I watched this yesterday in it's entirety, I definitely did not agree with James Yeager and his friends opinion that "Bullpups sucked" I found it really ignorant and very misinformed to be combined with a high level of ignorance as well. But I do admire his character in the sense of stating his opinion regardless..I'm very happy that you are showing the strengths and weakness of Bullpops because there is a lot of misnomers/bias being promoted by some of the industries lead trainers and Blackrifle icons out there.
i wonder how he got a hold of a IWI tavor. i thought they were phrohib in the states.
I have a Kel-Tec RFB that I bought last week. I brought it out for this video shoot however the rifle wasn't working properly. I have to send it back to Kel-Tec for warranty work.
The Tavor is coming to the US next year, or so IWI tells us. The rifle I got a hold of and shot was the preproduction prototype. I'm looking forward to it quite a bit.
JY's opinions are aggressive and comical but I personally think he's right on with the idea that the bullpup system is highly sub-optimal. When you get down to putting rounds down range with Tavors or AUGs It's just so bulky and akward. It's an infantry gun over a gunfighters gun. I think thats where JY's opinions come from. In a CQB environment they are kings. But outside of their compact stature there are almost no advantages. With the quality of SBR's coming out these days it's hard to really want to mess with all of your AR/AK ergonomics. This is all not including the P90 which I consider to be a sub-gun and not comparable to an AR or AUG.
The best testimony against AUG/bullpup was a mate of mine who had a 10 year career in the Aussie Army. He and most of the other guys hated the AUG. When he was accepted in to the Aus SAS and they got M4's was the best day of his career. You might not think that is something to be fussed about and that a poor craftsman blames his tools but this is a guy who has spent over 2 years collected on tour in firezones from east timor to Iraq/A-stan. And the one thing that becomes obvious only when you are being shot back at is that bull pups are fumbly and do not work easily under stress. Guys end up grabbing hot barrels with only their gloves on, having to visually find the mag well and other fun **** ups that dont count on the square range. The worst is apparently how the HUGE BULKY stock get caught on all your chest rig kit. Also, hot barrels seem to cause malfs in rifles [esp in 40'+ heat]. Fixing that **** in a bull pup is like doing surgery on a hamster. when you get a stuck casing it's not as easy as just finger banging the casing out.
And that's what prevented me from getting a tavor many years ago. But IRL if you just want a sick range puppy those things are funner than ****.
- chris
JY's opinions are aggressive and comical but I personally think he's right on with the idea that the bullpup system is highly sub-optimal. When you get down to putting rounds down range with Tavors or AUGs It's just so bulky and akward. It's an infantry gun over a gunfighters gun. I think thats where JY's opinions come from. In a CQB environment they are kings. But outside of their compact stature there are almost no advantages. With the quality of SBR's coming out these days it's hard to really want to mess with all of your AR/AK ergonomics. This is all not including the P90 which I consider to be a sub-gun and not comparable to an AR or AUG.
The best testimony against AUG/bullpup was a mate of mine who had a 10 year career in the Aussie Army. He and most of the other guys hated the AUG. When he was accepted in to the Aus SAS and they got M4's was the best day of his career. You might not think that is something to be fussed about and that a poor craftsman blames his tools but this is a guy who has spent over 2 years collected on tour in firezones from east timor to Iraq/A-stan. And the one thing that becomes obvious only when you are being shot back at is that bull pups are fumbly and do not work easily under stress. Guys end up grabbing hot barrels with only their gloves on, having to visually find the mag well and other fun **** ups that dont count on the square range. The worst is apparently how the HUGE BULKY stock get caught on all your chest rig kit. Also, hot barrels seem to cause malfs in rifles [esp in 40'+ heat]. Fixing that **** in a bull pup is like doing surgery on a hamster. when you get a stuck casing it's not as easy as just finger banging the casing out.
And that's what prevented me from getting a tavor many years ago. But IRL if you just want a sick range puppy those things are funner than ****.
- chris
A great post that brings up another question. Both the Aussie SAS and British SAS run M4's, and both militaries run bullpup rifles as standard issue. That really says something. More to that point, what elite unit anywhere in the world(aside from Israeli Mossad and the like) actively choose bullpup rifles?
MA's videos are great, very clear and to the point. However, the donwfalls as mentioned are a step backwards in modern fighting rifle design. Again, the one downfall not mentioned which I believe is a big one, is the fixed LOP. For temperate climates that may not be such an issue. For cold weather climates where gear and clothing add up quickly, it surely is an issue. Lets not forget that everyone is built a little different, and one LOP does not fit all. The only advantage a bullpup offers is shorter OAL. This is only a benefit if you do a lot of CQB/confined space work. The beauty of the AR platform is its modularity. Less than a minute and you can have a 10" barrel, or a 7.5" or a 20". The length of an M4 be it legit 14.5" or civvie 16" is not excessively restrictive for indoor work. When it comes to home defense, the length should be no issue. Its your house, game it out and work the angles. For LEO/MIL who don't necessarily know the layout, a shorter and less cumbersome rifle is always a plus. That being said, the only really confined space is in a vehicle and there's no wonder solution for that.
TDC




























