Very interesting, and yes, my mistake, I meant to say 7.62. Interesting info about the C2's, nice to hear many of you have experience or were in the forces and used them. How would you rate them vs. the AR-15 pattern C7's and 8's?
no it wouldnt , the hammer would ride back with the carrier and it wouldn't strike the pin .
The scores at the National Matches (aka CFSAC) at Connaught Ranges soared when the FNs were replaced by the C7s. Iron sights on each, same course of fire IIRC. The solution was to make the matches harder to keep things interesting.
Was the FN a better rifle? IMHO, no. Heavy, hard recoil, a gas plug that was hard (somewhat) to clean, smaller magazine and a butt stock shape that bruised everyone. The C7 has a worse backsight and for a while only one length of stock, but is lighter weight, no gas system to scrape, selective fire, negligible recoil, and a 30 rd magazine that makes a monopod rest. The C7A1 and the C79 sight improved the shooting even more. There were a few different length stocks in the system, but not easy to find. The C7A2 is even better because as a combat rifle, the shooter can adjust the stock to fit with body armour. But some nimrod decided to give every rifle a goofy Tri-Rail on the front sight block. It is only good as a counterweight.
Thank you for the insight! The C7A2 is the current model in service? Select fire, 30 round mag, 5.56 NATO? As for the tri rail, it does seem pretty goofy. How is the gas impingement system in regards to keeping clean and free of jams?
Yes the hammer does ride forward with the carrier, and it rests directly on the firing pin extension.
The hammer spring is stronger than the firing pin spring and causes it protrude from the hole, allowing the weapon to slam fire. This can happen before the BB is fully locked.
it should be almost impossible for this to happen on a rifle that isnt worn out of spec, the firing pin cant reach the primer until the breach block is in the locked position, and the hammer shouldnt push the firing pin forward unless it releases after the bolt is almost all the way forward, otherwise it will chamber a round, and stop unfired and just out of battery
Yes the hammer does ride forward with the carrier, and it rests directly on the firing pin extension.
The hammer spring is stronger than the firing pin spring and causes it protrude from the hole, allowing the weapon to slam fire. This can happen before the BB is fully locked.
The gas system is almost self-cleaning. It works perfectly with certain military issue powders; but worked very badly in Vietnam when a more heavily fouling powder was accepted as a substitute for their 5.56 ammo. The C7's interior parts are chromed and clean easily. As long as the gaps on the slip rings are not aligned, all is good.
The firing pin can reach the primer before it is fully locked. It can act the same way the fixed pin on the C1 SMG did, and there is a warning about the round firing prematurely (yes I know that the smg was designed to fire just before the bolt was fully forward).
The hammer does indeed rest on the firing pin extension before the breech block is fully locked. The hammer spring is much stronger that the firing pin spring and will force it to protrude fully through the front of the breech block.
The BBC won't stop out of battery, the force of the return springs will force it closed and there is no way for the hammer to stop that from happening.
Not a misnomer. That is the correct name.
Correct according to whom? The inventor was a Belgian francophone, what did he call it?



























