You also have to remember a lot of people of shooting cheap crap 55grn Norco ammo out of it. It is a 1 in 7 twist barrel, it's stabilizes the heavy bullets better.
Interesting
Would 62gr be heavy enough?
You also have to remember a lot of people of shooting cheap crap 55grn Norco ammo out of it. It is a 1 in 7 twist barrel, it's stabilizes the heavy bullets better.
Some people have missed the point of this thread it seems - no one is claiming that the X95 is a precision rifle (I have a Ruger Precision and an HK SL8 for those purposes) - my question was is barrel flex (as shown quite clearly in the video I linked) a factor
I am not surprised by all the excuses coming after this. It is a battle rifle , so what, it has a license to suck ?
Tavors have well documented issues that contributed to its lack of accuracy. Thin barrel, heavy trigger combined with weak plastic housing that loosens up gradually by cradling hot steel components.
Tavors have never been in a single fight with nearly equally equipped opponents. It s so called battle proven is inrelavent.
Sorry for your $2600 rifle, it is not that good.
reliability is an inverse function of accuracy
reliability is an inverse function of accuracy
You also have to remember a lot of people of shooting cheap crap 55grn Norco ammo out of it. It is a 1 in 7 twist barrel, it's stabilizes the heavy bullets better.
I'd expect a recent design to be able to at least match a decent late model AK for accuracy, but many Tavors and especially X95s can't even seem to do that, even with optics.
I respect the practical offhand accuracy and ergos, but between the typically mediocre mechanical accuracy and the Playskool plasticy feel, I'd expect these things to be priced in the $1300-$1500 range, not $2600.
I'd expect a recent design to be able to at least match a decent late model AK for accuracy, but many Tavors and especially X95s can't even seem to do that, even with optics.
I respect the practical offhand accuracy and ergos, but between the typically mediocre mechanical accuracy and the Playskool plasticy feel, I'd expect these things to be priced in the $1300-$1500 range, not $2600.
it is not you, not the optics it is the gun. It should be a $1000 level gun for its quality but we have so few NR options here in Canada. btw iwi uses a few women to advertise I hope you did not fall for her cuz she is already spoken of. lol
I bet the designers at IWI are laughing at us North Americans for putting scopes and nice triggers in the rifle. Pretty sure they designed the rifle to be run-n-gun, CQB, cover fire type shooting.
Here's a question, go to YouTube and search for combat footage. Let me know how often do standard soldiers, under fire, have the opportunity to find a position where they can make used of an accurate sub MOA rifle. I'm not talking about DMR type tasks, which they probably have AR type platforms for it.
Or try this yourself, without any bench/table support, and try to see if you can shoot a supposedly accurate sub-MOA rifle, accurately. I bet it's impossible. I can't even imagine the stress and pace involved during combat, so I'm pretty sure 99.9% of the soldiers won't even be able to take advantage of an accurate sub-MOA combat rifle.
The problem is any number of older designs (AK-74, AR, AUG etc) shoot better on average, while weighing less and not looking like a Tapco'ed up Kel Tec product.



























