Author Topic: 3 of the Oldest Weapons in the Pentagon’s Inventory  (Read 205 times)

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3 of the Oldest Weapons in the Pentagon’s Inventory
« on: October 01, 2019, 12:05:13 pm »
3 of the Oldest Weapons in the Pentagon’s Inventory

If it ain't broke, why fix it?

By Kyle Mizokami   
Sep 26, 2019


This week, we learned about new upgrades that'll make the B-52H, one of America's oldest weapons still in use, eligible for service for nearly a century. Here's a look at some of the Pentagon's oldest weapons in its arsenal—and why the military still uses them.

For a country with a $600 billion dollar defense budget, the United States still uses a sizable amount of old gear. Some of the antiquated stuff is around because it works really, really well, and there’s not come along anything better to replace it with. In other cases attempts to replace the equipment have floundered, usually for reasons having to do with complexity or cost.

We dug up three examples that rank among the oldest still in action: the M2 heavy machine gun, KC-135 Stratotanker, and B-52H bomber. Even though one of these weapons dates back to World War I, the Pentagon does not have plans to retire any of them any time soon.

https://www.popularmechanics.com/military/weapons/a20777886/3-of-the-oldest-weapons-in-the-pentagons-inventory/