They didn't look at the ejection port to see if it was actually empty and not a failure?
How is that the guns fault?
is it relevant if you use the charging handle instead of the bolt release?
LOL! How do you assume from any of those videos that they are forced by their equipment to take shortcuts?
When I load 10 rounds in a mag and fire 10 rounds from it, I don't check the chamber before reloading either. None of my equipment forces me to do that.
At least you're right about it being settled on the range. I'll settle the best for me on the range, you can settle it for you, and everyone else can do it for themselves as well.
if the gun stops firing, release the mag, put new full mag in, charge with charging handle.
guess what, if you have a jam it'll clear the jam and you'll have a full mag in there to boot!
sounds pretty logical to me...
Maybe I am an alien?
I love how the AR vs. Tavor threads always devolve into a debate about mag change speeds. While being proficient with your weapon is extremely important for a soldier I have serious doubts about how important that .5 second longer mag change is in the grand scheme of a battle. The important thing is does the rifle go bang when it's supposed to, and does it put rounds where it is supposed to? It seems quite clear to me from all of the things I've seen and read that they both do exactly what they were intended to do, and that attempting to make definitive statements about which is better is mostly about promoting the one you personally prefer. So in the spirit of the debate I say the AR is crap... Mostly because my C7 was long and annoying when climbing in and out of a vehicle, and on the occasions I got to go to KAF the green furniture clashed with my civilian clothing...
A rapid string of fire has nothing to do with shooting more rounds in a group. Shooting more rounds in a group is to limit or eliminate the low variable you mention below and provide a more realistic expectation of how your rifle performs.A lot of the boys...saying that 5 and 10 shot groups are required because large rapid strings are a fact of life for military guns.
That's fair as far as it goes but it also introduces more variables that may skew results, IMHO.
That opens up another dog fight.
I fire three shot groups allowing the barrel time to cool between shots. A lot of the boys take exception to that saying that 5 and 10 shot groups are required because large rapid strings are a fact of life for military guns. That's fair as far as it goes but it also introduces more variables that may skew results, IMHO.
you need at least 6 to calculate a standard deviation, so statistically if you want to be correct you need a 6 shot group, minimum. then you do a 95 percentile and that gives you your moa.
Actually - no. Barrel heat induces flyers that tend to skew statistical results. That is why the precision guys avoid barrel heat like the plague. The lighter barrels especially start to spray once they heat up. A large number of rounds in a group will only prove that accuracy degrades as the barrel heats. Personally I would limit the number of shots per group to five...three is better. For meaningful results you want to eliminate variables external to the gun as much as possible.
Thankfully matches and combat are never more than 5 rounds of slow fire at a time.
If you need to limit group size and fear a warm barrel to get decent groups from a supposed service rifle, it is not much of a service rifle.



























