shadownet said:In an environment like Iraq or Afghanistan, I'd rather have an AK with me than an M4 or C7. No offense, but I prefer reliability over tech. And sure, it's range is dirt, but most firefights happen inside the AK's deadly range anyways, especially Iraq.
The AK-74 has a longer range than the AK-47 or AKM, and the bullet is supposedly to have a longer tumbling effect than the 5.56mm, but hey, whatever the CF gives me, I'll use it to its fullest and take good care of it, may it be a C7A2, C8, C9, or even a TAC-50.
I'm not going to touch the other stuff, but I'm curious what you mean by a "longer tumbling effect than the 5.56mm." Most modern "spitzer" rifle bullets tumble when they strike soft tissue, but the 5.56mm is somewhat unique in that in its SS109/M855 analogues, it reliably fragments in soft tissue at velocities above ~2,500 fps, the so-called "Fackler velocity." The 5.45mm does not, however, reliably fragment at any velocity. The "tumbling effect," or a bullet's tendency to yaw when it strikes soft tissue, is a result of a spitzer-type bullet's physical characteristics, not unique to any one rifle or particular cartridge.


And yes - AKs and anything based on the AK action are classified as Prohibited Weapons by Order in Council. So anyone holding an AK in Canada without a Prohibited PAL is doing so illegally.