I worked in the weapons det. in Wainwright when it was the PPCLI battle school. You should have seen the tricks the troops used to get those rifles and guns clean. Brake cleaner, gel hand cleaner, routine hot showers for the weapons, scraping tools and screwdrivers. The instructors and all of the guys in the QM loved to jack up the recruits so you can understand why they were such fastidious "cleaners". Rifle "maintenance" is for civis. Despite all that, the c7s still seemed to shoot well enough.
Wow...your post and C77's really brought back memories I'd long forgotten about!
But this brings up a point: considering the damage being done to precision tools belonging to the nation and the taxpayer...tools which should be cared for, which if undamaged can give you an edge in survival for the troops...I'm wondering if the Battleschool instructors shouldn't be threatened with military charges? I mean, let's think about this: the military correctly harps on us about care and maintenance of our weapons and equipment, insisting on a light coat of CLP for rust prevention, lube for reliable operation, cleaning the barrel for optimum accuracy and proper chambering/extraction... yet the specific demands of these instructors are having a significant unintended consequence in actually doing significant damage to the rifles.
I know that when I was in, if I'd been discovered to have damaged Crown equipment or weapons, I'd have faced military charges, even when I was a dummy Private. So why do we continue to let the battleschool staff insist on "cleaning standards" that damage equipment?!?!
Back when the C7 was still brand new, I remember getting a flyer from Diemaco at an airshow, describing the C7 and C8 barrels as they were existing in 1989. I remember clearly being totally stunned that they claimed a C7 barrel that was only subjected to standard "ball" ammunition (meaning no blanks abuse) and only semi-auto shooting, was supposed to last 25,000 rounds 'till the rifling was eroded bad enough that accuracy had grown to double group/MPI sizes as compared to a brand new barrel. I thought that was especially good. And for the next 5 years, every C7 I'd shot was capable of very tight accuracy...with three exceptions: Basic Training rifles, Battleschool rifles and the Elcan scoped C7's. Now, that's not to say those were "horrible", they just weren't nearly as "pin point accurate" as a well-kept C7 was capable of with a good shooter on a good day...but even an abused C7 was far more accurate than AK's or many other assault rifles, while being competitive with some of the better designs.
But when a C7 is cared for, and limit the full auto to just reasonable amounts, very limited or no blank use...wow. I mean really wow.
One day, using the iron sight Battleschool C7's, it was about -35, and we laid in the snow to shoot moving targets at 400m. I was getting around 70% hits...and I still can't quite believe it even today! But I wasn't the only one on the line that was getting such good results. Keep in mind, those were likely 10 years old by that point, lots of strains and abuse subjected to them, tens of thousands of rounds of blanks over the years...and it STILL performed like that?!?!? I'd think a Russian Spetnaz operator would be really jealous if he saw us all that day!


















































