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Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR


Edsel

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The standard BAR M1918A2 from Pulp Hero page 305, is a bulky focus.

 

Clyde Barrow (of Bonnie & Clyde fame) used a BAR on which he had cut down the barrel and cut down the butt to enable the weapon to be lighter and more quickly brought into action. Of course I imagine that such a modification ought to impart a -1 Range Modifier and perhaps increase the STR minimum of the weapon since there is less weight to counter recoil. The thing had to be hip fired since the butt was now too short.

 

In your opinion would this allow the weapon to do away with the "bulky" limitation? The PER Modifier of a standard BAR is +7 how much less do you think the PER Modifier would be for the cut-down version?

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

Why is that munchkin? He is citing a well known historical example' date=' so you know that it's "realistic." Now if he said that he wanted to do the same with a water-cooled machine gun, then we would be talking munchkin.[/quote']

 

I believe he was calling Mr. Barrow's action munchkin...

 

Not to his face, mind you.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

I believe he was calling Mr. Barrow's action munchkin...

 

Not to his face, mind you.

 

Close. :)

 

It was more of an ironic inference that if a player wanted to do something similar in a game, and no one in the group had heard of Mr. Barrow's having done so IRL (or maybe even if they had), that player would be (falsely, IMO) accused of munchkinism.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

I think this is mostly going to affect the concealability, which is the point. The STR min wouldn't change much (if anything it might go down 1 or 2 points due to weight reduction).

 

Range is unlikely to be affected all that much. What you would be losing would be the bonus a rifle would give you vs. range.

 

Typically the BAR is used for suppressive fire or general autofire uses, much less on the aimed shot front.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

I think this is mostly going to affect the concealability, which is the point. The STR min wouldn't change much (if anything it might go down 1 or 2 points due to weight reduction).

 

Range is unlikely to be affected all that much. What you would be losing would be the bonus a rifle would give you vs. range.

 

Typically the BAR is used for suppressive fire or general autofire uses, much less on the aimed shot front.

 

Yes, reduce the STR min by 1, it would be a shorter weapon and a little lighter.

Reduce the range bonus. In the military the BAR is used suppressive fire or general autofire uses, but a skilled operator can use it for precise shots. Barrow was considered (by accounts of his actions) a good shot with it. Barrow IMHO had one or two skill levels in BAR.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

str min should go up, we are talking about firing a 30.06 (a full sized rifle round)on full auto with no shoulder stock to brace against

 

now it could be braced against the get away car during a getaway

the BAR has only 20 rnds per clip so it is not ment for general suppresion

I feel in this situation the Bar is ment as a BFG for Pre attacks while in the bank and then used to disable any vehicle that may try to pursue

 

I think this is mostly going to affect the concealability, which is the point. The STR min wouldn't change much (if anything it might go down 1 or 2 points due to weight reduction).

 

Range is unlikely to be affected all that much. What you would be losing would be the bonus a rifle would give you vs. range.

 

Typically the BAR is used for suppressive fire or general autofire uses, much less on the aimed shot front.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

Close. :)

 

It was more of an ironic inference that if a player wanted to do something similar in a game, and no one in the group had heard of Mr. Barrow's having done so IRL (or maybe even if they had), that player would be (falsely, IMO) accused of munchkinism.

 

 

I got it.

 

I just explained the set up, and left the subtext for the reader to discover once the initial misunderstanding was resolved.

 

Most of human advancement is munchkinism, if you think about it...

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

I got it.

 

I just explained the set up, and left the subtext for the reader to discover once the initial misunderstanding was resolved.

 

Most of human advancement is munchkinism, if you think about it...

 

Yep. When you can change the world around you instead of just reacting to it, that's munchkinism in most gamers' eyes.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

I got it.

 

I just explained the set up, and left the subtext for the reader to discover once the initial misunderstanding was resolved.

 

Most of human advancement is munchkinism, if you think about it...

 

That's kind of deep.

 

I imagine some guy playing a 5th level Caveman saying, "I want to be able to buy the Create Fire feat that was only available to the Shaman class and there's nothing saying I can't."

 

"My character has a club too, but he has lashed a sharp rock to it with hide strips so it does more damage. What?? Tell me where it says in the rules that you can't do that. In fact, I want to put them on the ends of lightweight sticks an fire them out of a thing called a bow, so I can have a ranged attack better than just throwing things."

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

According to interviews with surving gang members and family Bonniie just reloaded during fire fights. She practice with with them. the intresting thing is they made thier living robbing gas stations with an average take of about 15 dollars and gas and food.

some thing like a hundred robberies, it was one of the ways they got found it was easy to track them to the area they where in.

 

and about the firepower

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

At 11 p.m. that night, Sheriff Coffey led a group of officers armed with Thompson submachine guns toward the cabins.[19] But in a pitched gunfight at considerable distances, the submachine guns proved no match for Clyde Barrow's preferred Browning Automatic Rifles, stolen July 7, 1933 from the National Guard armory at Enid, Oklahoma

 

the Posse chose to arm itself with BARs.

 

the Barrow gang killed nine police officers which largetst total I have ever read about.

 

You ride with the gang you die with the gang.

 

Lord Ghee

El paso TX

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

I've actually seen the BAR in question, it is at the Texas Rangers museum in Waco, TX. As I recall the most noticable modification was the removal of the bipod, I don't believe the stock was removed, just trimmed down probably to fit him better. It was 10 years ago that I was there so I could be remembering wrong, they had several BARs on display.

 

The BAR and Colt Monitor (civilian BAR) were actually fairly popular with gangsters when available because they were quite effective at taking out pursuing police cars, much better than shotguns or Tommy guns. The BAR was also known for its accuracy when fired in slow aimed fire.

 

 

Personally I don't think the BAR or BREN should have the bulky limitation, they are basically just big rifles. They were part of a regular rifle squad and could keep up with the riflemen. Now I could see the Browning M1919A6 or MG42 having the bulky lim as they were considerably larger, heavier and belt fed which is one of the reasons they were seperate elements in a platoon.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

In case anyone is curious...

 

In my current Pulp Hero game one of the players is a typical two-fisted hero type. The PC has a 20 STR and uses a BAR whenever he can get away with it. As it turns out he was able to get the weapon to the big ending fight in the Hero Plus Adventure "Curse of the Vulture God."

 

This was a huge fight. The High Priest, 4 summoned mummies and 40 Vulture cultists (half armed with old 6-shot carbines) verses 5 Player Characters and 10 Brotherhood of the Western Ankh (all armed well). The BAR was very effective in this fight (as was the flamethrower they had gotten their hands on). It was a really huge battle and took us about 2 1/2 hours to fight to conclusion.

 

All of the BAR questions stem from the PC wanting to somehow lighten the weapon so it would not be bulky. Since it was mainly used while braced behind a vehicle the bulky aspect was really never an issue during this battle.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

Personally I don't think the BAR or BREN should have the bulky limitation' date=' they are basically just big rifles. They were part of a regular rifle squad and could keep up with the riflemen. Now I could see the Browning M1919A6 or MG42 having the bulky lim as they were considerably larger, heavier and belt fed which is one of the reasons they were seperate elements in a platoon.[/quote']

 

Dude, have you ever toted or fired a Bren? I have, back in ATC days. It's as heavy as **** (way heavier than a heavy rifle like a Enfield .303) and also is hard to control on auto (oddly Bren's don't really kick: you have to brace yourself, because they actually pull forward and slightly to the side). According to my dad, standard practice in the field was to give the bren to the biggest guy in the section and then parcel the ammo out across his mates. I've never seen a working MG42, but I have hefted the one at the armoury here and it's only (if memory serves) marginally heavier than the Bren.

 

Edit: turns out my memory isn't too faulty - according to Wiki, there's about 2 pounds difference between Bren and MG42 in weight

 

cheers, Mark

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

Dude, have you ever toted or fired a Bren? I have, back in ATC days. It's as heavy as **** (way heavier than a heavy rifle like a Enfield .303) and also is hard to control on auto (oddly Bren's don't really kick: you have to brace yourself, because they actually pull forward and slightly to the side). According to my dad, standard practice in the field was to give the bren to the biggest guy in the section and then parcel the ammo out across his mates. I've never seen a working MG42, but I have hefted the one at the armoury here and it's only (if memory serves) marginally heavier than the Bren.

 

Edit: turns out my memory isn't too faulty - according to Wiki, there's about 2 pounds difference between Bren and MG42 in weight

 

cheers, Mark

 

 

It's all interpretation, I imagine bulky as appropriate for hip firing a .30 cal water cooled MG, a weapon not intended for firing from the shoulder.

 

I'm not sure about the BREN, it was a much better LMG than the lighter BAR. The BAR was supposed to be used as a rifle, and as a light machinegun when fired from a bipod, that was why it had two rates of fire (some semi and full auto, some slow auto 300 rpm +/- and fast auto 600 rpm +/-). The first BARs didn't even have a bipod, it was to be fired from the hip as the shooter walked across no mans land in WW1.

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

Just so you know

 

We our Soliders and Marines got off the boat in France their brigth shiny new BAR where taken away and put in storage and they where given the Chauchat with it open tray feed which always jamed do to supply fears.

The fighting men hated and gave the Chauchat (pronounced show shat) a fighting mans nickname that rymed.

 

The French learn and licenced the BAR and turn the reciver so that the clip was on the top like the bren. it equiped their infanrty during the interwar and ww II period.

 

The best bar work in movie is in the sand pebbles with Steve McQueen

and a very young Robert Wagner in From heaven to hell

 

Lord Ghee

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

Just so you know

 

We our Soliders and Marines got off the boat in France their brigth shiny new BAR where taken away and put in storage and they where given the Chauchat with it open tray feed which always jamed do to supply fears.

The fighting men hated and gave the Chauchat (pronounced show shat) a fighting mans nickname that rymed.

 

The French learn and licenced the BAR and turn the reciver so that the clip was on the top like the bren. it equiped their infanrty during the interwar and ww II period.

 

The best bar work in movie is in the sand pebbles with Steve McQueen

and a very young Robert Wagner in From heaven to hell

 

Lord Ghee

 

Not quite. While all major armies entered WWI with what were later called medium machine guns, it was the French who first realised saw that a new tactical category of "light machine gun" had emerged on the battlefield. Their first attempt to design an LMG on the fly, the Chauchat, was a notorious failure. Nevertheless, American troops in Europe were issued with Chauchats and British Lewis Guns because there was as yet no American equivalent. The Browning Automatic Rifle, of which a Frenchman might say that it was magnificent but no LMG, began to appear in 1918.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browning_Automatic_Rifle

The French were very impressed with the Browning action, but less so by the BAR. The nature of infantry warfare had been transformed by the LMG, and the French army was about to reorganise on a fundamental level, replacing the 13 man rifle squad with a 9 man LMG-based section. For that they needed an LMG, which, for all its similarities to the BAR, the Mle 24 was.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mle_1924

Americans, who fought the entire Second World War in the conceptually obsolete squad organisation with the unsatisfactory BAR, have been contriving to ignore this ever since, hence the premiere tactical game of World War II, Squad Leader, which contrives not to notice that no army fought WWII in squads except the American.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

Not quite. While all major armies entered WWI with what were later called medium machine guns, it was the French who first realised saw that a new tactical category of "light machine gun" had emerged on the battlefield. Their first attempt to design an LMG on the fly, the Chauchat, was a notorious failure. Nevertheless, American troops in Europe were issued with Chauchats and British Lewis Guns because there was as yet no American equivalent. The Browning Automatic Rifle, of which a Frenchman might say that it was magnificent but no LMG, began to appear in 1918.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browning_Automatic_Rifle

The French were very impressed with the Browning action, but less so by the BAR. The nature of infantry warfare had been transformed by the LMG, and the French army was about to reorganise on a fundamental level, replacing the 13 man rifle squad with a 9 man LMG-based section. For that they needed an LMG, which, for all its similarities to the BAR, the Mle 24 was.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mle_1924

Americans, who fought the entire Second World War in the conceptually obsolete squad organisation with the unsatisfactory BAR, have been contriving to ignore this ever since, hence the premiere tactical game of World War II, Squad Leader, which contrives not to notice that no army fought WWII in squads except the American.

 

And yet it didn't cost them the war...

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Re: Clyde Barrow's Sawn-Off BAR

 

Not quite. While all major armies entered WWI with what were later called medium machine guns, it was the French who first realised saw that a new tactical category of "light machine gun" had emerged on the battlefield. Their first attempt to design an LMG on the fly, the Chauchat, was a notorious failure. Nevertheless, American troops in Europe were issued with Chauchats and British Lewis Guns because there was as yet no American equivalent. The Browning Automatic Rifle, of which a Frenchman might say that it was magnificent but no LMG, began to appear in 1918.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browning_Automatic_Rifle

The French were very impressed with the Browning action, but less so by the BAR. The nature of infantry warfare had been transformed by the LMG, and the French army was about to reorganise on a fundamental level, replacing the 13 man rifle squad with a 9 man LMG-based section. For that they needed an LMG, which, for all its similarities to the BAR, the Mle 24 was.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mle_1924

Americans, who fought the entire Second World War in the conceptually obsolete squad organisation with the unsatisfactory BAR, have been contriving to ignore this ever since, hence the premiere tactical game of World War II, Squad Leader, which contrives not to notice that no army fought WWII in squads except the American.

 

Not sure this is the correct forum, but I disagree.

First, WWI squads were 8 men, for almost all the participants. WWII squads were also about that size, except for the US.

Two, British Commonwealth squads used the BREN gun, which was magazine fed like the BAR, and so was not really a LMG. (Yes, it was easier for an assistant to reload than the BAR, but still not a LMG.)

Three, the reason the US squad did not center all its tactics around the automatic weapon was that with the M1 semiautomatic rifle, the US squad had much more firepower. The effective rate of fire with a springfield (bolt action) rifle was about 10 rpm (rounds per minute); with an M1 it was 30.

Four, the Germans used squads without LMGs in the units that had the MP44 (first assault rifle, the AK-47 is basically a copy of it).

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