G36 zero shifting has been said for years. The barrel trunnion molded into plastic and the cheapo Hensoldt 3.5X power sight are the problems. There is also something about the receiver flexing.
Seems to me every nation complaint about their 556 rifles. The US did in Vietnam, the brits did it when the SA80 came out, the French with their FAMAS, now the German... could it be because of the smaller parts compared to a 762 NATO rifle and the use of plastic instead of wood and metal?
No, it was poor engineering.
Most rifles have issues when introduced to service. That said almost all manufacturers accept these issues and the rifles are improved and those issues go away very quickly.
Seems to me every nation complaint about their 556 rifles. The US did in Vietnam, the brits did it when the SA80 came out, the French with their FAMAS, now the German... could it be because of the smaller parts compared to a 762 NATO rifle and the use of plastic instead of wood and metal?
Yes, the problem is the plastic, but it's not because they used plastic instead of wood, or 5.56 instead of 7.62, is what I was saying.Making smaller parts and using plastic instead of wood and metal is "engineering". Just not what they are blaming the issue on in the article.
Edit: I had to re-read the article. I skipped too much the first time.
Seems to me every nation complaint about their 556 rifles.
The US did in Vietnam,
carbon-fouling/chamber-coroding
the brits did it when the SA80 came out,
fragile plastic-furniture, and rate-of-fire concerns
the French with their FAMAS,
firing-mode-selector issues, and bolt-carrier frailty issues
now the German... could it be because of the smaller parts compared to a 762 NATO rifle and the use of plastic instead of wood and metal?



























