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XM8 Project: Turn A HK SLR Into A G36

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A Real H&K XM8 (top), Tommy Tactical conversion (bottom)

TommyBuilt Tactical is an 07/SOT FFL who specialize in customizing H&K rifles. They are busy working on a conversion kit to turn a H&K SLR rifle, the sporting version of the H&K G36, into a H&K XM8 look-alike.

890e5a1e3f6f4114be6df415b18e7bcf

8f3611a0b4e54d9e878097edfb933053

454ada90bc8a4b39821a46b9cff40414

The ill-fated XM8 was designed in that brief period of time when the military realized the value of modular rifles, but before the picatinny rail really took off to become the ultimate way to achieve this. This lead to its futurist design, that looks like it came straight from a hollywood prop supply company, lacking the “tactical” rails which adorn almost every surface of later rifles. It was also designed during that unfortunate period when gun designers thought integrating optics into a gun was a good way to shave a little weight off a rifle. If the XM8 program had not been cancelled, it would have faced strong competition from the FN SCAR, and even H&K’s own HK416, which arrived not long after.

Tommy tactical have not finished this project and so pricing is not available (despite writing this, I am seriously going to be getting about one email per month over the next year from excited fanboys asking about pricing).


Cooper Scout Rifle Concept

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Imgp5503-660x429

A true Cooper Scout Rifle has been on my list of guns to buy since I first read about the concept, but something always came along that I “needed” more. Over at AllOutdoor, Major discusses the Scout concept …

Much has been written about Jeff Cooper’s scout rifle concept. Although no one can speak more authoritatively on the subject than the late Cooper himself, I have become a student of the concept. Unfortunately, many writers have missed the spirit of the scout rifle concept, using the traits such as the light weight, .308 chambering, and overall length as mandates instead of guidelines. A point often missed was Cooper’s more important requirement of shooter capabilities. After all if you cannot hit the target, it matters little how good the equipment is.

Lets Play Guess That AK

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ak

[ This is the third article written by Claymore on the guns he encountered during his varied and colorful career. His first article is here, the second is here. ]

While I was looking around for weapons while I was with the Hmong I would record the selector markings to document the types of weapons they had.

Selector markings is one of the obvious ways that is used to discover the country of manufacture or origin.

Sometimes, but not always, they can also point in the direction of where the weapons came from but a lot of countries including the USA “collect” supplies of weapons from other countries to help obscure the true origin of weapons “supplied”.

So what I have done, to help involve the readership of this site, is taken ten of the photos and we will have a little “contest” on country of origin of AK family receivers.

The winner of the “contest” will NOT receive any prize other than pride of winning and hopefully this will be a “fun” exercise and not make for hard feelings.

I tired to enhance the selector markings as best I could, with my limited photo program, but if anybody has the skills to better show them go ahead and do your “magic”.

Since this is be a “fun exercise” try and do your picks WITHOUT google, at first, the way I did it way back when I took these photos.

I used to know them all by heart, after research using good old reference books, but old age memory, and lack of use for them has reduced my “sureness” (is that a word LOL) about some of them so we may have some disagreements so try and keep any discussions that may result “polite” as we are all fans of this site.

I realize that most of you don’t have any use for a bunch of reference books and we may have to later rely on searching the web for final results but give it a try the old way first.

And BTW there are an unknown amount duplicates and a couple that are REAL hard to read but we can’t make this too easy.

AND we all know the the USSR was the main country of the design of the AK-47 family but that is not what we are looking for here try and get from the markings the country that these were intended for use in or manufactured in.

First up early AK-47 with slotted selector “stops” nice and clear markings should be easy:

CF10176 (1024x666)

 

A little less clear and a hint they are not letters. The handguard is another indication of country of origin:

CF10178 (1024x698)

Another early AK-47 type with less clear markings but they are letters:

CF20069 (1024x712)

 

An AKM type with slab side mag. The markings are hard to see. There are two “characters” (not English or Cyrillic writing):

VP20091 (1024x731)

 

Similar markings on a later AKM style:

VP20092 (1022x812)

 

Again similar but are they Chinese, Korean or Japanese?

VP20093 (1024x698)

 

The same or different?

VP20094 (1024x698)

 

This nice and clear AK-47 should be the easiest:

VP20095 (1024x700)

 

Another AKM with folding stock. No help on this one:

VP20096 (1024x701)

 

The final very easy AKM …

VP20098 (1024x700)

 

Post your answers in the comments below (reference the photos in your answers) ….

SIG Sauer’s SIGM400 “Muddy Girl”

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Sig-Sauer-Pink-1

SIG has a new AR-15 featuring Magpul furniture and “Muddy Girl”, a camo scheme which sort of cuts the difference between the traditional-black black rifle finish and the in-your-face-bright-neon-pink finish. Forbes’ Vice blogger Susannah Breslin spoke to the Moon Shine, who developed the camo

“We wanted to do something that didn’t have to be restricted to mimicking nature,” explains Mattern, 42, a hunting and motorsports enthusiast. Armed with his past experience as a designer and an architecture degree from Pennsylvania State University, he set out to design an eye-popping “lifestyle camo” for outdoorsy women. Previously, other brands had simply slapped a pink background behind their camouflage for men. Muddy Girl, one of four Moon Shine camos, combines hot pink and purple, the neon trend, and a thicket of bramble to alarming affect.

On an unrelated note. I have trouble understanding why guns are considered vice by the mainstream media. Can an activity that millions of young children and their parents do in public each weekend be considered in the same category as illegal drugs, illicit sexual activity, pornography and other criminal activities? Sigh….


Springfield Armory® is offering 30% off the entire webstore! Shop before December 15th


Disney’s Stop That Tank!

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boys rifle

Our friends at Forgotten Weapons published the Boys anti-tank rifle training film created by Disney for the Canadian Army. It is pretty hilarious. It starts off with Hitler complaining to the devil that they can’t win the war because of the Boys anti-tank rifle, and ends with a private making out with his Boys rifle under the sheets (hoplophilia?) …

According to Wikipedia the movie was made because the troops loathed the rifle. I can just imagine a General who never saw the Western Front deciding that his troops should crawl within 100 yards of a light tank, with a huge rifle, to shoot it in precisely the right places (joints, treads) and at precisely the right angle in order to disable it … only to find it had its armor upgraded and the bullets were useless against it, all the while its gunner is taking aim at them.

… increases in vehicle armour during the Second World War left the Boys largely ineffectual as an anti-tank weapon. A shortened version was issued in 1942 for issue to airborne forces and saw use in Tunisia, where it proved completely ineffective because of the reduced velocity caused by the shortened barrel.[6] The Boys was so unpopular that the Canadian government commissioned a Disney training film, Stop That Tank, to oppose the rifle’s “jinx” reputation.

The weapon was standard issue to British and Commonwealth forces which attempted to stem the Japanese onslaught through the Pacific theatre. At Milne Bay, the weapon proved completely ineffective. It also failed to stop Japanese tanks in Malaya. Some accounts claim that the 1/14th Punjabis knocked out two light Japanese tanks at a roadblock.[6] This claim, however, has never been substantiated from the Japanese side.

I remember my grandfather, an Army captain during WWII, telling me about his anti-armor training. He and his fellow officers were very skeptical about many of the techniques they were taught.

 


Springfield Armory® is offering 30% off the entire webstore! Shop before December 15th


Nesika Precision Custom Rifles

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Nesika Sporter

Nesika Firearms, a Freedom Group owned company based in Sturgis, South Dakota, have introduced a new line of custom rifles built on their own Nesika action. There are three models, the Sporter Rifle, the Long Range Rifle and the Tactical Rifle. Prices start at $3,499 for the Sporter and up to $4,499 for the Tactical.

Nesika Long Range

Nesika Long Range

Nesika Tactical

Nesika Tactical

Nesika Sporter Rifle Specs

  • Nesika Stainless Hunter action, receiver made from 15-5 stainless and one-piece bolt with CeraKote® finished 4340 CM steel
  • Douglas air-gauged stainless 24”and 26”barrel
  • Timney Trigger set at a crisp, three pounds
  • Stainless steel Oberndorf- style hinged floor plate
  • Leupold® QRW Bases
  • Sporter hand laid-up composite stock with aluminum bedding block
  • Guaranteed MOA accuracy, test target included

Nesika Long Range Rifle Specs

  • Nesika Stainless Hunter action, receiver made from 15-5 stainless and one-piece bolt with CeraKote® finished 4340 CM steel
  • Douglas air-gauged 26” stainless barrel, fluted varmint contour
  • Timney Trigger set at a crisp, three pounds
  • Leupold® QRW Bases
  • Stainless steel Oberndorf- style hinged floor plate
  • Varmint/Tactical hand laid-up stock with aluminum bedding block
  • Guaranteed MOA accuracy, test target included

Nesika Tactical Rifle Specs

  • Nesika Stainless Tactical action, receiver made from 15-5 stainless and one piece bolt from 4340 CM steel
  • Douglas air-gauged stainless barrel, 28’ Tactical contour, plus an AAC Blackout muzzle brake/suppressor adapter
  • All metal is coated with CeraKote® matte black finish for added protection
  • Timney Trigger set at a crisp, three pounds
  • 5-round detachable box magazine
  • Tactical hand laid-up composite stock with aluminum bedding block, spacer adj. length and adjustable cheekpiece
  • One-piece, stainless Mil Std 1913 rail with 15 MOA taper
  • Guaranteed MOA accuracy, test target included

Nesika


Springfield Armory® is offering 30% off the entire webstore! Shop before December 15th


Sightmark Photon-S: Hybrid Night Vision Riflescope

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Sightmark Photon S

Sightmark is making what they call a hybrid night vision riflescope.  The Photon-S is a daylight capable 3.5x 42mm scope with night vision capabilities.  The unit uses a 150mW LED IR illuminator combined with a 1/3″ CMOS CCD to provide low-light/night time vision capability.

The display resolution is 300×225 and the sensor resolution is 768×576.  Video out via RCA connectors is possible.

The night vision component is powered by a pair of AA batteries.  The Dot-Duplex reticle is powered by a single CR2032.  According to Sightmark specifications, the scope uses standard Weaver mounts, has a 30mm tube diameter and is not nitrogen filled.

MSRP is $599.97.

New Weatherby Mark V Terramark RC Rifles

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Weatherby

Weatherby announced a new line of rifles called the Mark V Terramark RC.  The RC stands for “range certified” and will come with a sub-MOA guarantee.

The fluted barrels will be made of stainless steel and will use button rifling.  The 26″ barrels will be free floating and will have a target crown.  Rifles will have a desert camo finished Monte Carlo synthetic stock with a Pachmayr Decelerator pad.  Metal will be finished in Cerakote flat dark earth.

Rifles will weigh 8.75 pounds, and pricing will start at $2,800.  The guns will come with a factory test target signed by Ed Weatherby, the company president.


A Strange Choice Of Gun For An Insurgent

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Jaish ul-Adl

The Arkenstone blog published this propaganda photo by the Iranian insurgent group Jaish ul-Adl (“Army of Justice”) that operates in the South East of the country. There is not much information about this group online. They formed last year and seem to be a generic Sunni insurgent group on a “holy war” against the Shia majority. The Iranians claim they are being funded by Pakistan. In October they attacked a police station killing 14 police officers near the Iran-Pakistan border.

Iran.

Iran.

Why the above photo is interesting is that the two men in the foreground are holding expensive civilian firearms. The gun on the left is a suppressed Steyr rifle and the man on the right is holding a Walther G22 bullpup chambered in .22 LR. In mountainous terrain, that .22 LR must be close to worthless. It is a novel and fun rifle to shoot but nobody has ever claimed it is an accurate rifle.

A propaganda photo published by Jaish ul-Adl after the October attack.

A propaganda photo published by Jaish ul-Adl after the October attack.

I do wonder if these men are weekend warriors taking their favorite hunting rifles into the mountains to play Cops n’ Insurgents, after which they go back to their dreary office jobs and dream of jihad. Photos published by the group (see above) after the police station massacre show the usual suspects looking like disheveled desert nomads carrying rusty pre-Revolution weapons. They are not carrying expensive consumer rifles while wearing pressed uniforms and quality mountain clothing.

Thanks to Nic for the tip.

CMMG Mk3 CBR (Carbine Battle Rifle)

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CMMG_Mk3_CBR

CMMG Mk3 CBR  has announced the availability of their new CMMG Mk3 CBR (Carbine Battle Rifle). Other than the name (“Rifle Carbine” is a contradiction in my opinion), it is a very slick looking carbine with quality parts at a reasonable price of $2,000.

From the press release …

The Mk3 CBR (Carbine Battle Rifle) is chambered in .308 WIN/7.62x51mm NATO and is precision-built to deliver the relentless functionality that CMMG rifles are known for. The Mk3 CBR is an ideal rifle for long-range shooting or close-quarters action and because it’s built with CMMG’s premium manufacturing requirements, it gives shooters the chance to own a high-end AR rifle at a practical price.

The Mk3 CBR features the free float RKM15 KeyMod hand guard that measures 15 inches in length to accommodate a wide range of hand positions and allows users to attach an assortment of different accessories. The KeyMod slots are located at the 3, 6 and 9 o’clock positions with a 1913 Picatinny rail on top to give the hand guard an array of mounting options.

The KeyMod system is the new industry standard for mounting accessories. It is a simple, comfortable and lightweight solution that offers users a low profile mounting alternative to the M1913 Picatinny rail. The KeyMod system presents a new level of customization, as it allows the direct attachment of compatible accessories without the use of intermediate M1913 Picatinny rails. For accessories that are not yet KeyMod compatible, users can purchase a separate CMMG 5-slot Picatinny adapter rail that can be easily attached to any of the KeyMod slots for optimal placement of the accessories.

The Mk3 CBR rifle is constructed with a hard anodized, billet 6061-T6 aluminum receiver.  A 416 stainless barrel was selected and features a nitride finish that provides the barrel with long lasting accuracy and corrosion resistance. CMMG’s medium taper (MT) barrel is the perfect balance between weight and rigidity. The rifle also includes a CMMG SV muzzle brake, designed to reduce recoil and increase muzzle control for quick and manageable follow-up shots.

Caliber: .308 WIN/7.62x51mm NATO
Weight: 9 lbs. (unloaded), 10 lbs. (loaded with 20-rd PMAG)
Barrel: 16″ 416 Stainless Steel, 1:10″ Twist, 5/8-24 Threaded
Hand Guard: RKM15 KeyMod Hand Guard
Sights/Gas Block: Low Profile Gas Block
Muzzle: CMMG SV muzzle brake
Furniture: Magpul MOE Pistol Grip & ACS-L butt stock
Trigger: Geissele Super Semi-Automatic (SSA) 2 Stage Trigger
Magazine: 20rd Magpul 20 LR PMAG

 

TrackingPoint XS4 .338 Lapua Magnum

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xs4

TrackingPoint has announced a new .338 Lapua Magnum chambered addition to their Precision Guided Firearm line up. The TrackingPoint XS4 has a range of 1,200 yards. It features a 27″ Krieger barrel, Magnum Surgeon action and McMillan A5 adjustable stock.

Model: XS4 (XactSystem 4)
Rifle Mfg.: Surgeon Rifles (Surgeon XL action & Krieger barrel)
Rifle System Mfg.: TrackingPoint (integrated long range shooting system)
Rifle Type:PGF (Precision Guided Firearm)
Operating System:Bolt action
Caliber: .338 Lapua
Bullet:300 grain Sierra Match King OTM (Open Tip Match) [280 grain LRX (Long Range X Bullet)
Muzzle Velocity:300 grain = 2720 fps (+/- 10 fps standard deviation muzzle velocity) 280 grain = 2715 fps (+/- 10 fps standard deviation muzzle velocity)
Max TTX Range:Tag Track Xact to 1200 yards (+50 yard backend flex)
Min TTX Range:50 yards
Barrel Length: 27” (with M18x1.5 threaded muzzle with cap)
Barrel Twist: 1:9.35 inch – right hand twist
Barrel Contour:MTU and fluted
Trigger System:Guided with integrated ambidextrous track button in trigger guard
Trigger Pull:Traditional Mode 3.5 lbs. (+/- .5 lb.) not adjustable / Advanced Mode –not applicable
Weight Loaded:22.5 lbs. (rifle, scope, two batteries, loaded mag, bipod, brake)
Weight Unloaded:19.8 lbs. (rifle, scope, no batteries, no magazine, no bipod, with brake)
Operating Temperature:-4° to 120°F (-20° to 49°C)
Stock: McMillian A5
Stock Adjustments:Height of comb, length of pull (spacers 6mm x2 and 11mm x 2)
Length of pull:15” with all spacers
Scope:Networked tracking scope with HUD (Heads Up Display)
Zoom:6 to 35x, parallax free
Magazine: 5 round detachable box (x2)
Night Vision:Not optimized for night vision
Thermal Sights:Not optimized for thermal sights

The press release follows …

TrackingPoint™, creator of the world’s first Precision Guided Firearm (PGF) system, today announced the newest addition to its smart rifle line, the XS4 338 Lapua Magnum. Combining the power of a large caliber rifle with a smaller McMillan A5 hunting stock, the XS4 delivers both stopping power and convenience, integrated with TrackingPoint’s revolutionary TTX (Tag Track Xact) technology—the most accurate targeting system on the market today. The company also announced that it intends to announce additional new PGF models at the 2014 NSSF SHOT Show, January 14-17, 2014 in Las Vegas.

Like TrackingPoint’s XS1, the new XS4 has a maximum TTX range of 1,200 yards, the longest effective range offered by the company. The precision rifle’s performance is driven by a bolt-action, .338 Lapua Magnum Surgeon™ XL action. The rifle’s 27-inch, Krieger™ cut-barrel is fitted in a traditional-style, adjustable McMillan A5 chassis. It also features TrackingPoint’s longest parallax-free zoom: 6 to 35X.

“Our customers have been asking for the power of our 338 Lapua Magnum smart rifles in the form factor of our popular XS3 hunting model,” said John Lupher, Chief Technology Officer for TrackingPoint. “One of the best parts of working with our community of TrackingPoint PGF owners is that we can learn from their feedback and develop products to suit customer needs as our company grows.”

Pre-orders for the XS4 are now being accepted. The rifle will be demonstrated at the 2014 NSSF SHOT Show as well as at other industry trade shows in the coming year.

Adjustable AR Gas Blocks

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Imgp1849

Over at AllOutdoor Major Pandemic writes about the benefits of installing an adjustable gas block on an AR-15 rifle

This last weekend, I provided a buddy a side-by-side comparison of his standard AR and one of my AR-15s with an adjustable gas block. His actual quote was, “Holy crap. When can you do that to mine?” Your first experience with an adjustable gas block will be an enlightening one. The near absence of recoil and almost non-moving sight picture is stunning to say the least, in the “Holy crap, why did I not do this before?” kind of way. I maintain that an adjustable gas block is the most significant performance upgrade anyone can make to their AR format rifle.

After my very first JP adjustable gas block, I was sold on the having the ability to tune the gas pressure on a standard direct impingement AR-15 system. The advantages are a plenty: a large reduction in recoil, faster recoil recovery, faster sight picture acquisition between shots, heat reduction at the bolt, and a bit cleaner running.

What are your experiences like with them? Are they worth having?

Why full power service rifles were unnecessary by 1915

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Gewehr 98; a typical long barrel full power repeating rifle

This guest post is written by German milblogger Sven who blogs at Defense and Freedom.

Assault rifles typically use cartridges which are at most fine for shooting at 250 to 400 metres distant targets. This came into being based on ammunition maker (especially Rheinmetall-Borsig and GECO) experiments during the Interwar Years, and only rarely do demands for the lightweight long range unobtanium rifle flare up again.

The switch from full power rifle cartridges to shorter or smaller calibre rifle cartridges made fully automatic rifles easier to develop, lighter and more gentle in recoil. Ranges at which infantry fought its battles with its basic rifle (instead of with scoped rifles, machineguns, mortars or infantry guns) had been well within the 400 metre range most of the time ever since the First World War.
It’s common to read remarks about how infantry entered (and left) the First World War with unnecessarily heavy and long rifles. Their powerful bullets were supposed to decimate close order (quite parade-like) infantry formations at more than a kilometre distance and were also supposed to stop a horse with a single torso hit. The aforementioned remarks usually conclude that this was unnecessary, as most infantry combat of the First World War happened within 200 metres range, often even in mêlée using bayonets or shovels as weapons.

I’ve never been satisfied with this. There were long-range rifle fights during the Boer Wars with very similar technology, after all. In the meantime, I’ve become so very unsatisfied with these remarks that it’s about time to write my own take on it.

 ——–

The story begins in the 1880s, when inventors finally delivered practical low smoke propellants. (They are often called “smokeless powder“, but they were neither smokeless nor necessarily powders. I’m guilty of calling them “smokeless” at times, too.)

blackpowder smoke

Blackpowder and real rapid fire – not compatible

These ‘smokeless powders’ had several important consequences:

(1) Higher muzzle velocities were achievable thanks to higher gas pressures.

(2) The moderate smoke did not blind the shooter: Rapid fire became practical (unlike with the relatively impractical Mitrailleuses which are often overrated in accounts of the Franco-German War 1870/71).

(3) The weapon wasn’t fouled quickly by blackpowder residue, which again was important for practical rapid fire.

(4) The low smoke characteristic made it difficult to spot hostiles even after they opened fire. This had important consequences for the value of camouflage, for reconnaissance, for ambushes and for distance as an input for survival.

These characteristics allowed Hiram Maxim to develop his initial blackpowder-based machinegun design into the very reliable, very practical Maxim machinegun.

Rifles (and artillery) gained a lot of effective range and power as well (save for projectile weight, which was rather reducing during the move to higher muzzle velocities). Rifle marksmanship training did at times extend to formation targets beyond 1,000 metres range. Such ranges were previously achieved as well, but the technological progress made this capability much more meaningful with much flatter trajectories.

The higher muzzle velocities also allowed for lighter bullets (smaller calibres) and this in turn allowed for much more ammunition carried (though not necessarily by the individual infantryman).

By the 1890s military theorists were thoroughly impressed by the increased firepower of artillery and rifles (even though some did downplay the actual artillery ranges in their publications, apparently because published figures were lower than the secret actual ones).

The great firepower and range allowed for doctrines in which (at the latest after the marksmen-dominated First Boer War) the own infantry was expected to open effective fire at hostiles at more than a kilometer range and was supposed to establish fire superiority at more than 600 metres.

The other side of the coin was that taking such fire while orderly moving over such a distance was unacceptable, of course. The defenders did not have too much trouble with this, as they could use trees, walls and earthworks as cover and could thus reduce their exposure.

Mafikeng_Second_Boer_War

A scene from the Second Boer War

The attackers on the hand – and this was understood before the Boer Wars by some authors – had to avoid such destructive fires by exploiting concealment. They had to close to within short range without being seen, moving behind woodland, buildings, hills and obstructions. The theorists did apparently fail to appreciate that this would require the infantry to break up into quite independently manoeuvring platoons if not sections. Even as late as 1915 important authors still considered the company as the relevant unit of manoeuvre.

Now let’s assume the infantry had been equipped with short cartridge carbines and sights good for a few hundred metres only. What would have happened? Judging by individual weapons alone, the attackers could have moved on open fields up to only 400-600 metres distance again. Short cartridges and long range sights would have made things more difficult to predict, but an inferiority against full power cartridges would have been very much evident.

Infantry armament has never been homogeneous, of course. The Maxim machine gun had arrived, and it was capable of shooting well past a kilometre distance with the benefit of a proper carriage with elevation control. The water (evaporation) cooling, reliability and easier ammunition supply to just a few weapons allowed a few Maxim machinegun sections to substitute for the long range rifle firepower of an entire battalion. They were even better than the riflemen at it, as they were much fewer targets and would thus be even less exposed to long range rifle fires than the battalion’s partially covered riflemen would be.

So basically the machineguns were the better choice in the long range fire role (once available in quantity, that is by 1915). They were so good at it that the firepower of a few Maxim-pattern machineguns doomed a battalion advance over open fields from 1,000 to 400 metres distance without the assistance of rifles.

On top of this there was the light field artillery, which was also good at long-range fires, albeit not without its own difficulties.

This allowed for the individual weapons to be reduced into shorter barrel, lighter weight, shorter cartridge case, lower recoil assault rifles. These didn’t appear in service for four decades after massed rifle fires had become technically unnecessary beyond more than 400 metres.

Lithuania Adopts FN SCAR-H Precision Rifle (7.62mm)

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fn_scar_pr-tfb

Lithuania’s Ministry of Defense has purchased $3.9 million worth of the designated marksmen version of the FN SCAR-H rifle, the SCAR-H PR, along with Schmidt & Bender optics. While they will not say how many were ordered, my guess based on the contract value, would be about 750. Defense News reports

Lithuania’s Ministry of Defense has ordered FN SCAR-H PR semi-automatic rifles for the country’s armed forces. The 7.62 mm rifle is produced by Belgian arms manufacturer FN Herstal.

The contract is worth 9.6 million litas (US $3.9 million), the ministry said in a statement. Deliveries of the weapons are scheduled to begin in 2014.

The FN SCAR-H PR rifles will be supplied to the Lithuanian land forces. The weapons are to be fitted with rifle scopes made by German manufacturer Schmidt & Bender. The amount of rifles ordered was not disclosed by the ministry.

CMMG Mk4 RCE Rifle

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CMMG Mk4

CMMG is offering a new AR-15 for 2014 called the Mk4 RCE.  The rifle will come with a variety of popular parts standard such as a Geissele Automatics SSA 2-stage trigger, Magpul CTR buttstock, MOE pistol grip and 30 round PMAG.  The rifle will be outfitted with a proprietary KeyMod handguard and SV muzzle brake.

The rifle will be available in both 5.56 NATO and .300 BLK.  The barrel is 16″ long and will have a 1:7″ twist.  MSRP is $1,399.95.  No word on an expected shipping date.

CMMG Mk4 RCE Specifications:

  • Caliber:  5.56x45mm NATO / .300 AAC Blackout
  • Barrel:  16″ medium weight tapered profile, 416 stainless steel, 1:7” twist
  • Muzzle:  CMMG SV muzzle brake, Threaded ½-28
  • Hand Guard:  CMMG RKM14 KeyMod hand guard
  • Upper Receiver:  Forged 7075-T6 AL M4
  • Lower Receiver:  Forged 7075-T6 AL AR15
  • Trigger:  Geissele Automatics SSA 2-stage trigger
  • Furniture:  Magpul MOE Pistol Grip & CTR butt stock
  • Weight: 6.5 pounds (unloaded), 7.5 pounds (loaded with 30 round PMAG)
  • Length: 33 inches (stock collapsed), 36 3/8 inches (stock extended)
  • Magazine:  30rd Magpul PMAG
  • MSRP:  $1,399.95

New Variants in Smith & Wesson M&P Rifle Line

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S&W M&P10 Magpul

Smith & Wesson announced two new variants in the M&P line of rifles.  The first is a new M&P10 that ships with a 20-round Magpul magazine.  Prior M&P10 rifles shipped with five- or ten-round magazines.  This version of the gun will retail for $1,619.

The second new variant is in the M&P15 line.  Smith & Wesson will now offer an all black version of the .300 Whisper rifle.  Recently, this gun has only been available in Realtree APG camo.

Previously, S&W offered an all black version of the rifle with a 16″ barrel and a quad-rail.  After that model was discontinued, the company continued to offer a complete upper assembly with the quad-rail.  That was also discontinued.

Smith & Wesson M&P15 300

Smith & Wesson stated that the new black rifle will not come with rails, and instead it will have a standard, ribbed handguard instead.

The 16″ barrel has a 1:7.5″ twist.  A 30-round Magpul magazine is standard with the rifle.  Retail will be $1,119.

H&K MR556-SD MR762A1-SD with Modular Rail System & OSS Suppressors

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MR556-SD MR762A1-SD

Rob Curtis published a product brochure for the upcoming not-yet-announced H&K MR556-SD MR762A1-SD. The H&K MR556-SD MR762A1-SD features a new Modular Rail System (MRS) that allows rails segments to be screwed in where required, much like the KeyMod system. The suppressors are interesting. Rob writes

The OSS suppressor system also improves the HK platform by adding caliber and configuration modularity, individual suppressor component sustainability, greater than 90% reduction in blowback and bolt velocity compared to competing suppressor systems. The OSS system comprises a back pressure regulator (BPR) and a sound reduction module (SRM). The rifle is shot ‘unsuppressed’ with the BPR installed. This reduces flash and noise noticeably, but the addition of the SRM will reduce the muzzle noise to 139db at the shooters ear.

These guns will be available for sale to consumers.

 

MasterPiece MPA 308BA Rifle

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MPA308BA black

New from MasterPiece Arms (MPA) is a precision tactical-style bolt action rifle. Chambered in .308 Win. the rifle is built on a Spencer action (Spencer being a recent acquisition of MPA). The rifle will retail for $3,475.

MPA’s first bolt-action rifle, chambered in .308 is built on a MPA tactical aluminum chassis with a Remington 700 type bolt design with a Stiller’s Precision TAC Series action. This is the first MPA rifle incorporating a Spencer Precision barrel since MPA purchased the company in 2013.

The MPA chassis is produced from 6061 aluminum with a v-bedding system that is matched perfectly to the Stiller’s TAC series actions providing zero twist or distortion. The stock is a Magpul PRS stock with a custom adaptor. The .308 also features a front mounted bridge with Picatinny rail and a lower mounted Picatinny rail, plus a 20 MOA scope rail. The body is finished in a durable medium texture powder coat or ceramic finish. The MPA .308BA is compatible with any AICS type magazines.

The Spencer/MPA barrel is produced from 416 (Condition T) stainless steel and is precision gun drilled, reamed and honed. It is pull-button rifled using CNC produced twist guides to exacting and consistent twist control and stress relieved in a Cress Vacuum Furnace. The barrel is available in a straight or helical fluting version.

The Stiller’s Precision TAC Series premium actions, produced solely for MPA, have a bolt-to-action fit of .0005″ or less. The action is machined from heat-treated stainless steel and the face, tenon and lug abutment cuts are machined in a single setup, ensuring exact parallelism and perpendicularity for critical features that affect accuracy. The Stiller’s Precision TAC Series bolt, also produced solely for MPA, is a one-piece design with the bolt, lugs and handle machined from a single piece of 4140 heat-treated steel and all critical features and dimensions are finished on a CNC OD grinder. All bolts feature spiral fluting and are hand-lapped and fitted individually to each action. The bolts have a nitride or armoloy finish.

Additionally, the MPA .308BA rifle is available with a counter twist muzzle brake and a jewel or Timney trigger. The MPA .308BA (other calibers coming soon) retails for an MSRP of $3,475.00 and includes the tactical chassis and an AICS or Accurate International 5-round magazine.

The TKB-059: A TRIPLE Barrel Assault Rifle

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TKB-059 triple barrel assult rifle

I have blogged about double barrel assault rifles before but this is the first triple barrel I have ever seen. Google translate is struggling with the Russian text of this article, but I gather it was a prototype with the designation TKB-059.

Thanks to Petras for the link.

DRD Tactical Paratus G762

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g762-a

DRD Tactical have just announced the Paratus G762 Rifle. This semi-automatic take-down rifle uses 20-round H&K G3 magazines rather than  AR-10 magazines. It features a 13-inch QD Picatinny rail, FN hammer-forged 16” barrel, Magpul stock and pistol grip and a custom cut foam hard case for transport when takendown.

In other news, the Cobb County, Georgia, Sheriff’s department’s Tactical Operations Unit have adopted Paratus rifles chambered in 5.56mm and 7.62mm. This allows them to carry the rifles discretely in backpacks and attache cases or in a motorcycle saddle-bag without attracting attention.

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