I had the absolute pleasure of getting to know this awesome little belt fed today. Here's a bunch of pics and a the video footage I took of this gun.
[youtube]S-HXFj9-G0[/youtube]

One thing I noticed was how you felt the recoil in the ground, the tripod does a great job of keeping the gun perfectly steady on target and transferring any force directly into the soil.

The bolt travels quite a bit inside the receiver, so when you shoot it, you feel two very distinct little nudges. One when the round goes off and one where the bolt hits the back of the receiver. To give you an idea of what it was like, it felt like shooting a awesomely exaggerated AR-15.

38 pounds without the tripod makes this thing very controllable but it would be a pain to carry around all day, that's for sure.


I'm glad it has a nice big barrel shroud like it does, it's way too easy to burn through a hundred or more rounds and one would instantly burn themselves on the barrel if they happened to touch it.

Interestingly enough, the trigger isn't pulled to the rear like in normal guns, it's pulled up. A bit strange at first, I don't exactly know why they did that. It might be due to the trigger on some of these being that "double thumb paddle" or something, but that's purely coming out of my arse. I know too little about the 1919 to give a definitive reason for why the trigger has to be pressed up.











Has a pretty nice set of sights too.


All in all it was wonderful and I'm very glad to have had the chance of seeing and shooting this firearm.
[youtube]S-HXFj9-G0[/youtube]

One thing I noticed was how you felt the recoil in the ground, the tripod does a great job of keeping the gun perfectly steady on target and transferring any force directly into the soil.

The bolt travels quite a bit inside the receiver, so when you shoot it, you feel two very distinct little nudges. One when the round goes off and one where the bolt hits the back of the receiver. To give you an idea of what it was like, it felt like shooting a awesomely exaggerated AR-15.

38 pounds without the tripod makes this thing very controllable but it would be a pain to carry around all day, that's for sure.


I'm glad it has a nice big barrel shroud like it does, it's way too easy to burn through a hundred or more rounds and one would instantly burn themselves on the barrel if they happened to touch it.

Interestingly enough, the trigger isn't pulled to the rear like in normal guns, it's pulled up. A bit strange at first, I don't exactly know why they did that. It might be due to the trigger on some of these being that "double thumb paddle" or something, but that's purely coming out of my arse. I know too little about the 1919 to give a definitive reason for why the trigger has to be pressed up.











Has a pretty nice set of sights too.


All in all it was wonderful and I'm very glad to have had the chance of seeing and shooting this firearm.
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