Answer I assume that you refer to the small arms used by the Allied troops. The large artillery shells fired by the naval support vessels would be too numerous to list. The US troops used the M-1 Garand rifle which fired a 30-.06 cartridge. The small machine gun and the pistol fired the .45 Colt. The officer's carried the M-1 Carbine which fired a small .38 caliber round(I believe that is right). The Americans also carried heavy machine guns of .30 and .50 calibers and a light BAR machine gun that fired the 30-.06 round.
The standard rifle that was issued to the British and Canadians was the .308 Enfield rifle. They also carried the Sten sub-machine gun and the Bren machine gun but I'm not sure of their ammo type.
Enough
the invaders. It was there code so the counties they were attaking did not have a clue they were planning to invaid the invaders. It was there code so the counties they were attaking did not have a clue they were planning to invaid the invaders. It was there code so the counties they were attaking did not have a clue they were planning to invaid
On D-Day, June 6, 1944, the cost of ammunition varied depending on the type and caliber. However, a general estimate for the cost of military ammunition during World War II was around $0.10 to $0.20 per round for standard infantry ammunition. The overall expenditure for the operation included not just ammunition but also logistics, equipment, and personnel, resulting in a massive financial commitment from the Allied forces.
A. Money B. Food C. Men D. Ammunition It is D. Ammunition!
No, there were many, more deadly battles. The German troops were unprepared and many of their large guns ran out of ammunition part way through the day.
D-day happened after over a year's planning and marshalling the necessary troops, transport, ammunition, fuel, food etc in southern England. It was made necessary by the desire of the Allies to re-occupy Europe and defeat Hitler.
The D-Day invasion was a pivotal moment in the Second World War. The D-day itself lasted for twenty four hours. However the invasion continued on those beaches for approxinmately 3 months landing more troops ,trucks, jeeps, tanks and thousands of tons of supplies and ammunition.
an ORM-D material
Yes. It falls into the ORM-D category.
Many of them were 2nd rate troops, there because of recovering from wounds, or impressed into the German Army from other foreign armies. (soldiers taken prisoner by the Germans were often given the choice of prison or fighting in the German Army) . -On the Atlantic wall, many of the defensive guns were French or other captured weapons. There was not much ammunition for these and more than a few German units simply ran out of ammunition on D-Day.
yes
The name of the wall that protected the roman empire from barbarian invaders is called Hadrian's Wall. Hope that helped! ;D