
zostaje zastąpione przez tomahawk?
ty lord serio gadasz do walki wręcz? czy swat tnie ludzi tomahawkami?
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Z hawkiem chodzi oto , ze jest to sprzed personalny , jak widac na zdjeciach typowe hoolligan tools sa troszke przyduzawe.Hawkiem mozna podwazyc okno , rozpieprzyc zwykle drzwi ( np w srodku budynku biurowego) przy rozpoznawaniu budynku parami.
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Czy nadal używają tych narzędzi w jednostkach swat?Z hawkiem chodzi oto , ze jest to sprzed personalny , jak widac na zdjeciach typowe hoolligan tools sa troszke przyduzawe.
Hawkiem mozna podwazyc okno , rozpieprzyc zwykle drzwi ( np w srodku budynku biurowego) przy rozpoznawaniu budynku parami.
Czasami trzeba rozwalic skrzynie , szafe itd.
No tu bym się zgodził, tam jego miejsce, ale nie żeby nosić przy sobie.To sprzet bardzo popularny wlasnie w Police High Risk Entry Teams , US Border Patrol , BNE , znalesc go mozna w bagazniku prawie kazdego oficera ATF.
Zobaczmy co swat ma na głównym wyposażeniu, między innymi :Tomahawk byl i jest rowniez bardzo popularnym sprzetem u Rangersow i to zarowno w Vietnamie jak i obecnie.
Amerykanie nie mają co zrobić z kasą to raz, a dwa kontrakty z armią zawsze były dochodowe, posypał ktoś sosem i zamówienie jest.Fiod , moze i zgodnie z twoja predykcja otwieraja nim puszki z rybkami w oleju , ale prawda jest ze 80 % AT idzie do klientow z army i law enforcemend.
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Tomahawk Strikes a Balance Between Tool and Weapon
April 15 — Regardless of the tomahawk's historic combat uses, American Tomahawk Co.'s Andy Prisco said primarily he considers it to be a tool.
"There's no doubt [that a tomahawk is also a backup weapon], but the entrenching tool is also a backup weapon, so there is nothing new about the tomahawk's ability. It's extremely capable in this regard ... The Patriot and The Last of the Mohicans are well-known movies where a tomahawk is used combatively."
One e-mail sent to the U.S. Army Infantry School supporting adoption of tomahawks came from an instructor in the U.S. Air Force Special Operations School's International Terrorism Division.
He said that while he was deployed in Afghanistan, tomahawks were useful for tasks that field-issue bayonets and fighting knives were too delicate to accomplish. He said troops were constantly borrowing tomahawks from those who had them, and they were used for everything from cutting open foreign metal ammunition cans to ripping apart wooden pallets for construction to kitchen duty, when a cook used one to butcher a goat.
Both Prisco and Ryan Johnson of RMJ Forge say their tomahawks are being chosen by members of a broad spectrum of the military, including elite units from Air Force security groups, Navy SEALs, Army Rangers and special forces. In fact, one special forces team's new patch features an ATC tomahawk crossed with a bayonet and arrow, topped with a skull.
Prisco said that between purchases by individuals and some military units, his firm has sold several thousand tomahawks to armed services personnel.
Johnson said he wasn't at liberty to say how many tomahawks he's sold to members of the military. "It's been enough to keep us busy, let's put it that way."
U.S. forces have much more deadly items in the arsenal, and even bayonets are accepted as military weapons. But despite the tomahawk's dual role as a tool, the prospect of its use as a weapon makes some people uncomfortable.
Johnson said that during an interview at his shop, a reporter held one of his tomahawks. "Don't you think this is kind of vicious?" he was asked.
"And I told her, 'These guys aren't playing tag football out there.' This is serious business. The average person that carries our stuff, they're special forces, and these guys, this is the kind of stuff they need."
Does This Relic From the Past Have a Future?
Currently, service members are buying tomahawks individually or, in some cases, units are using operational funds to buy them for their group. But manufacturers would not be displeased if their products were adopted more widely in the armed services.
"This is not a standard-issue item per se — [but] are we moving that direction? Yes indeed, in my view we are," said ATC's Prisco. "The tomahawk's got a lot of versatility — soldiers don't have to carry seven or eight pieces of larger kit. They can carry a tomahawk and do the same thing."
RMJ Forge's Johnson said in his opinion, the tomahawk won't be a standard-issue item for all of the military, but "I think it will definitely be an issue item for a lot of the special forces eventually."
Prisco added that the appeal of tomahawks goes beyond the military. He said members of the Border Patrol and Department of Justice carry his products along the border, and members of the Drug Enforcement Administration use it when they conduct operations in forest environments.
"As far as firefighting and law enforcement, there are a lot of crossover applications of our products," Prisco said. One message on the forum of ATC's Web site written by a firefighter describes how he used his tomahawk to break a padlock off a gate, then hacked open a door to get access to a burning house.
Johnson said it was a conversation with a firefighter that gave him the idea for a modified tomahawk small enough for firefighters to carry, but big enough for them to cut or pry their way out of a dangerous situation.
"He said, 'I'd love to have one to carry on my personal gear. If you did this and this and this, that would eliminate three things that I'd have to carry — I could just have it all in this one tool.' So that's kinda the direction we've been going, to come up with a multipurpose tool."
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