Sgt C
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Did Marines in Vietnam ever convert any 2.5 or 5 ton trucks into gun trucks? All I ever see pictures of are Army gun trucks.
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Yes, according to James Lyles books, the Marine Corps had war wagons, as they called them. If you can find copies of his books, you should find lots of general gun truck information. The Army, Air Force and Marine Corps all had gun trucks. The Navy had battleships.Did Marines in Vietnam ever convert any 2.5 or 5 ton trucks into gun trucks? All I ever see pictures of are Army gun trucks.
.Yes, according to James Lyles books, the Marine Corps had war wagons, as they called them. If you can find copies of his books, you should find lots of general gun truck information. The Army, Air Force and Marine Corps all had gun trucks. The Navy had battleships.
The Navy inadvertently left a 20mm machine gun unguarded. It ended up on an Army gun truck. There’s pictures of quad .50’s on 2.5 and 5 ton trucks. The quads were leftovers from World War 2 and the Korean War. If I could find the parts and pieces, I’d build a quad .50 truck. Imagine driving that in a parade!.
Pretty amazing that a search brings up nothing about the USMC and War Wagons. No pictures that don't have US Army on anything I hunted down... I did find the books by Jame Lyles.
It is pretty interesting that a few Army trucks had Quad 50's mounted on a turret in the bed of a 5-Ton. Seems like the Navy could have helped the Marines outfit a few trucks with some hard hitting AA platforms like that...
- The Hard Ride, Vietnam Gun Trucks, James Lyles, Planet Art, 2002, ISBN 971-93037-1-9
- The Hard Ride, Vietnam Gun Trucks; Part Two, James Lyles, 2011
- Gun Trucks In Vietnam, Have Guns - Will Travel, James Lyles, Rhame (Random?) House Publishers, 2012
Just ordered all three books. Thanks for the lead!.
Pretty amazing that a search brings up nothing about the USMC and War Wagons. No pictures that don't have US Army on anything I hunted down... I did find the books by Jame Lyles.
It is pretty interesting that a few Army trucks had Quad 50's mounted on a turret in the bed of a 5-Ton. Seems like the Navy could have helped the Marines outfit a few trucks with some hard hitting AA platforms like that...
- The Hard Ride, Vietnam Gun Trucks, James Lyles, Planet Art, 2002, ISBN 971-93037-1-9
- The Hard Ride, Vietnam Gun Trucks; Part Two, James Lyles, 2011
- Gun Trucks In Vietnam, Have Guns - Will Travel, James Lyles, Rhame (Random?) House Publishers, 2012
There’s at least one picture, maybe two, in the book that shows the Marine gun truck. As I recall, all Marine Corps gun trucks were called “war wagons”. If they also had more personalized names, I don’t recall seeing any.Just ordered all three books. Thanks for the lead!
I'll see if I can find pics of itThere’s at least one picture, maybe two, in the book that shows the Marine gun truck. As I recall, all Marine Corps gun trucks were called “war wagons”. If they also had more personalized names, I don’t recall seeing any.
My gun truck “War Wagon” is modeled on the 359th TC gun truck by the same name. I upgraded it as I believe that was what would have been done by crews who drove the original. I go to a few local parades and to the nearby Air Force Base open house every year. If you have the chance, my build pictures may be on this section.
The Navy inadvertently left a 20mm machine gun unguarded. It ended up on an Army gun truck. There’s pictures of quad .50’s on 2.5 and 5 ton trucks. The quads were leftovers from World War 2 and the Korean War. If I could find the parts and pieces, I’d build a quad .50 truck. Imagine driving that in a parade!
This just reminded me of an ad I saw recently from a guy selling a quad .50 mount, I believe his asking price was @ 35 g's for the mount, add 20 g's more if you wanted the replica .50's........yikes !!This is mine as it sits now. Obviously a work in progress. View attachment 886615
No way I'm spending that kind of cash for a display prop!This just reminded me of an ad I saw recently from a guy selling a quad .50 mount, I believe his asking price was @ 35 g's for the mount, add 20 g's more if you wanted the replica .50's........yikes !!
That deuce belongs to Robert, a member of our group, LoneStar MVPA, who lives up Houston way. The quad mount, unfortunately, belongs to another guy, who has recently decided he wants to sell it, and not cheaply.There was a Deuce in Houston with a quad .50. I’d see it in downtown each year for the Veteran’s Day parade.
Beautiful truck! The hardest part of building a Marine Corps gun truck you already have, the ring mount. The gun box sat a couple feet aft of the cargo bed forward bulkhead. There was an antenna and a weapons mount sticking up out of the bed. I need to find my books to jog the old brain housing group.This is mine as it sits now. Obviously a work in progress. View attachment 886615
Thanks. I'm 4 years into it now. I'll be welding on the toothpicks over the winter and fabricating 2 pedestal mounts for the bed. I can't believe how scarce replica guns are right now. I have the David Doyle book but not a single USMC truck in it. I know the deuces didn't last long as gun trucks but I'm not going to look for a 5-ton. I have limited space on my property and there is just something about a deuce...Beautiful truck! The hardest part of building a Marine Corps gun truck you already have, the ring mount. The gun box sat a couple feet aft of the cargo bed forward bulkhead. There was an antenna and a weapons mount sticking up out of the bed. I need to find my books to jog the old brain housing group.
There’s also a couple other books with info. The first was written by David Doyle and the second… hmm, got to find it again. Regardless, you’ve got a real winner!
I need to dig around in my dungeon, I mean basement, for all the books I’ve got on the subject. The one book I don’t have is the Marine Corps manual on converting vehicles into improvised gun trucks.Thanks. I'm 4 years into it now. I'll be welding on the toothpicks over the winter and fabricating 2 pedestal mounts for the bed. I can't believe how scarce replica guns are right now. I have the David Doyle book but not a single USMC truck in it. I know the deuces didn't last long as gun trucks but I'm not going to look for a 5-ton. I have limited space on my property and there is just something about a deuce...
If you find it, let me know!I need to dig around in my dungeon, I mean basement, for all the books I’ve got on the subject. The one book I don’t have is the Marine Corps manual on converting vehicles into improvised gun trucks.
Unfortunately it requires a paid subscription to read the article beyond the 1st paragragh.Some shots of trucks on convoys.Braving Vietnam’s Roads
John Teasdale reports on the dangers the US Marines faced when...www.keymilitary.com
If you find that manual, I'd like to see it also. I don't think there is one. We had gun trucks in Iraq and other than as issued any others were made on site usually as per whatever you could scrounge. In the early days of the ground war, we still had soft doors and tops on Hummers, as time went on our version of armor was what we called "hillbilly armor", stuff cut off of Iraqi vehicles, sometimes off our own vehicles, other times just "stuff" bolted or welded on a lot like some Vietnam trucks looked like. A later trip back over had for real up armored Hummers, armored kits made for the big trucks, "hillbilly armor" was no more.I need to dig around in my dungeon, I mean basement, for all the books I’ve got on the subject. The one book I don’t have is the Marine Corps manual on converting vehicles into improvised gun trucks.