Blakey said:Are you stating "Fact" or "Opinion" ?.....
Just a Sig Op said:Ok, brief off topic, silly question I have to ask, what does SME stand for?
KevinB said:On firearm malfunction:
I shoot a lot (in excess of 20K rounds / year - not counting beltfed fun) I have seen two AD's (I consider the mechanical breakdown not a ND) form this - one with a C9 where a solider was shot in Afghanistan (the saftey button retainign spring thingy had snapped and got caught between the breechblock and the sear... then released when the weapon was moved), and once on a range in Canada where a C7 that was recently ATI'd had so little hammer/disconnect contact it went off. Two area that need to be addressed with this issue - both troops and Weapon techs need to be trained (or retrained in some respects) on what to look for while doing weapons maintenance or inspections. Weapons over the end of their service life have to be retired - not just sent back with a serviceable tag until they fail and cause death or injury.
48Highlander said:Ok, I'm a little confused over this. I keep hearing the term "breech explosion" and as near as I can tell, it's a holdover from the .50cal and other blowback operated weapons. The C6 and C9 firing pin cannot strike a round unless the bolt is fully locked, at which point the round is in the chamber. Once the bolt is locked and the pin strikes the round, the explosion occurs within the chamber, and since the bolt is LOCKED it cannot shoot back and release any gasses. Gas is directed forward, through the barrel, and some is redirected back through the gas mechanism. When that gas pushes on the piston, ONLY THEN is the bolt unlocked and the chamber exposed. So at no point in the entire cycle is there a chance for hot gasses and/or bits of carbon/metal to come out of the chamber.
So the point of that long winded explanation is this: where exactly is the danger? With a blowback operated weapon (eg. .50 cal) you'd get carbon and gas shooting up in your face, but theoreticaly with the C6 and C9 you should be able to fire the weapon quite safely with the feed cover open.
And sorry for going off topic, I know this doesn't really fall into the realm of ND's but it's something that's been bugging me for a long time. I'd appreciate it if anyone can enlighten me.
Also, as far as the C6 and the C9 being the only weapons where you have to increase the readiness state of the weapon during the unload....as long as your finger isn't on the thrigger, you don't have a problem You should be treating your weapon as if it's ready to fire at all times anyway, so it should make no difference if you increase the readiness state. It all comes down to good drills, and that depends on proper training and lots of repetition/experience.
George Wallace said:I had the 'grand' experience after years of working with MGs to experience this first hand. It does happen. I was on the range in one of the pits as we ran all the Medics, Doctors and Nurses through the C6 and C9 for their live fire indoc prior to ROTO to Bosnia. I was on a C9 running a female medic through her drills. She had a misfire. I talked her through the drill and had her step back from the gun. There was a double feed. I had a 12 inch screwdriver in my hand and went to push down on the rounds. As I placed the screwdrive over the opening there was a 'cookoff'. The 12" blade disappeared leaving me holding only the handle in my gloved hand. I thought to myself; "Now wasn't that stupid" and looked at what I had left of the screwdriver, casually flinging it over my shoulder in disgust. When I turned around people were freaking out. "Are you OK, are you OK!" from several medics and nurses......(NOTE: don't go to the range with that many medical staff....they freak out too easy). I had shrapnel and cordite to the face and some blood, but no pain of feeling that anything was wrong. Good thing I wear glasses. They all figured I was in shock. I was pissed I had lost a perfectly good screwdriver, that I had borrowed from a guy who had brought it from home. But, I'm alright now.
Anyway, things like that happen if you fire too many rounds, don't properly follow drills, don't properly lubricate or maintain your wpn, get careless, or a myriad of other reasons. Murphy's Law is waiting for you.
GW
Blakey said:I would propose this change for the simple fact that nowhere in the current IA do you inspect the breach area or barrel, quite a few stoppages on the C9 are as George described, a missfired round that has been logged in the barrel and does not eject when the wpn is cocked.
Any input?
48Highlander said:when you squeeze the trigger durring the IA, the working parts will fail to go fully forward.
Blakey said:Negative, if that round is fully home in the barrel, the bolt and bolt carrier will be fully forward, try this with a "dummy round", put it into the breach,close the feed tray cover and feed tray, then fire the action.
[edit] I should add that this is probably due to a problem with the extractor and or carbine build-up in the barrel.[/edit]