M
Master Blaster
Guest
GPig;
The receiver dents that you refer to are the result of using the A3 collapsible stock that has been in the system for some time. It‘s an armourers job to take out the dents with a formed mandrel supplied by the manufacturer. As the weapon wears, the stock has a tendency to cause the rear area of the receiver to become misshapen and cause some failuers to feed and extract. It is an easy fix to a problem known for some time. This is part and parcel of the regularly scheduled maintenance of the KH SMG/rifle system.
The mythical quality you refer to is far from mythical...you point the weapon at what you wish to destroy; it‘s dead. Simple, straightfoward and deadly. Easy to train both inexperienced and skilled shooters in load/clear/IA‘s, a controllable rate of fire and a flash signature that is nothing compared to the way an M4 lights up the country side.
I don‘t really want to get in a pissing match as to the ‘best‘ weapon because there isn‘t one. What ever works best in the deadly confrontational environment where you happen to encounter live targets is the best at the time.
A skilled soldier/LEO with the weapon he is most secure with will devastate any other individual with any other weapons system. A prime example is the sniper. Another example is Assault teams from Law Eenforcement HERT groups or Covert Ops teams. Intimate knowledge of the capabilities of the weaponry they apply at the target designated by the operational requirement.
If you truly want to be impressed by the destructive capacity of a sub 20mm automatic weapon, check out the GPMG teams from the northern Scottish islands called the Orkneys...the best that the Brits have ever produced reside in the Regiment known as "The Highlanders" (formerly the Seaforth, Glengarry and Camerons). To watch them lay, engage and destroy targets well beyond the specifications established originally by FN with the MAG58 is a joy to behold. It makes this old soldier a little moist in the corner of at least one eye.
All the Best
Dileas Gu Brath
The receiver dents that you refer to are the result of using the A3 collapsible stock that has been in the system for some time. It‘s an armourers job to take out the dents with a formed mandrel supplied by the manufacturer. As the weapon wears, the stock has a tendency to cause the rear area of the receiver to become misshapen and cause some failuers to feed and extract. It is an easy fix to a problem known for some time. This is part and parcel of the regularly scheduled maintenance of the KH SMG/rifle system.
The mythical quality you refer to is far from mythical...you point the weapon at what you wish to destroy; it‘s dead. Simple, straightfoward and deadly. Easy to train both inexperienced and skilled shooters in load/clear/IA‘s, a controllable rate of fire and a flash signature that is nothing compared to the way an M4 lights up the country side.
I don‘t really want to get in a pissing match as to the ‘best‘ weapon because there isn‘t one. What ever works best in the deadly confrontational environment where you happen to encounter live targets is the best at the time.
A skilled soldier/LEO with the weapon he is most secure with will devastate any other individual with any other weapons system. A prime example is the sniper. Another example is Assault teams from Law Eenforcement HERT groups or Covert Ops teams. Intimate knowledge of the capabilities of the weaponry they apply at the target designated by the operational requirement.
If you truly want to be impressed by the destructive capacity of a sub 20mm automatic weapon, check out the GPMG teams from the northern Scottish islands called the Orkneys...the best that the Brits have ever produced reside in the Regiment known as "The Highlanders" (formerly the Seaforth, Glengarry and Camerons). To watch them lay, engage and destroy targets well beyond the specifications established originally by FN with the MAG58 is a joy to behold. It makes this old soldier a little moist in the corner of at least one eye.
All the Best
Dileas Gu Brath