detailed information on chemical or biological attacks. The reports use standard formats. The warning and reporting system is based on a code letter system. More
2001. Staplebound. Various paginations (approximately 100 pages). Illustrations. Figures. Checklists. References. Glossary. Abbreviations and Acronyms. Terms and Definitions. Cover has some wear and soiling. Three-hole punched with staples between the holes at the left side. Marked For Official Use Only. Distribution Restriction: Distribution authorized to U.S. Government agencies only to protect technical or operational information from automatic dissemination under the International Exchange Program or by other means. Destruction Notice also on front cover. It is understood that this restriction is no longer applicable due to the passage of time and availability of copies on-line. Issued in September, 2001, it represents the state-of-knowledge, the state-of-practice, the state-of-doctrine, and the tactical state-of-the-art at the time the United States experienced the 9/11 attacks and began anti-Taliban, anti-Al Qaeda, and anti-terrorism in the Middle East and elsewhere. More
Washington DC: United States, Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1976. Reprint which includes current pages from Change 1. Wraps. Format is approximately 8.25 inches by 10.75 inches. Three-hole punched and staplebound. Various paginations (approximately 76 pages). Illustrations. References. This bulletin supersedes TB 746-95-1, 12 October 1971, and TB 746-95-2, 24 August 1964. Cover has some wear and soiling. This Technical Bulletin describes the colors and patterns to be used for the camouflage of ARMCOM equipment which require camouflage pattern painting and provides a uniform system of marking such equipment. Additional camouflage patterns will be added as new equipment is developed. Nuclear weapons and ammunition (Class V) are not included in this bulletin. More
Forest Grove, OR: The Combat Bookshelf, 1969. Reprint of 1962 edition. Wraps. 220. [4] pages. Illustrations. References. Index. Cover has some wear and soiling. Some edge soiling. This is an important Vietnam War era military manual focused on soldier's training for combat. This manual supersedes FM 21-75, 14 June 1957, including C 1, 26 March 195. , This manual is dedicated to the soldier — the key to success on the battlefield. Wars are not won by machines and weapons but by the soldiers who use them. Even the best equipped army cannot win without motivated and well-trained soldiers. If the US Army is to win the next war, its soldiers must be motivated by inspired leadership, and they must know how to do their jobs and survive on the battlefield. This is the soldier's field manual. It tells the soldier how to perform the combat skills needed to survive on the battlefield. These are basic skills that must be learned by soldiers in all military occupational specialties. More
Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1950. Presumed First printing of this version. Wraps. iv, 340, [8] pages. Illustrations. References. Exercises. Index. Marked Restricted. Cover has some wear and soiling. Some edge soiling. This is an important Korean War era military manual focused on soldier's training for combat. This manual supersedes FM 21-75, 6 February 1944, including C1, 6 May 1944: C 2, 5 July 194;, C 3 July 1945; and C 4 23 August 1945. This manual is dedicated to the soldier — the key to success on the battlefield. This is a guide for the soldier, regardless of the arm or service. It explains how to go about your duties as a soldier in daylight and darkness. It shows the soldier to to protect and preserve your health and how to see at night. It also teaches the soldier the technique of sniping and shows how combat intelligence can help . This is the soldier's field manual. It tells the soldier how to perform the combat skills needed to survive on the battlefield. These are basic skills that must be learned by soldiers in all military occupational specialties. More
Washington DC: United States, Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1984. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Wraps. Various paginations (approximately 3/4 inch thick). Illustrations (Tables, Figures). Formulae. Glossary. Bibliography. Upper right corner has damp stains; all pages complete and separate. This manual together with TM 5-858-1, 31 October 1983 and TM 5-858-3 through TM 5-858-8 supersedes TM 5-856-1, 1 July 1959; TM 5 856-2, 15 March 1957; TM 5-856-3, 15 March 1957; TM 5-856-4, 15 March 1957; TM 5-856-5, 15 January 1958; TM 5-856-6, 15 January 1960; TM 5-856-7, 15 January 1958, TM 5-856-8, 15 January 1960; and TM 5-856-9, 15 January 1960. The purpose of this manual is to provide guidance to engineers engaged in designing facilities that are required to resist nuclear weapon effects. It has been written for systems, structural, mechanical, electrical, and test engineers possessing state-of-the-art expertise in their respective disciplines, but having little knowledge of nuclear weapon effects on facilities. While it is applicable as general design guidelines to all Corps of Engineers specialists who participate in designing permanent military facilities, it has been written and organized on the assumption a systems-engineering group will coordinate design of the facilities. More
Washington DC: United States, Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1977. Presumed first printing thus. Wraps. Stapled on the left side and three-hole punched. Various paginations (approximately 175 pages, illustrations, fold-out. Front cover is illustrated and has wear and soiling. Writing on spine area. Rear cover is missing but this document appears to be otherwise complete. This FM supersedes FM 21-40, 17 May 1971, including all changes. Immediate Action Interim Change No. I01 dated 12 February 1982 (4 pages) laid in. This disseminates the revised first aid procedure for nerve agent poisoning and was considered critical in view of the recent replacement of nerve agent antidote with atropine. This manual tells how units of the United States Army can use the principles and techniques of nuclear, biological, and chemical (NBC) defense in the conduct of combat operations. The probability that the U.S. Army will be outnumbered at the start of any future war makes it essential that every unit gain the highest level of survival proficiency and basic operational skills. The concepts of training to fight and factually fighting under NBC conditions are the same. This manual services two purposes. It provides doctrine and guidance for the commander and his staff in NBC defense, an d it provides the technical information necessary for chemical personnel and other personnel assigned NBC defense duties to evaluate NBC situations and advise their commander. More
Washington DC: Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1964. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Disbound, three hole punched, held together with a binder clip. Some of the punch holes are torn. Format is approximately 9 inches by 11 inches. Approximately 50 pages plus many tabs. Rare surviving original copy. Table of Contents includes: Introduction (including Instructions for the use of the nuclear play calculator), Strike Assessment Procedures (including sections for cannons, free rockets, missiles, air delivered weapons, atomic demolition munitions and partisan atomic demolition munitions, and new Aggressor weapons); Damage Determination, References, and Nuclear Play Calculator Aids (in envelope). The Aids are present. This manual includes 11 tables in Chapter 2 and 15 tables in Chapter 3. This manual provides guidance on procedures and techniques for evaluation the nuclear play of aggressor forces during tactical exercises. This manual provides the necessary aids for the Aggressor to determine the damage to United States and Allied forces from nuclear strikes. The weapons systems in this manual are based on material contained in the Handbook on Aggressor Military Forces, FM 30-102. Chapter 2 contains the tables for Aggressor strike assessments from nuclear weapons. Chapter 3 contains the damage radii tables from the nuclear weapons employed by the aggressor forces. Large Strategic Weapons (20MT-100MT) were not included. Source date were extracted from FM 101-31-1. Aids envelop includes 8 plastic sheets of horizontal dispersion templates (scaled 1:50,000 and 1:25,000) for cannons, free rockets and Guided missiles and air delivered weapons, and Damage circle templates for 1:50,000 and 1:25,000). Plastic sheets show wear and loss of text. More
Washington DC: Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1964. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Three hole punched with metal fasteners. Format is approximately 9 inches by 11 inches. 6 pages plus many tabs with one or more pages per tabbed section. Rare surviving original copy. Ink notation on front cover. Pages 1/2 is ahead of page 'i', The contents include: Introduction (including Instructions for the use of the nuclear play calculator), Strike Assessment Procedures (including sections for cannons, free rockets, missiles, air delivered weapons, atomic demolition munitions and new weapons); Damage Determination, References,Sample Problem Strike Assessment, and Nuclear Play Calculator Aids (in envelope). The Aids are present. This manual includes tabbed sections on Cannons, Rockets, Missiles, Air-delivered weapons, Atomic Demolition Munitions and then by yield from 0.5 KT through 5 MT. The Tab for I KT is mislabeled 1 MT. This manual provides guidance on procedures and techniques for nuclear play during tactical exercises. This manual provides the necessary aids for the Aggressor to determine the damage to United States and Allied forces from nuclear strikes. The weapons systems in this manual are based on material contained in the Handbook on Aggressor Military Forces, FM 30-102. Aids envelop includes 8 plastic sheets of horizontal dispersion templates for cannons, free rockets and Guided missiles and air delivered weapons, and Damage circle templates for 1:50,000 and 1:25,000). More
Washington DC: United States, Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1982. This copy is a reprint which includes current pages from Changes 1. Wraps. Three hole punched and staple bound. Various paginations (approximately 30 pages). The manual contains operation data for the NBC Contamination Marking Set. This marking set provides the necessary equipment to mark contaminated areas as defined by FM 3-3. The purpose of this manual ti to show how each part of the marking set can be used. The purpose IS NOT to set policy. Department of the Army forms and procedures used for equipment maintenance will be those prescribed by DA-PAM 738-750, The Army Maintenance Management System (TAMMS). Chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear defense (CBRN defense or CBRNE defense) are protective measures taken in situations in which chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear warfare (including terrorism) hazards may be present. CBRN defense consists of CBRN passive protection, contamination avoidance and CBRN mitigation. A CBRN incident differs from a hazardous material incident in both scope (i.e., CBRN can be a mass casualty situation) and intent. CBRN incidents are responded to under the assumption that they are intentional and malicious; evidence preservation and perpetrator apprehension are of greater concern than with HAZMAT incidents. More
Washington DC: United States, Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1993. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus [This UPDATE printing published a new Army pamphlet]. Wraps. iii, [1], 116 pages. Figures. Tables. References. Reproducible Forms. Cover has some wear and soiling. This Department of the Army pamphlet provides an overview of the Army Ammunition Management Program, key procedures, and references. It is designed to describe the system and basic procedural guidance for full life cycle ammunition management and is to be used in conjunction with applicable references for ammunition management. This includes ammunition research, development, and acquisition; distribution, storage, and maintenance; and production base readiness, management, and stock control procedures. This reflects the state of the art, the state of knowledge, and the state of practice at the time of the First Gulf War. More
Washington DC: Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1963. Presumed First printing thus [supersedes prior guidance]. Wraps. Three-hole punched, with one staple on the left side. 163, [5] pages, illustrations (Figures and Tables). Footnotes. Ink notations on spine and bottom edge. Stapled on left side and three hole punched. So,e cover wear and soiling. This manual together with FM 101-31-1, 1 February 1963, and FM 101-31-1, 1 February 1963, and FM 101-31-3, 1 February 1963, supersedes FM 101-31, 20 July 1959, including C 1, 29 Jun 2 1961; FM 101-31 (modified), 15 September 1960; DA Pam 39-1, 20 May 1959; and DA Training Circular 101-1, 8 December 1958, including C 2, 14 June 1060. The contents include: Introduction, Initial Effects of Nuclear Weapons, Target Analysis, Command Responsibilities, Staff Procedures and Techniques of Employment, Operations in Residual Radiation Areas; Protective Measures, Appendices, and Index. This manual provides guidance to commanders and staff officers in the operational and logistical aspects of nuclear weapons employment in combat operations. The doctrine presented in this manual is concerned with nuclear weapons employment with the field army. When the manual discusses special ammunition logistics, vulnerability analyses and the employment of nuclear weapons in such areas as air defense the scope is extended to include the theater of operations. In addition, some portions of this manual are applicable to Continental United States air defense. More
Washington DC: United States, Department of the Army, Headquarters, 1955. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Wraps. i, [1], 59, [3] pages. Figures (including fold-out). Sketch map. Index chart to damage estimation charts and nomographs. Cover has some wear, and soiling/staining. Marked For Official Use Only, but this limitation is understood to no longer apply. This pamphlet provides an unclassified basis for the utilization of atomic weapons in courses at the various schools and in training. The effects data herein are based primarily on the unclassified data contained in The Effects of Atomic Weapons and in Radiological Defense, Volume II, but also on other unclassified sources. The methods of casualty and damage estimation herein have been so designed as to provide an understanding of the role of target analysis in the tactical use of atomic weapons without at the same time burdening nonspecialized students with the details of a comprehensive target analysis. It is intended that this text be utilized for classroom purposes. The text has been reviewed by Headquarters, Armed Forces Special Weapons Project. The damage estimation system it contains is based on certain material produced by the SANDIA CORPORATION. More
Washington DC: Headquarters, Department of the Army, 1971. TEST (Draft) issue. Wraps. Various paginations (approximately 270 pages). Illustrations. Diagrams. References. Equipment. Glossary. Index. Format is approximately 8.5 inches by 11 inches. Three-hole punched and Staplebound. Cover has some wear and soiling. This test field manual represents the state-of-knowledge, state-of-practice, and state-of doctrine for the U.S. Army toward the end of the Vietnam War. Equipment addressed reflect, at an unclassifed level, the current state-of-the-art in such technologies. S.T.A.N.O. represents Surveillance Target Acquisition and Night Observation. This is a real grouping of technology in our military. The type of equipment included in this grouping are night vision devices, Intrusion detection devices, man portable surveillance radar, laser aiming, ranging and detecting devices, certain specialized optical systems such as stabilized optical monoculars and binoculars. The concept of S.T.A.N.O. evolved from a high tech solution for maximizing intelligence gathering efficiency while minimizing human risk. The term S.T.A.N.O. was first coined by General Westmoreland which represented his perspective of a specialized grouping of technological innovations pertaining to the electronic battlefield. More