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Old 09-25-2010, 08:06 AM
smudger252 smudger252 is offline
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Location: Dundee, Scotland
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Default Hi guys from a wet and windy Dundee SCOTLAND.

I found the site after being re-directed by the RBLR(royal british legion riders branch) and thought I'd register.

I served in 29 Commando Regt Royal Artillery and have served alongside some of your troops and marines on active service in some of the worst shitholes in the world.

Looks like a good site you have here and am very much looking forward to joining in your discussions

Allan
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Old 09-25-2010, 03:54 PM
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David David is offline
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Welcome to the site Allan.
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Old 09-27-2010, 02:12 PM
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The Commando Gunners - Green Beret

To become a Commando Gunner our soldiers must pass the arduous All Arms Commando Course held at Royal Marines The Training Centre, Lympstone. This earns them the right to proudly wear the coveted Green Beret. 29 (two-nine)Commando Regiment Royal Artillery are spearhead troops trained as amphibious, mountain and arctic warfare specialists. They can equally operate at the other extreme in the desert or jungle. The Commando Gunners are equipped with twelve 105mm Light Guns and Fire Support Teams (FSTs) trained to coordinate their firepower. The FSTs also coordinate other indirect fire support assets such as mortars, fast jets, attack helicopters and the guns from Royal Naval ships. The batteries from 29 Commando Royal Artillery operate around the world on ship with the Royal Marines. We have served in both Afghanistan and Iraq on recent operations and 29 Commando provide offensive fire support to 3 Commando Brigade Royal Marines.

Our Batteries
7 (Sphinx) Commando Battery
8 (Alma) Commando Battery
23 (Gibraltar 1779-83)/Headquarters Commando Battery
79 (Kirklee) Commando Battery
148 (Meiktila) Commando Battery

Location
We are based across the length of the country; in Arbroath Scotland, Poole Dorset and Plymouth Devon. The Commando Gunners recruit from the South West of England but also attract Commando volunteers from all over the UK. Our address is The Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, PL1 2PD.
29 Commando Batteries
29 Commando RA is made up of the following Commando batteries:


29 CDO RA use the L118 105mm howitzer as its main gun. (US variant, the M119 is pictured). The L118 can fire 6-8 rounds per minute to a range of 17km. Crucially, for Commando operations, the gun can be transported slung beneath helicopters and towed by vehicles.
US DoD photo by:
SSG KEVIN L. MOSES SR., USA23 (Gibraltar 1779 - 1783) Commando Headquarters Battery Royal Artillery
23 Battery, also based at the Royal Citadel Plymouth, provides command and control for 29 Commando. They provide signals and admin support and deploy alongside the other batteries when on operations. A radar troop from 23 is used to detect enemy artillery fire, plotting the incoming arc of fire and pinpointing the firing position. This techniques has been used to direct counter-fire against enemy mortar positions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

7 (Sphinx) Commando Battery Royal Artillery
Based at Arbroath, Angus, home of 45 commando, 7 Battery comprises 6 105mm guns and 3 observation parties.

8 (Alma) Commando Battery Royal Artillery
Also known as 'Black Eight', based at the Royal Citadel Plymouth. Alma consists of 6 105mm guns and 3 observation parties.

79 (Kirkee) Commando Battery Royal Artillery
Also based at the Royal Citadel Plymouth, 29 Battery consists of 6 light 105mm guns and 3 observation parties.

148 (Meiktila) Commando Forward Observation Battery Royal Artillery
148 Battery are highly-trained Army and Navy personnel tasked with calling in Naval gunfire in support of 3 Command Brigade operations. Apart from Commando training, 148 Bty men also undergo training in parachuting and submarine infil/exfil techniques.


The Royal Regiment of Artillery, generally known as the Royal Artillery (RA), is, despite its name, a corps of the British Army. It is made up of a number of regiments.

History

Before the 18th century, artillery 'traynes' were raised by Royal Warrant for specific campaigns and disbanded again when they were over. On 26 May 1716, however, by Royal Warrant of George I two regular companies of field artillery, each 100 men strong, were raised at Woolwich. On 1 April 1722 these companies were grouped with independent artillery companies at Gibraltar and Minorca to form the Royal Regiment of Artillery, commanded by Colonel Albert Bogard. The regiment expanded rapidly and by 1757 had 24 companies divided into two battalions, as well as a Cadet Company formed in 1741. By 1771 there were 32 companies in four battalions, as well as two Invalid Companies comprising older and unfit men employed in garrison duties. In January 1793, two troops of Royal Horse Artillery (RHA) were raised to provide fire support for the cavalry, joined by two more in November 1793. All RHA personnel were mounted. The Royal Irish Artillery was absorbed in 1801.

The regiment was under the control of the Board of Ordnance until the Board was abolished in 1855. Thereafter the regiment came under the War Office along with the rest of the army. In 1861 the regiment absorbed the artillery of the British East India Company – 21 horse batteries and 48 field batteries – which brought its strength up to 29 horse batteries, 73 field batteries and 88 heavy batteries. On 1 July 1899, the Royal Artillery was divided into three groups: the Royal Horse Artillery and Royal Field Artillery comprised one group, while the coastal defence, mountain, siege and heavy batteries were split off into another group named the Royal Garrison Artillery. The third group continued to be titled simply Royal Artillery, and was responsible for ammunition storage and supply. Which section a gunner belonged to was indicated by collar badges (R.A., R.F.A., R.H.A., or R.G.A.). The RFA and RHA also dressed as mounted men, whereas the RGA dressed like foot soldiers. The three sections effectively functioned as separate corps. This arrangement lasted until 1924, when the three amalgamated once more. The Royal Horse Artillery, which has always had separate traditions, uniforms and insignia, still retains a separate identity within the regiment, however, and is considered (by its members at least) to be an Ă©lite.
The Royal Artillery Today
The Royal Artillery is equipped with a variety of equipment and fulfils a wide range of roles, including:

Long range observation, Unmanned air vehicle surveillance, Amphibious / Airborne artillery, Armoured Artillery, Long Range Missile Systems, Air defence.

The Captain General of the regiment is Queen Elizabeth II. The post was previously known as Colonel-in-Chief until King George VI expressed the desire to be known as Captain General. The head of the regiment is the Master Gunner, St. James's Park.

The Royal Regiment of Artillery comprises both regular (full-time) and volunteer (part-time) units. The current regiments of the Royal Artillery are:
Regular Army

Camp flag of the RA: "Everywhere" - "Where Right and Glory Lead"

*King's Troop, Royal Horse Artillery (Ceremonial/Home Defence)
*1st Regiment Royal Horse Artillery (Armoured Artillery)
** A Battery (The Chestnut Troop)
** B Battery
** E Battery
** L/N (NĂ©ry) Battery (The Eagle Troop)
** O/HQ Battery (The Rocket Troop)
*3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery 'The Liverpool and Manchester Gunners' (Armoured Artillery)
**C Battery
** D Battery
** J (Sidi Rezegh) Battery
** M (HQ) Battery
*4th Regiment Royal Artillery 'The North East Gunners' (Armoured Artillery)
**3/29 (Corunna) Battery
** 88 (Arracan) Battery
** 94 (New Zealand) HQ Battery
** 97 Battery (Lawson's Company)
*5th Regiment Royal Artillery 'The North, East & West Yorkshire Gunners' (Surveillance and Target Acquisition)
**K (Hondeghem) Battery
** P Battery (The Dragon Troop)
** Q (Sanna's Post) HQ Battery
** 4/73 (Sphinx) Special Observation Post Battery
** 53 (Louisbourg) Battery
*7th (Parachute) Regiment Royal Horse Artillery (7 PARA) 'The Airborne Gunners' (Field Artillery [Airborne])
**F (Sphinx) Parachute Battery
** G Parachute Battery (Mercer's Troop)
** H Parachute HQ Battery (Ramsay's Troop)
** I Parachute Battery (Bull's Troop)
*12th Regiment Royal Artillery (Air Defence Artillery)
**T/HQ Battery (Shah Sujah's Troop)
** 9 (Plassey) Battery
** 12 (Minden) Battery
** 58 (Eyre's) Battery
*14th Regiment Royal Artillery (Training and Support)
**1st Battery 'The Blazers'
** 24 (Irish) Battery
** 34 (Seringapatam) Battery
*16th Regiment Royal Artillery 'The London and Kent Gunners' (Air Defence Artillery)
**11 (Sphinx) HQ Battery
** 14 (Cole's Kop) Battery
** 20 Battery (Commando)
** 30 Battery (Rogers's Company)
** 32 (Minden) Battery
*19th Regiment Royal Artillery 'The Highland Gunners' (Armoured Artillery)
**13 (Martinique 1809) HQ Battery
** 5 (Gibraltar 1779–1783) Battery
** 28/143 Battery (Tomb's Troop)
** 52 (Niagara) Battery
** 127 (Dragon) Battery
*26th Regiment Royal Artillery 'The West Midland Gunners' (Armoured Artillery)
**16 Battery (Sandham's Company)
** 17 (Corunna) Battery
** 55 (The Residency) HQ Battery
** 159 (Colenso) Battery
*29 Commando Regiment Royal Artillery 'The Commando Gunners' (Field Artillery Commando)
**7 (Sphinx) Commando Battery
** 8 (Alma) Commando Battery
** 23 (Gibraltar 1779–1783) Commando HQ Battery
** 79 (Kirkee) Commando Battery
** 148 (Meiktila) Commando Forward Observation Battery
*32nd Regiment Royal Artillery (Surveillance and Target Acquisition – Unmanned Air Vehicles)
**18 (Quebec 1759) Battery
** 22 (Gibraltar 1779–1783) Battery
** 42 (Alem Hamza) Battery
** 46 (Talavera) HQ Battery
** 57 (Bhurtpore) Battery
*39th Regiment Royal Artillery (MLRS)
**35 Battery
** 56 (Olpherts) HQ Battery
** 74 Battery (The Battle Axe Company)
** 132 Battery (The Bengal Rocket Troop)
** 176 (Abu Klea) Battery
*40th Regiment Royal Artillery 'The Lowland Gunners' (Armoured Artillery)
**6/36 (Arcot 1751) Battery
** 38 (Seringapatam) Battery
** 49 (Inkerman) HQ Battery
** 129 (Dragon) Battery
** 137 (Java) Battery
*47th Regiment Royal Artillery 'The Hampshire and Sussex Gunners' (Air Defence Artillery)
**10 (Assaye) Battery
** 21 (Gibraltar 1779–1783) Battery
** 25/170 (Imjin) Battery
** 31 HQ Battery
** 43 Battery (Lloyd's Company)
*Royal School of Artillery
*Band of the Royal Artillery
Territorial Army
*Honourable Artillery Company (Surveillance and Target Acquisition) (London) - The HAC is under the operational control of the Royal Artillery, but is a separate regiment in its own right, with its own customs and traditions.
**HQ Squadron
**1 Squadron
**2 Squadron
**3 Squadron
**Signal Squadron
**Liaison Troop
*100th (Yeomanry) Regiment Royal Artillery (Armoured/Field/Airborne Artillery)
*Regimental headquarters located at 201 Battery Luton
** 201 (Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Yeomanry) Battery (Luton/ Romford) (Airborne Artillery attached to 16th AA)
** 266 (Gloucestershire) Parachute Battery (Bristol)
** 307 (South Nottinghamshire Hussars Yeomanry RHA) Battery (Bulwell, Nottingham)
*101st (Northumbrian) Regiment Royal Artillery (Volunteers) (MLRS/Surveillance and Target Acquisition)
** HQ (Tynemouth Volunteer Artillery) Battery (Gateshead)
** 203 (Elswick) Battery (Blyth)
** 204 (The Tyneside Scottish) Battery (Newcastle upon Tyne)
** 205 (3rd Durham Volunteer Artillery) Battery (South Shields)
** 269 (West Riding) Battery (Leeds)
*103rd (Lancastrian Artillery Volunteers) Regiment Royal Artillery (Armoured/Field Artillery)
** 208 (3rd West Lancashire) Battery (Liverpool)
** 209 (The Manchester and St Helens Artillery) Battery (St Helens/Manchester)
** 216 (The Bolton Artillery) Battery (Bolton)
*104th Regiment Royal Artillery (Volunteers) (Close Air Defence Artillery)
** 210 (Stafforshire) Battery (Wolverhampton)
** 211 (South Wales) Battery (Newport/Cardiff/Abertillery)
** 214 (Worcestershire) Battery (Worcester)
** 217 (City of Newport) HQ Battery (Newport)
*105th Regiment Royal Artillery (Volunteers) 'The Scottish & Ulster Gunners' (Field Artillery)
** Regimental Headquarters (Edinburgh)
** 206 (Ulster) Battery (Newtownards/Coleraine)
** 207 (City of Glasgow) Battery (Glasgow/Motherwell/Edinburgh)
** 212 (Highland) Battery (Arbroath/Kirkcaldy)
*106th (Yeomanry) Regiment Royal Artillery (Air Defence Artillery)
** 202 (Suffolk and Norfolk Yeomanry) Battery (Bury St Edmunds)
** 265 (Home Counties) Battery (Grove Park)
** 457 (Hampshire Yeomanry) Battery (Southampton)

The Royal Artillery's traditional home is Woolwich, in south east London but much of their training activity takes place on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire.
Equipment
Air Defence
The Royal Artillery is equipped with two main weapons in the air defence mission;
*Rapier FSC - Rapier is the standard Low Level Air Defence (LLAD) weapon in the British Army. In the Royal Artillery, it equips 16 Regiment, and a battery of 106 Regiment RA(V).
*Starstreak HVM - Starstreak is a continuation of the Blowpipe and Javelin missile series. In the RA it can be used as a shoulder launched weapon, in the Lightweight Multiple Launcher (LML) or mounted on a Stormer armoured vehicle. The weapon equips 12 Regiment, 47 Regiment, 104 Regiment RA(V), 105 Regiment RA(V), and two batteries of 106 Regiment RA(V).
Close Support
In the support mission, the Royal Artillery has three types of weapon;
*MLRS - the Multiple Launch Rocket System equips the "heavy" regiments of the Royal Artillery, 39 Regiment and 101(V) Regiment.
*AS90 - the AS90 is a self-propelled gun that equips five field regiments, 1 RHA, 3 RHA, 4 Regiment, 19 Regiment and 26 Regiment.
*Light gun - the Light Gun is a 105 mm howitzer used in the close support mission in support of light or specialist forces. It equips three regular regiments, 7 (Para) RHA, 29 (Commando) Regt RA and 40 Regiment RA, as well as three Territorial Army Regiments - 100 Regt RA(V), 103 Regt RA(V) and 105 Regt RA(V).
Surveillance and Target Acquisition
*COBRA, MAMBA, ASP - the COunter Battery RAdar (Cobra), Mobile Artillery Monitoring Battlefield Asset (Mamba) and Advanced Sound ranging Program (ASP) are the main pieces of equipment used in the battlefield surveillance mission by 5 Regiment.
*Phoenix UAV - the Phoenix Unmanned Aerial Vehicle is utilised in the surveillance mission by 32 Regiment.
*Desert Hawk UAV - the Desert Hawk Unmanned Aerial Vehicle is a smaller, more discreet vehicle. Also operated by 32 Regiment.
Miscellaneous Facts
* The Royal Artillery does not carry Colours. Its guns are its colours and are saluted on parade.
* Since it is present in every campaign in which the British Army fights, the Royal Artillery does not have Battle Honours. Instead, it has the motto and battle honour Ubique ("Everywhere"), granted by William IV in 1833. Its subsidiary motto is Quo fas et gloria ducunt ("Where Right and Glory Lead"). Both mottoes are shared with the Royal Engineers, due to the shared Board of Ordnance history.
* Many Regular Army batteries bear an Honour Title (in parentheses) commemorating an exceptional act of service.
* Battalions and Companies were renamed Brigades and Batteries in 1859. In 1938, Brigades were renamed Regiments.
* Until 1794, the Royal Artillery hired civilian horses and drivers to haul its guns. In that year the Corps of Captains' Commissaries and Drivers was formed to provide these services. This was reformed as the Corps of Gunner Drivers in 1801. In 1806 these became the Royal Artillery Drivers. In 1822 these were disbanded and from that date all men enlisted into the Royal Artillery as "Gunner and Driver" until 1918, when they simply became Gunners. None of this applied to the Royal Horse Artillery, which had always had its own drivers.
* During World War II comedian Spike Milligan served as a signaller in the 56th Heavy Regiment, D Battery, as Gunner Milligan, 954024.
* On 1 April 1947, all Royal Artillery units (except the Royal Horse Artillery) were placed on a single roll. This meant that each battery and regiment carried a unique number (whereas before there could have been, for instance, a 10th Field Battery, 10th Heavy Battery, 10th Coastal Battery etc). The numbers of the batteries within a regiment bear no relation to the regiment or each other. Royal Horse Artillery batteries (and batteries that used to be RHA) bear letters instead of numbers.
* All British coast defence artillery units were disbanded in the 1950s.
* When on parade with its guns, the Royal Horse Artillery takes precedence over every other regiment and corps in the British Regular Army (and parades at the right of the line). Otherwise it immediately follows the Household Cavalry. The rest of the Royal Artillery takes precedence immediately after the regiments of the Royal Armoured Corps. If the Territorial Army were included in the parade, the honour of right of the line would fall to the HAC being the oldest regiment which has guns as colours.
* In 1871 the Royal Regiment formed two batteries of garrison artillery which became the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery.
* During World War II, the Royal Artillery created a new type of formation, the Army Group Royal Artillery to command artillery assets at levels higher than division.
* In recognition of its history, 25/170 (Imjin) Battery of 47 Regiment wears the United States Distinguished Unit Citation that was awarded to 170 Battery for its service at the Battle of the Imjin River during the Korean War (see Non-U.S. winners of U.S. gallantry awards).
Order of Precedence
See also
* Artillery
* Royal Artillery Memorial
* Royal Artillery Barracks
* Royal School of Artillery
* Firepower - The Royal Artillery Museum
* Bermuda Militia Artillery
* Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery
* Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery
* Royal Regiment of New Zealand Artillery
* 79th Light Anti-Aircraft Battery
External links
* Royal Regiment of Artillery
* /94 Locating Royal Artillery


SMUDGER252

Ain't it grand to have History behind you! Welcome to our site.
__________________
Boats

O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
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  #4  
Old 09-27-2010, 03:04 PM
smudger252 smudger252 is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Dundee, Scotland
Posts: 7
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Cheers Boats

I just didn't want to show off
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