ebay find--Kaltverpflegung
Hi German_Epa,
That you are not allowed to look at certain Ebay auction has to do with the language settings of your computer!
Ebay checks language settings and location (via IP number) of its users. Doing that, Ebay can block your entrance to the auctions.
So set your computer to English and the problem will probabbly be solved (this too worked fine with me in the past).
Good luck.
That you are not allowed to look at certain Ebay auction has to do with the language settings of your computer!
Ebay checks language settings and location (via IP number) of its users. Doing that, Ebay can block your entrance to the auctions.
So set your computer to English and the problem will probabbly be solved (this too worked fine with me in the past).
Good luck.
"if you don't read the newspaper, you are uniformed. If you do read the newspaper, you are misinformed". (Mark Twain)
- German_EPA
- Moderator
- Posts: 1412
- Joined: Sun Jun 17, 2007 7:53 am
- eBay name: advenutre-world-shop
- Location: Germany, Bavaria
- Contact:
hey thank you for your proposal!aquarius wrote:Hi German_Epa,
That you are not allowed to look at certain Ebay auction has to do with the language settings of your computer!
Ebay checks language settings and location (via IP number) of its users. Doing that, Ebay can block your entrance to the auctions.
So set your computer to English and the problem will probabbly be solved (this too worked fine with me in the past).
Good luck.

i already got a proposal thats not so impractically. its anything with proxy...
but thanks again...
regards
Geman-EPA
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MILITARY/OUTDOOR/CAMPING/EMERGENCY-FOOD
My shop: http://www.adventure-world.de
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MILITARY/OUTDOOR/CAMPING/EMERGENCY-FOOD



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- donaldjcheek
- Posts: 211
- Joined: Thu Apr 05, 2007 12:53 pm
- Location: San Angelo, TX
Kman
Don't know if this will be helpful, but here goes:
The East German National Volksarmee (NVA) developed a ration scale based on two sources - the old German Army and the occupying Soviet Army. Two "norms" determined the scale of issue to most troops. Like the Soviets, the issue was determined by assignment rather than actual need. Also like the Soviet Army, political reliability was the determining factor in assignment to a "norm."
Grundnorm 110 was the most common category, utilized by the majority of NVA troops. Grundnorm 130 was used by Border Guards, Security Troops, troops deployed forward "in defense of the border," and by sailors aboard ship.
The rations authorized were among the most generous of the former Warsaw Pact states.
Daily Service Ration: (N110/N130)
Meat, Sausage or meat products - 220 g/250 g
Potatoes, fresh - 800 g/800 g
OR Potatoes, preserved - 400 g/800 g
Butter - 50 g/50 g
Milk or Milk products - 300 g/350 g
Vegetables (fresh or preserved) - 300 g/350 g
Fats - 30 g/40 g
Fruits - 200 g/200 g
Eggs - 35 g/40 g
Rye Bread - 300 g/300 g
Fish - 45 g/45 g
White Bread or biscuit - 200 g/200 g
Cheese - 35 g/40 g
Marmalade - 30 g/30 g
Tea - 2 g/2 g
Sugar/Sweets - 30 g/40 g
Seasonings - 25 g/25 g
Nutritional extracts - 60 g/60 g
March Ration: This was a cold ration issued to units in transit, which could be eaten without further preparation. For Grundnorm 110, the following items were authorized. Meat (either preserved meat, sausage, or dried sausage) - 400 g; Bread - 500 g; Sweets - 100 g; Fruits (or fruit juices) - 70 pfennigs worth.
Combat Ration: The combat ration pack developed by the NVA reflected both Soviet and German army experience. It was fairly typical, containing mostly canned and preserved items. Alone among Warsaw Pact armies, this ration included a plastic spoon. The ration consisted of: Canned meat - 200 g; Hard biscuit - 200 g; Marmalade - 30 g; Tea - 2 g; Salt - 15 g; Vitamin C-fortified dextrose tablets - 50 g; fuel tablets; and spoon. Since the ration did not meet NVA nutritional norms, it was usually supplemented with 500 g fresh or canned bread.
Special E-boat Ration: This was developed for naval personnel who manned small coastal security ships. Packed in a small, water-resistant paperboard box, the ration was intended as a meal replacement for watercraft too small to rate a galley. The drab green or gray box contained: 90 g canned meat; 25 g vitamin-enriched chocolate; a 200-ml bottle of vitamin C fortified fruit juice; and a 50 g roll of vitamin C fortified dextrose tablets. This ration was generally supplemented with 250 g bread or hard biscuit.
Don't know if this will be helpful, but here goes:
The East German National Volksarmee (NVA) developed a ration scale based on two sources - the old German Army and the occupying Soviet Army. Two "norms" determined the scale of issue to most troops. Like the Soviets, the issue was determined by assignment rather than actual need. Also like the Soviet Army, political reliability was the determining factor in assignment to a "norm."
Grundnorm 110 was the most common category, utilized by the majority of NVA troops. Grundnorm 130 was used by Border Guards, Security Troops, troops deployed forward "in defense of the border," and by sailors aboard ship.
The rations authorized were among the most generous of the former Warsaw Pact states.
Daily Service Ration: (N110/N130)
Meat, Sausage or meat products - 220 g/250 g
Potatoes, fresh - 800 g/800 g
OR Potatoes, preserved - 400 g/800 g
Butter - 50 g/50 g
Milk or Milk products - 300 g/350 g
Vegetables (fresh or preserved) - 300 g/350 g
Fats - 30 g/40 g
Fruits - 200 g/200 g
Eggs - 35 g/40 g
Rye Bread - 300 g/300 g
Fish - 45 g/45 g
White Bread or biscuit - 200 g/200 g
Cheese - 35 g/40 g
Marmalade - 30 g/30 g
Tea - 2 g/2 g
Sugar/Sweets - 30 g/40 g
Seasonings - 25 g/25 g
Nutritional extracts - 60 g/60 g
March Ration: This was a cold ration issued to units in transit, which could be eaten without further preparation. For Grundnorm 110, the following items were authorized. Meat (either preserved meat, sausage, or dried sausage) - 400 g; Bread - 500 g; Sweets - 100 g; Fruits (or fruit juices) - 70 pfennigs worth.
Combat Ration: The combat ration pack developed by the NVA reflected both Soviet and German army experience. It was fairly typical, containing mostly canned and preserved items. Alone among Warsaw Pact armies, this ration included a plastic spoon. The ration consisted of: Canned meat - 200 g; Hard biscuit - 200 g; Marmalade - 30 g; Tea - 2 g; Salt - 15 g; Vitamin C-fortified dextrose tablets - 50 g; fuel tablets; and spoon. Since the ration did not meet NVA nutritional norms, it was usually supplemented with 500 g fresh or canned bread.
Special E-boat Ration: This was developed for naval personnel who manned small coastal security ships. Packed in a small, water-resistant paperboard box, the ration was intended as a meal replacement for watercraft too small to rate a galley. The drab green or gray box contained: 90 g canned meat; 25 g vitamin-enriched chocolate; a 200-ml bottle of vitamin C fortified fruit juice; and a 50 g roll of vitamin C fortified dextrose tablets. This ration was generally supplemented with 250 g bread or hard biscuit.
"I think," said Christopher Robin, "that we ought to eat all our Provisions now, so that we shan't have so much to carry."
Old German Army?!donaldjcheek wrote:Kman
Don't know if this will be helpful, but here goes:
The East German National Volksarmee (NVA) developed a ration scale based on two sources - the old German Army and the occupying Soviet Army. (...)

Could you please replace all in either east Germany Army or NVA
There was no old German Army, just the Bundeswehr or the Nationale Volksarmee
Or did you mean the Wehrmacht....

- donaldjcheek
- Posts: 211
- Joined: Thu Apr 05, 2007 12:53 pm
- Location: San Angelo, TX
Housil
No disrepect intended. I wrote "old German Army" rather than "Wehrmacht" on purpose, as the new NVA used Imperial German Army, Reichswehr, & Wehrmacht traditions in everything from uniforms to field gear. It was easier to combine them all into the "old German Army," - which no longer existed.
No disrepect intended. I wrote "old German Army" rather than "Wehrmacht" on purpose, as the new NVA used Imperial German Army, Reichswehr, & Wehrmacht traditions in everything from uniforms to field gear. It was easier to combine them all into the "old German Army," - which no longer existed.
"I think," said Christopher Robin, "that we ought to eat all our Provisions now, so that we shan't have so much to carry."