tracer des lignes - definitie. Wat is tracer des lignes
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Wat (wie) is tracer des lignes - definitie

AMMUNITION WHOSE BULLETS EMIT LIGHT OR SMOKE DURING FLIGHT
Tracer rounds; Tracer round; Phosphorus-tipped bullets; Tracer bullets; Tracer fire; Tracer ammo; Tracer projectile
  • M2HB Browning machine gun]] and armor-piercing incendiary (M8) ammunition loaded. Note every fifth round is a red-and-silver-tipped armor-piercing incendiary tracer round (M20).
  • M249 light machine gun]]
  • HMMWV]] ricochet off a decommissioned tank being used as a training target at the [[Air Mobility Warfare Center]].
  • Tracer fire lights up the night sky at [[Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton]] as recruits engage targets during a night-fire exercise.
  • Tracer fire on Finnish-Soviet border during the [[Winter War]] (1939–1940)

Ligne Aérienne Seychelles         
Lignes Aerienne Seychelles; Ligne Aerienne Seychelles; Lignes Aérienne Seychelles
Ligne Aérienne Seychelles (LAS) was a charter airline based on Mahé in Seychelles. The airline was formed in 1986 by Christopher Hurndall, in collaboration with Paul Lewis, and began operating charter flights in December 1986 with a leased Boeing 707 (S7-LAS).
Grumman E-1 Tracer         
  • Grumman E-1B Tracer of RVAW-110 after service aboard USS ''Franklin D. Roosevelt'' in 1976, showing the Grumman-patented ''Sto-Wing'' wing folding arrangement
  • The XTF-1W prototype.
  • WF-2 of VAW-11 on the catapult of USS ''Hancock'' in 1962
  • 3-view line drawing of the Grumman WF-2 Tracker
CARRIER-BASED AIRBORNE EARLY WARNING AIRCRAFT FAMILY BY GRUMMAN
Grumman WF-2; E-1B Tracer; Grumman WF; E-1 Tracer; WF Tracer; Grumman WF Tracer; E-1B
The Grumman E-1 Tracer was the first purpose-built airborne early warning aircraft used by the United States Navy. It was a derivative of the Grumman C-1 Trader and entered service in 1958.
Tracer         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Tracers; Tracer (comics); Tracer (disambiguation); Tracers (song); TRACER
·noun One who, or that which, traces.
II. Tracer ·add. ·noun An inquiry sent out (·esp. in transportation service) for a missing article, as a letter or an express package.
III. Tracer ·add. ·noun A person engaged (·esp. in the express or railway service) in tracing, or searching out, missing articles, as packages or freight cars.

Wikipedia

Tracer ammunition

Tracer ammunition (AMO) (Tracers) are bullets or cannon-caliber projectiles that are built with a small pyrotechnic charge in their base. When fired, the pyrotechnic composition is ignited by the burning powder and burns very brightly, making the projectile trajectory visible to the naked eye during daylight, and very bright during nighttime firing. This allows the shooter to visually trace the flight path of the projectile and thus make necessary ballistic corrections, without having to confirm projectile impacts and without even using the sights of the weapon. Tracer fire can also be used as a marking tool to signal other shooters to concentrate their fire on a particular target during battle.

When used, tracers are usually loaded as every fifth round in machine gun belts, referred to as four-to-one tracer. Platoon and squad leaders will load some tracer rounds in their magazine or even use solely tracers to mark targets for their soldiers to fire on. Tracers are also sometimes placed two or three rounds from the bottom of magazines to alert shooters that their weapons are almost empty. During World War II, aircraft with fixed machine guns or cannons mounted would sometimes have a series of tracer rounds added near the end of the ammunition belts, to alert the pilot that he was almost out of ammunition. However, this practice similarly alerted astute enemies that their foes were nearly out of ammunition. More often, however, the entire magazine was loaded four-to-one, on both fixed offensive and flexible defensive guns, to help mitigate the difficulties of aerial gunnery. Tracers were very common on most WWII aircraft, with the exception of night fighters, which needed to be able to attack and shoot down the enemy before they realized they were under attack, and without betraying their own location to the enemy defensive gunners. The United States relied heavily on tracer ammunition for the defensive Browning M2 .50 caliber machine guns on its heavy bombers such as the B-24 Liberator.