Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord! |
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here. |
M26 hand grenade: Difference between revisions
Orca1 9904 (talk | contribs) (→Film) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:200px-M-67handgrenade.jpg|thumb|right|600px|M26 HE Frag hand grenade]] | |||
The '''M26 hand grenade''' was developed in the years right after World War 2. This was the first model of handgrenade which used a thin outer shell which enclosed either notched wire or shot to serve as the lethal fragments rather than the grenade body itself. This new type of grenade was much more reliable than the old Mk II Pineapple grenades. The M26 was developed and adopted by the U.S. Army just before the Korean War (1950) but since most units still had huge inventories of Mk II "Pineapple" grenades left over after World War 2, the M26 rarely saw action in the Korean War. Throughout the 1950s it was the issued hand grenade for all Army units, despite the fact that we still had huge leftover inventories of the MK II as well. In the early 1960s another improved version of the M26 was adopted, the '''M61'''. The '''M61''' had a thin sheet metal body with a notched coiled flat wire and improved fuse. | |||
The Vietnam War: Though the M61 was now the official new hand grenade of the U.S. Armed forces, the U.S. shipped tens of thousands of existing stock of Mk II Pineapple and M26 grenades to South Vietnam, for use by the ARVN (Army of the Republic of Vietnam). These were stored in huge military warehouses throughout the country and many M26s were provided to American troops in the field as well, despite the fact that all new grenade production only provided the M61. So you see a mix of M26 and M61 hand grenades in use by American forces in Vietnam. Most authors of war books or military articles never bother to reveal the complicated munitions supply issues of the conflict, and most only refer to the M26 as the hand grenade of choice, despite the fact that it is more likely that the virtually identical M61 is really the hand grenade that was used. | |||
'''The M26 hand grenade has appeared in the following films and television series used by the following actors:''' | '''The M26 hand grenade has appeared in the following films and television series used by the following actors:''' | ||
=== Film === | === Film === |
Revision as of 21:06, 19 July 2008
The M26 hand grenade was developed in the years right after World War 2. This was the first model of handgrenade which used a thin outer shell which enclosed either notched wire or shot to serve as the lethal fragments rather than the grenade body itself. This new type of grenade was much more reliable than the old Mk II Pineapple grenades. The M26 was developed and adopted by the U.S. Army just before the Korean War (1950) but since most units still had huge inventories of Mk II "Pineapple" grenades left over after World War 2, the M26 rarely saw action in the Korean War. Throughout the 1950s it was the issued hand grenade for all Army units, despite the fact that we still had huge leftover inventories of the MK II as well. In the early 1960s another improved version of the M26 was adopted, the M61. The M61 had a thin sheet metal body with a notched coiled flat wire and improved fuse.
The Vietnam War: Though the M61 was now the official new hand grenade of the U.S. Armed forces, the U.S. shipped tens of thousands of existing stock of Mk II Pineapple and M26 grenades to South Vietnam, for use by the ARVN (Army of the Republic of Vietnam). These were stored in huge military warehouses throughout the country and many M26s were provided to American troops in the field as well, despite the fact that all new grenade production only provided the M61. So you see a mix of M26 and M61 hand grenades in use by American forces in Vietnam. Most authors of war books or military articles never bother to reveal the complicated munitions supply issues of the conflict, and most only refer to the M26 as the hand grenade of choice, despite the fact that it is more likely that the virtually identical M61 is really the hand grenade that was used.
The M26 hand grenade has appeared in the following films and television series used by the following actors:
Film
- Tom Cruise as Ray Ferrier in War of the Worlds
- One of the Redhook chop-shop terrorists in The Siege
- In the back of General McAllister (Mitchell Ryan)'s car in Lethal Weapon
- Danny Glover as Detective Roger Murtaugh in Lethal Weapon (turns out to be a smoke grenade in disguise)
- A "Company Man" in Mr. & Mrs. Smith
- U.S. Army soldiers in We Were Soldiers
- U.S. Army soldiers in Forrest Gump
- Used as part of an improvised explosive device in Tomorrow Never Dies