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Old 30-04-10, 01:17
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ARTY-BOY ARTY-BOY is offline
Rob
 
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Default Tac No. help

Does anyone no the Tac No's for:
5th LAA RCA
8th LAA RCA
I have 73 for both!!!
Cheers
Rob
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Archive of 10th(R/Fus)Medium Regt RA.
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  #2  
Old 30-04-10, 15:24
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Mark W. Tonner Mark W. Tonner is offline
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Originally Posted by ARTY-BOY View Post
Does anyone no the Tac No's for:
5th LAA RCA
8th LAA RCA
I have 73 for both!!!
Cheers
Rob
Rob;

If you mean the Arm of Service (AoS) number, yes, both regiments used the number '73'. 8th LAA Regt was with the 4th Cdn Armd Div and the 5th LAA Regt was with the 5th Cdn Armd Div .

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Old 30-04-10, 16:54
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Cheers Mark
Seems strange both Regts using the same No. Trying to help a chap who has aquired a Helmet in Holland with this painted on and wants to know which Regt it came from.
Regards
Rob
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Old 30-04-10, 17:46
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Default Not Strange - Army!

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Originally Posted by ARTY-BOY View Post
Cheers Mark
Seems strange both Regts using the same No. Trying to help a chap who has aquired a Helmet in Holland with this painted on and wants to know which Regt it came from.
Regards
Rob
You will find a lot of units using the same "number", but they are located in different formations (Brigade, Division, Corps, Army/Army Group). The confusion is avoided by looking at the formation tac sign that usually accompanies the artillery or AoS number.
Visit http://home.cogeco.ca/~gdavidson1/home.html for examples - look at
1st Cdn Inf Div, AoS 47 and then the same for the 2nd and 3rd Cdn Inf Divs. Three separate units with the same AoS sign.

Modern tac signs are less "flashy" but easier to comprehend - you don't have to remember colours or colour patterns...
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Why is it that when you have the $$, you don't have the time, and when you have the time you don't have the $$?
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Old 30-04-10, 18:01
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Originally Posted by ARTY-BOY View Post
Cheers Mark
Seems strange both Regts using the same No. Trying to help a chap who has aquired a Helmet in Holland with this painted on and wants to know which Regt it came from.
Regards
Rob
Hi Rob;

The Arm of Service marking, in this case '73' on a horizontally divided red over blue background, was meant to be read in conjunction with the formation sign carried by the vehicle. In the two Canadian armoured divisions the AoS number ‘73' was used to identify the divisional LAA regiment, while in the three Canadian infantry divisions the AoS number ‘47' was used to identify the divisional LAA regiment. Both ‘Corps Troops’ LAA regiments of I and II Canadian Corps used the AoS number ‘14' with a 2-inch white bar above the Arm of Service marking, denoting Corps Troops.

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Old 30-04-10, 18:03
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RHClarke View Post
You will find a lot of units using the same "number", but they are located in different formations (Brigade, Division, Corps, Army/Army Group). The confusion is avoided by looking at the formation tac sign that usually accompanies the artillery or AoS number.
Visit http://home.cogeco.ca/~gdavidson1/home.html for examples - look at
1st Cdn Inf Div, AoS 47 and then the same for the 2nd and 3rd Cdn Inf Divs. Three separate units with the same AoS sign.

Modern tac signs are less "flashy" but easier to comprehend - you don't have to remember colours or colour patterns...
... I didn't realize that you had posted this before my reply ... I'm getting slow I guess
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Old 30-04-10, 19:28
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Originally Posted by Mark W. Tonner View Post
... I didn't realize that you had posted this before my reply ... I'm getting slow I guess
Consider it added value, and you also included info on the "white bar".
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Why is it that when you have the $$, you don't have the time, and when you have the time you don't have the $$?
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  #8  
Old 01-05-10, 01:22
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Thank you both Gentlemen.
As you say, Army Eh!
Rob
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