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In message , robert
arndt writes "Paul J. Adam" wrote in message ... How so moron since we Germans invented the assault rifle in WW2 as the STG-44 No, the Russians first invented the assault rifle in 1916 with the Federov Avtomat. Sorry, Mauser issued the first automatic rifles Flieger Selbslader Karbiner in 1915 as aircraft observers guns. So you're now going from "selective-fire rifle with lower-power ammunition", the normal definition of an assault rifle (and one filled admirably by the Federov) to simply "semi-automatic rifle"? In that case, then you're batting level with Mexico, who had designed the Mondragon (which was possibly the first automatic rifle to be formally adopted as a service arm - by the Mexican Army in 1908). Interestingly, the Mondragon was bought in numbers by Germany in 1914, for use by aviators. Not needing oiled cartridges probably helped. These were followed by the experimental infantry Model 16 in 1916. The very first Mauser experimental rifles were tested in 1908... well before the Avtomat. (From the Encyclopedia of Firearms by Ian V. Hogg) But the Avtomat was a selective-fire weapon, and controllable in full-auto: the Mauser and Mondragon weapons were not. Or was the M1 Garand an "assault rifle"? The G11 being so incredible that it's dead as a dodo without a single service user? Dropped for general Heer usage due to reunification costs, still in use by German SOFs. No, they've got the G36. Also superior to anything in US Inventory... and that gun also originated in WW2 with Niploit caseless ammunition research!!! No, it didn't (Nipolit was a moderately interesting idea, but has virtually nothing to do with the G11's design: the key breakthrough was raising the cook-off temperature sufficiently) Rob p.s. Nice try ![]() -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
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(B2431) wrote in message ...
From: (robert arndt) Date: 7/5/2004 4:16 AM Central Daylight Time Message-id: http://www.hk-usa.com/pages/military...bines/xm8.html Check out the head-to-head comparison. HK rules! Rob Congratulations, teuton, it only took 40 years for you Germans to catch up with us. How so moron since we Germans invented the assault rifle in WW2 as the STG-44 and the last was Mauser's STG-45... which the Mauser team went to Spain and developed as the Cetme... before returning to Germany as HK improving the design into the G-3... which has led to both the incredible G-11 and new G-36. IIRC, you got your crummy M-16A-1 which fouled like a MF in Vietnam... 20 years AFTER the Mauser STG-45. Having said that, you really do need to get over your inferiority complex and try to stay on topic. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired What would an AF jerk like you know about rifles anyway? Ever fired once since boot? I'll bet I own and have fired more assault weapons in my 20s than you ever fired during your entire military career/life. My dad was a weapons inspector and I still have a fairly large pre-ban arsenal at home. Rob |
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From: (robert arndt)
Date: 7/6/2004 12:37 AM Central Daylight Time Message-id: (B2431) wrote in message ... From: (robert arndt) Date: 7/5/2004 4:16 AM Central Daylight Time Message-id: http://www.hk-usa.com/pages/military...bines/xm8.html Check out the head-to-head comparison. HK rules! Rob Congratulations, teuton, it only took 40 years for you Germans to catch up with us. How so moron since we Germans invented the assault rifle in WW2 as the STG-44 and the last was Mauser's STG-45... which the Mauser team went to Spain and developed as the Cetme... before returning to Germany as HK improving the design into the G-3... which has led to both the incredible G-11 and new G-36. IIRC, you got your crummy M-16A-1 which fouled like a MF in Vietnam... 20 years AFTER the Mauser STG-45. Having said that, you really do need to get over your inferiority complex and try to stay on topic. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired What would an AF jerk like you know about rifles anyway? Ever fired once since boot? I'll bet I own and have fired more assault weapons in my 20s than you ever fired during your entire military career/life. My dad was a weapons inspector and I still have a fairly large pre-ban arsenal at home. Rob I wouldn't bet on that if I were you. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
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A well-armed milita being necessary for the safety of a free state, the
right of the people to bear and carry AK-47 shall not be infringed. |
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robert arndt wrote:
http://www.hk-usa.com/pages/military...bines/xm8.html Check out the head-to-head comparison. HK rules! Rob Where's the bayonet go? Cheers, Richard |
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Richard Stewart wrote in message ...
robert arndt wrote: http://www.hk-usa.com/pages/military...bines/xm8.html Check out the head-to-head comparison. HK rules! Rob Where's the bayonet go? Cheers, Richard Take a look he http://sys.heatgame.net/Public/News/hk-g36-strip.jpg Interestingly enough, the HK G-36 (which the XM-8 is derived from) actually uses the old AK-74 bayonets left over from the NVA stock! Had the HK G-11 rifle been adopted the evolutionary bayonet for it was going to be a ballistic tube-launched device. This was in the design stage when the hand-guard version, single rail model was testing. Rob |
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B2431 wrote:
From: (robert arndt) snip Interestingly enough, the HK G-36 (which the XM-8 is derived from) actually uses the old AK-74 bayonets left over from the NVA stock! Oh? And just when did the North Vietnamese Army get the AK-74? NVA = Nationalen Volksarmee (National People's Army), the East German armed forces. Does the X in XM8 mean "experimental?" How many have actually been used in combat? None as yet (at least publicly; it's possible some SOF units have used them). The G36 saw combat with German special forces in Afghanistan. It seems to have done very well there. ONwe thing not yet mentioned is that there is a serious move afoot to reequip with a larger caliber weapon (probably 6.8mm) and the XM8 may be the opportunity to do it. -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right." - Senator Carl Schurz, 1872 |
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From: "Thomas Schoene"
Date: 7/7/2004 4:24 PM Central Daylight Time Message-id: . net B2431 wrote: From: (robert arndt) snip Interestingly enough, the HK G-36 (which the XM-8 is derived from) actually uses the old AK-74 bayonets left over from the NVA stock! Oh? And just when did the North Vietnamese Army get the AK-74? NVA = Nationalen Volksarmee (National People's Army), the East German armed forces. I know, I was tweaking teuton. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
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