I got my introduction to my new best friend, FNC1 s/n 7L2612, during basic training at the old Armoured Corps School in Borden in 1965. The SMG was the personal weapon of the tank crewman so we had one of these too, mine was s/n 0S7185. Did a lot of shooting with them after that, incl various rifle teams. The FN was the "gold standard" for a battle rifle at the time-rugged, reliable, easy to strip and clean, but a tad heavy. I prefer an Garand or M14 type on the range, but the FN was it for a fighting rifle.
I think our contingent on the Golan Heights was just about the last CF unit to convert from the FN to the C7 in 1987/88. I did an earlier tour there in the 1970s during which time our QM burned down and toasted a few FNs and SMGs in the process. More importantly, all the issue records for personal weapons were destroyed in the fire. I thought I was quite clever when I had the RQMS get an aquittance roll from the pay office and go around in dawn's early light to inspect every man's personal weapon, and have him sign for it by s/n on the aquittance roll inorder to restore our weapons security. Several years later I learned that they had torn down one of the old Turkish-made pre-fabs that we were living in at the time and found an FN in the attic insulation that was not on inventory. I guess some "gunnut" decided to nick it and maybe send it home, but lost the stomach to go thru with it.
I remember another loss in that fire, an expensive Italian o/u shotgun belonging to one of the UN civvies. I had agreed to him securing it in a paul bunyan container in the QM while he went on home leave to Greece. Needless to say it was toast as well. This guy got all PO'd and accused me of destroying his nice shotgun because of previous "disagreements". I told him that he had indeed pi$$ed me off a few times, but not enough for me to burn down our QM stores as a revenge act. I remember another funny one in the aftermath of this conflagration where NDHQ had produced a listing of everything that had ever been issued to us from the supply system. The list included 10,000 or so of the MWO's metal collar rank badges, and they queried me as to why our excessive consumption of these. I told them that we were a 130 man unit and that promotions to MWO had been quite slow during my tour, but maybe they were an everyday event before my time.