Hand grenade training advice

I may have an opportunity to throw a few hand grenades at a military range. I have read that hand grenade training is one of the most dangerous small arms training scenarios in case of a stress induced brain fart.

Any advice from members with hand grenade experience would be appreciated. Would my level IIA soft body armour be a good idea?

If this thread was about taking a crap, would there be 7 pages about it?

Don't Worry, be Happy ... and don't crap your pants when you pull the pin!
 
I think they got rid of the V-40's due to the characteristic that they could get 'lost in your hand' a lot easier than the C-13 (which absolutely could not get lost in your hand). I had heard there was at least one training fatality with them in CDN svc; It might have been back in the 1970's. -On the plus side, you could carry way more of them than the C-13.

Weight: V-40: 4.8 ounces

Weight: C-13: 14 ounces.

I've got to get to bed now. G'night.
 
You take the safety clip off, and put your middle finger through the safety pin and hold it in your chest then pull the grenade away from your chest so that your arm is straight and back and then toss it in a high arc, that's the standard drill, but whatever you do, pull the grenade away from the pin and throw.

My ol' Sgt taught us to pull the grenade away from the pin and in the same action, wind to throw. So take a coke can, grip the tab and pull the can downward, not the tab upward, and this is done at at hip level. Saves time instead of pulling the pin out then winding for the throw.

I know that my training is well dated but I'm pretty sure that there was more than one instance of people "losing" their grenades pulling them away from the safety pin and that SOP became to hold the grenade firmly and pull the pin away from the grenade to prevent this "unhealthy" occurrence.

I don't have the DND pam but FM3-23.30 states "(3) Grasp the pull ring with the index or middle finger of your nonthrowing hand. Remove the safety pin with a pulling and twisting motion. If the tactical situation permits, observe the safety pin’s removal."

Perhaps someone with current instruction can clarify.
 

well marines are DIFFERENT- i think it's old school vs new school- so what happens when you throw a wp? if they even use them anymore?- you hear WILLIE PETE?- takes too long to call and if you call white out, some bugger's going to think smoke-GRENADE is grenade, and smoke is smoke- the guys of today are too complicated
 
I know that my training is well dated but I'm pretty sure that there was more than one instance of people "losing" their grenades pulling them away from the safety pin and that SOP became to hold the grenade firmly and pull the pin away from the grenade to prevent this "unhealthy" occurrence.

I don't have the DND pam but FM3-23.30 states "(3) Grasp the pull ring with the index or middle finger of your nonthrowing hand. Remove the safety pin with a pulling and twisting motion. If the tactical situation permits, observe the safety pin’s removal."

Perhaps someone with current instruction can clarify.

How's Oct 2007 for current?
 
well marines are DIFFERENT- i think it's old school vs new school- so what happens when you throw a wp? if they even use them anymore?- you hear WILLIE PETE?- takes too long to call and if you call white out, some bugger's going to think smoke-GRENADE is grenade, and smoke is smoke- the guys of today are too complicated

Then check out P.113 5(b)(3). But you are probably right about this old school vs new school thing.

http://books.google.ca/books?id=eTb...X&oi=book_result&resnum=8&ct=result#PPA113,M1

Did I hear you say 'Pop Smoke' ? :D
 
Quote: "I have had to deal with a couple of misfires while blasting. Not for the faint of heart. Running like a mother*ucker was a part of the SOP as I recall."

Those who know me also know that sprinting is not one of my strengths.

One of my jobs(a long time ago) was destroying ordanace that needed blowing, like rocket motors that had been dropped, etc. One of our guys had an old car that was not licensed for the road. He used it to run around the base. We blew stuff in a field on the far side of a runway.

One day three of us unloaded a trunk full of rocket motors and parachute flares (20 pounders) and stacked them neatly. A few half pound blocks of TNT and a fuse were used to blow them.

We lit the 5 minute fuse and walked casually back to the car. It did not start right away. After 10 feet it stalled and died. Then we looked at the stop watch and started sprinting. I have never been faster.
 
Quote: We lit the 5 minute fuse and walked casually back to the car. It did not start right away. After 10 feet it stalled and died. Then we looked at the stop watch and started sprinting. I have never been faster.

I used to bush blast with 1m safety fuse. Generally burned 2:21. We'd set up the round. light the fuse and WALK away. The prospector who taught us to blast told us that a good blaster walks away from his round (it's safer, less chance of falling etc.). After 1:30 we'd find a tree wider than our shoulders and put it between us and the round for protection (get as close as you can to the tree and stick your hardhat against the trunk). The fun starts when you get that rare misfire. With a 1m safety fuse misfire we'd wait 30-40 minutes. Then slowly, staying as low as we could, we'd go back towards the round, staying behind cover as much as possible. When we were as close as we could get to the misfire with cover, we'd pop just our heads up and look for the smoke of the burning fuse. If we didn't see any smoke then whoever lit the fuse sucked it up and ran like a mother*ucker to the round and removed the blasting cap from the stick powder. Nothing to it. Easy peasy. It really motivated you to do a good job hooking up the round so that it didn't misfire in the first place.
 
Then check out P.113 5(b)(3). But you are probably right about this old school vs new school thing.

http://books.google.ca/books?id=eTb...X&oi=book_result&resnum=8&ct=result#PPA113,M1

Did I hear you say 'Pop Smoke' ? :D

when i was in" poppa smoke " was for calling somthing else in- smoke out was a round for the blooper- best one i ever heard for a comeback was juandice johnny- it was usually goofy grape or something else- but we didn't use frag grenades much - usually the blooper did a better job with far less chance of collateral damage- as for the marines vs the army issue, if it's a good procedure, all three services ( 4 if you count the various guards) mirror each other - if i dig out my old tm, i'll probably find something about a vebal warning as well- or maybe not , as we were NOT a seen and heard unit-turns out i was right- no verbal given, but bravo flag? must be shown- like i even know what that is
as far as good things go, it's usually in the marine recon first, then it filters down to the army after about 5 years
 
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All this advice on throwing grenades and not one person has mentioned the single most important thing about throwing a grenade.

Hold the thing so that the spoon is turned toward the palm of your hand. Otherwise the spoon fly's off as soon as you pull the pin which is somewhat alarming.

How NOT to throw a grenade http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=7H_6IAmUaxs
 
All this advice on throwing grenades and not one person has mentioned the single most important thing about throwing a grenade.

Hold the thing so that the spoon is turned toward the palm of your hand. Otherwise the spoon fly's off as soon as you pull the pin which is somewhat alarming.

How NOT to throw a grenade http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=7H_6IAmUaxs

post #13, 5thline down- the one with the picture
 
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