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Home » M4 Monopoly » No Issues with M4 at Wanat

No Issues with M4 at Wanat

wanat-m4-ok.jpg

Now back to the M-​​4 COP Kahler/​OP Topside debate.

I spoke with Col. Doug Tamilio, Program Manager for Soldier Weapons and Rich Audette, the Soldier Weapons deputy PM on Oct. 15 about the find­ings in a draft report on the so called “Battle of Wanat” that called out the M4 and the M-​​249 for mul­ti­ple fail­ures at “high cyclic rates” dur­ing the battle.

We’ve had a bit of a back and forth on this issue here at DT: was it a fun­da­men­tal flaw with the M4 or was it a prob­lem of lead­er­ship? Both sides are well rep­re­sented here, but I thought I’d give the Army its say in this debate.

Tamilio said he was sur­prised with the find­ings and that he did not agree with the author’s call for a sys­tem­atic look at the M4’s abil­ity to keep up at high rates of fire.

“To date, I have never had a Soldier or a com­man­der or an NCO come up to me and say ‘these weapons are terrible’…Now I’m just talk­ing about the M4. we don’t get any­thing, no feed­back, and you know if there was a seri­ous issue out there some­where in eight years of fight­ing with all the bat­tles that we’ve had we would have some seri­ous data.”

Obviously Tamilio is defend­ing his service’s rifle, but he has a point. We all know that there are less maintenance-​​intensive options out there for troops who do their work in dusty envi­ron­ments (which is just about every­where except the arc­tic and the jun­gle). But this issue of high rates of fire hasn’t been brought up earlier.

The require­ment for the M4 “mean time between stop­page” is 600 rounds. But Tamilio said today it demon­strates “3,600 rounds before stoppage…So that’s a world-​​class weapon.”

Tamilio said there are some “incon­sis­ten­cies” between the draft his­tory report and what he read and heard just after the bat­tle. “We talked to the unit sergeant major a year ago and the report is not what I got first hand from him.”

“I truly believe that some of these Soldiers fired so many rounds so quickly that could that hap­pen? Yes,” he added, explain­ing that he’d done tests with SOCOM where they fired 560 rounds in two min­utes before the bar­rel warped.

“We knew this hap­pened,” Tamilio said. “We inter­viewed the unit, talked to them and then went on about our busi­ness because we didn’t at that time think we had any issues with the M4 in that incident.”

— Christian

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October 20th, 2009 | M4 Monopoly | 4614100 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2009/10/20/no-issues-with-m4-at-wanat/No+Issues+with+M4+at+Wanat2009-10-20+19%3A36%3A35lowe You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. pfcem says:
    October 22, 2009 at 12:34 am

    NICK,
    Mr. Skinner and oth­ers don’t know WTF they are talk­ing about! A prop­erly main­tained M16/​M4 is as reli­able as any other carbine/​assault rifle. The ONLY dif­fer­ence is that some other designs are ‘more for­giv­ing’ to improper care/​maintenance. The M16/​M4 does not require any more care/​maintenance than ANY carbine/​assault rifle SHOULD. Your weapon is your life, treat it as such. IF the M16/​M4 was HALF as bad as Mr. Skinner and oth­ers make it out to be then we would be see­ing MUCH greater losses due to it. But in real­ity the VAST major­ity of ser­vice men (& women) haven’t had issues with the M16/M4’s reli­a­bil­ity.
    The biggest fail­ing of the M16/​M4 is the same as ALL 5.56mm NATO carbines/​assault rifles, the weak & unre­li­able 5.56mm NATO cartridge!

    Reply
  2. Thomas L. Nielsen says:
    October 22, 2009 at 12:46 am

    “Posted by: AMMO at October 21, 2009 01:32 PM:
    Why the hell can’t it be both?“
    Hear, hear. I might have men­tioned this in another post, but I’ve spent 8 years doing risk and haz­ard assess­ment on mil­i­tary sys­tems. In my expe­ri­ence, in a really mas­sive frak-​​up, sev­eral things go wrong at the same time. In this case, as AMMO points out, I doubt it was EITHER an inher­ent prob­lem with the M4 OR lack of main­te­nance OR the high sus­tained rate of fire, OR a lack of clay­mores OR bad fire dis­ci­pline OR.….. What hap­pened to “All of the Above”?
    Regards & all,
    Thomas L. Nielsen
    Denmark (presently Luxembourg)

    Reply
  3. Thomas L. Nielsen says:
    October 22, 2009 at 12:59 am

    Two fur­ther items:
    “Posted by: Gary Rubel at October 21, 2009 11:59 AM:
    Correction to the below post:
    AK has a TILTING bolt lock­ing sys­tem, NOT “rotat­ing”. Sorry for the error.
    Gary Rubel“
    Actually, you got it right the first time around. The AK series uses a 2-​​lug rotat­ing bolt head to lock.
    “Posted by: Billy Pitts at October 21, 2009 09:50 AM:
    .….and when he sat down with Alexai Kalishinikov, the designer of the AK fam­ily of weapons.…“
    That would be MIKHAIL TIMOFEYEVICH Kalashnikov. Don’t know if he had a brother named Alexai.….
    Regards & all,
    Thomas L. Nielsen
    Denmark (presently Luxembourg)

    Reply
  4. Tom Garrison says:
    October 22, 2009 at 6:17 am

    Funny. He’s never heard a com­man­der or sol­dier say any­thing bad? I am an infantry com­man­der and i think it blows. I know many, many peo­ple that do as well. It was a good rifle, but it’s time is up. The argu­ment of lead­er­ship is invalid. The point is that if there are options avail­able that are not as main­te­nance inten­sive then why would we not use them? People get to fanat­i­cal about these things. Our weapons are tools. Nothing more. It is a way to close with and destroy the enemy. I just want the best avail­able choice. The M4 is not it. Only a purist will tell you it is. Like many have said if it is an issue of cost buy the 416 uppers. I think we should just build ground up. Take lessons learned from the best rifles around the world. We are to beu­ra­cratic though. And we are lodged in ak and m4 camps etc. It is a tool. Try some objec­tiv­ity on it.

    Reply
  5. Zandor says:
    October 22, 2009 at 6:18 am

    Dear Nick;
    I think that you have the right idea.
    The US Army heroes, that can’t hit any­thing with their rifles, should be issued pis­tols in 44 Mag, 45ACP, 41 Mag, 357 Mag, 38 Special, 9mm, 32 Colt, 25 Colt, and 22 LR.
    With this line up of close range per­sonal defense weapons the US Army heroes will be able to miss their tar­gets with a choice of two weapons ( rifle or pis­tol ) in the cal­i­bre that they choose, instead of miss­ing with just the one weapon that they were issued.
    This pro­gram would not increase the chances of hits, since that is now effec­tively at near zero prob­a­bil­ity, but it would add to the macho image of hav­ing an oppor­tu­nity to take pic­tures of super studs car­ry­ing pis­tols, which can then be sent to girl­friends and moth­ers.
    A sol­dier that is so highly trained that he is unable fire his rifle, will be even more effec­tive if he is car­ry­ing a pis­tol.
    Some peo­ple don’t know any­thing about weapons.
    You are obvi­ously not in that group.

    Reply
  6. ProjectThor says:
    October 22, 2009 at 7:18 am

    Ahhh, another won­der­ful com­ment from Zandor! What would we do with­out your thought­ful insight and neu­tral views. I think you deserve a medal for youe brav­ery in com­bat and vast knowl­edge of the world at large…
    What a know noth­ing, used douchebag. Please, get a life or jump to a site like LiveLeak, where they like pin­heads like yourself.

    Reply
  7. Big Daddy says:
    October 22, 2009 at 7:33 am

    This is the same argu­ment that goes back to before the Civil war. The North could have armed many of their troops with the Henry and ended the war within a short period of time. That rifle when used by sol­diers who bought them with their own money rav­aged the south­ern troops they faced. No way a group of sol­diers with sin­gle shot weapons could over­come the onslaught of the Henry rifle’s fire­power. Any attacks by south­ern troops would have been put down within a few hours.
    But did the DOD buy them.….…NO!!!!!!! Even Lincoln who was a shooter him­self loved the weapon and could not get the Army to adapt it. There’s more to the story but I bring it up as an exam­ple. The same thing hap­pened to the sol­diers fac­ing the supe­rior Mauser dur­ing the Spanish war. We had the POS Krag. That fiasco made us adapt the Mauser based Springfield. The krag was only used for a few years, what a waste of money.
    So the DOD has a his­tory of this. before WWII they rejected the Thompson SMG, Did not use the quick change bar­rel for the BAR. Took for­ever to get the Garand into the hands of the sol­diers. And it goes on and on. The weird­est one is the fact we chose the M-​​60 over the MAG then adapted the MAG 20 years later..well big DUH for the DOD!!!!!
    The same argu­ment is going on now as did then when we issued the POS M-​​16. Not to men­tion only a few years after we forced all of NATO into using the 7.62mmx51mm. It (the M-​​16# was not designed to be a MBR, just a light car­bine for the Air Force.
    The Russians got it right because they actu­ally looked at the bat­tle fields of WWII and we got it wrong because we lis­tened to the bean coun­ters, pen­cil push­ers, pseudo scientists#like Robert McNamara#, desk com­man­dos and self serv­ing politicians/​generals who care more about their wal­lets get­ting fat.
    Look at the weapons we chose after WWII and look at what the Russians did. Their infantry squad and it’s weapons were way more effec­tive in real com­bat. To this day we still have no answer for the com­bi­na­tion of the RPG and AK-​​47, add the PKM, SVD and it’s a great com­bi­na­tion for the infantry. AND we still can’t get it right.
    The 5.56 round is anti­quated, there are bet­ter ones now#the 6.8mm). The need for mul­ti­ple weapons in mul­ti­ple cal­ibers is nec­es­sary for chang­ing bat­tle­fields and oper­a­tions. Desert, jun­gle, CQB, wood­land, spe­cial oper­a­tions, weapons for REMFs, dri­vers, MP’s and so on. One size does not fit all. It never has. The fun­ni­est one was the DOD try­ing to make boots that would fit both left and right feet as opposed to the not so funny M-​​16. It defi­cien­cies has cost many lives, that is a fact his­tory can­not ignore.
    What hap­pened at Wanat reads like an early report from Vietnam on how an out­post was over­run by the Vietcong. It was like deja vu all over again.

    Reply
  8. freefallingbomb says:
    October 22, 2009 at 10:18 am

    To the poster Mr. Byron Skinner:
    You wrote: “As usual with this prob­lem for over 40 years ‘Dead men tell no tales’.“
    and before that:
    “This whole issue stinks of cor­rup­tion at the high­est level in the Pentagon, it’s time for Congress to get off their cor­rupt col­lec­tive butts and look into this mur­der of American sol­diers and Marines and do some­thing about it. Where is Congressman John ‘I’m a Marine Colonel’ Murtha on this issue, on his way to a Colt ATM machine?“
    But ( LITERALLY ) TECHNICALLY SPEAKING the U.S.A. even “won” the two wars in Afghanistan and in Iraq! Why aren’t you happy?
    You U.S. infantrymen’s big prob­lem now is that these two wars were NOT won by RIFLES .
    Rifles don’t win wars, let alone World Wars. By the Second World War, rifles didn’t even win great bat­tles any­more: I think that the last time that this hap­pened was dur­ing the Two Boer Wars, and at very least dur­ing the con­quest of the entire American con­ti­nent.
    The flabby, lobster-​​tasting, nar­cis­sis­tic Pentagon gen­er­als know that: That’s pre­cisely the rea­son why they love to invest in heavy, cutting-​​edge, ultra-​​expensive hard­ware, espe­cially air­craft: Because THIS actu­ally wins wars, and even quickly & “cleanly” so!
    That’s also the rea­son why they insist on haz­ing every sin­gle U.S. infantry­man since World War Two with ridicu­lous toy guns, to every enemy soldier’s good laugh­ter.
    This rather sci­en­tific U.S. American notion of a “mil­i­tary vic­tory” is so skewed that the U.S.A. are even will­ing to spend more money on hav­ing 116 bloaks (and soon broads) bor­ing them­selves to death in EACH SINGLE state-​​of-​​the-​​art, nuclear-​​powered Seawolf-​​class attack sub­ma­rine, than on out­fit­ting 1.090.000 Army sol­diers plus another 203.000 Marines ( = a total of 1.293.000 infantry­men) with the VERY BEST assault rifle of any given period (“every epoch’s Infantry F-​​22 Raptor”), what­ever the model, and what­ever the price!
    Proof of that:
    ~ 1.500.000 U.S. infantry­men x 2.000 $ per “the best rifle in the World” = only 3.000.000.000 $ (3 BILLION U.S. dol­lars).
    In com­par­i­son to that:
    “Seawolf was pro­jected to be the most expen­sive (sub­ma­rine) ever built, with a total pro­gram cost for 12 sub­marines esti­mated in 1991 at 33,6 BILLION in cur­rent dol­lars” (Caps added by me)
    http://​www​.fas​.org/​p​r​o​g​r​a​m​s​/​s​s​p​/​m​a​n​/​u​s​w​p​n​s​/​n​a​v​y​/​s​u​b​m​a​r​i​n​e​s​/​s​s​n​2​1​_​s​e​a​w​o​l​f​.​h​tml
    (That’s 2,8 BILLION U.S. dol­lars per EACH INDIVIDUAL Seawolf-​​class sub­ma­rine, NOT COUNTING the true cost over­runs and pos­te­rior mod­ern­iza­tions!)
    And the heavy, strate­gic, nuclear B-​​1 bombers, cur­rently fly­ing as COIN planes in Afghanistan, also cost 70 mil­lion U.S. dol­lars EACH ,
    1) = 27,3 BILLION U.S. dol­lars for the whole pro­gram ( = for 69 air­craft)
    2) plus an ADDITIONAL 2,6 BILLION U.S. dol­lars in improve­ments
    3) and still ANOTHER 3,7 BILLION U.S. dol­lars worth of items needed to oper­ate the B-​​1 fleet,
    4) all of which makes 33,6 BILLION U.S. dol­lars for only 69 planes, or 486.956.521 EFFECTIVE U.S. dol­lars PER EACH INDIVIDUAL plane (what hap­pened to the orig­i­nal unit cost of only 70 mil­lion U.S. dol­lars? It went up 6,9 x times!),
    5) and B-1’s have only a crew of 4 men!
    http://​www​.nytimes​.com/​1​9​8​7​/​1​0​/​2​6​/​n​y​r​e​g​i​o​n​/​2​0​-​r​i​s​e​-​i​n​-​b​-​1​-​b​o​m​b​e​r​-​c​o​s​t​-​i​s​-​r​e​p​o​r​t​e​d​-​i​n​-​g​a​o​-​s​t​u​d​y​.​h​tml
    I think you get the point.
    In the mean­time, a brand-​​new AK-​​47 costs only 499 U.S. dol­lars, NOT EVEN the (the­o­ret­i­cal) 2.000 U.S. dol­lars I men­tioned above for some hypo­thet­i­cal “per­fect rifle” :
    http://​www​.atlantic​firearms​.com/
    Therefore:
    ~ 1.500.000 U.S. infantry­men x 499 $ per his Kalashnikov = 748.500.000 $ (748,5 mil­lion U.S. dol­lars, or ~ ONLY 30 % of O-​​N-​​E S-​​I-​​N-​​G-​​L-​​E Seawolf sub­ma­rine!)
    But, as you know, the wars that fol­lowed the Second World War were NOT World Wars… They were not even great wars any­more. They were dirty lit­tle skir­mishes, fought in jun­gles, deserts and moun­tains, by lots of small groups con­sist­ing of men, women and some­times even by chil­dren (because even A CHILD can hold and fire AK-47’s! Although the same can not nec­es­sar­ily be said of one of its his­tor­i­cal Vietnam oppo­nents, the M-​​14).
    The U.S. gen­er­als who shop for arms com­pletely neglect the polic­ing and Counter-​​Resistance = the down-​​to-​​Earth real­ity of any Occupation.
    That’s why the TRUE COST of the whole M-​​4 pro­gram could very well have been the fol­low­ing: Had the Talibans over­run that Wanat out­post – even briefly so – and tri­umphantly dis­played 9 impaled or cru­ci­fied U.S. sol­diers all over the Web, then the TOTAL cost of the Afghanistan War =
    229.759.242.899 U.S. dol­lars so far ( ~ 229 B-​​I-​​L-​​L-​​I-​​O-​​N-​​S of U.S. dol­lars, at least this morn­ing, when I last clicked on the run­ning esti­mate below: )
    http://​www​.costofwar​.com/
    (this year alone: 65 BILLION U.S. dol­lars = EVEN MORE money than for the Iraq War!)
    http://​www​.wired​.com/​d​a​n​g​e​r​r​o​o​m​/​2​0​0​9​/​0​5​/​s​i​g​n​-​o​f​-​t​h​e​-​t​i​m​e​s​-​a​f​g​h​a​n​i​s​t​a​n​-​w​a​r​-​c​o​s​t​s​-​h​i​g​h​e​r​-​t​h​a​n​-​i​r​aq/
    would have been spent com­pletely in vain, because the U.S.A. would have FLED head over heels from Afghanistan, like in Mogadishu (espe­cially now, since Obama became infal­li­ble with his Nobel Price for Peace), and all futur­is­tic, heavy, U.S. American weapon sys­tems would have had to leave Afghanistan equally defeated!
    Maybe, just maybe, the one and only thing that effec­tively stood between that last, bleed­ing U.S. soldier’s sur­vival in Wanat and (another) his­toric national mil­i­tary cat­a­stro­phe was indeed… THE ONLY func­tion­ing M-​​4 he found in that entire com­pound! (Was he even aware of that, dur­ing those gru­el­ing 4 hours?)
    The U.S.A. could cer­tainly NOT have counted on the whole rest of its exist­ing ser­vice­men and arse­nal to save its face, WORTH SEVERAL TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS , adver­tized as “the best in the World” and “stand­ing by” IDLY through­out that mas­sacre, start­ing with those four com­put­er­ized how­itzers and the low-​​level-​​capable B-​​1 bombers cir­cling overhead…

    Reply
  9. Jon Sheesh says:
    October 22, 2009 at 10:41 am

    Here’s an AR15 dust test:
    http://​www​.youtube​.com/​w​a​t​c​h​?​v​=​e​8​S​S​Q​_​w​I​G4o

    Reply
  10. Byron Skinner says:
    October 22, 2009 at 1:17 pm

    Good Morning Folks,
    Although the AK-​​47 (CHICOM Type-​​56) are not the issue of this post, I want to com­ment any­way.
    Again as one who has had exten­sive expe­ri­ence on BOTH sides of Kalashnikovs. It is clear that none of you know what you are talk­ing about. The only area where the Kalashnikov, any vari­ant, is supe­rior to the M-​​16/​M-​​4 is in it’s short pis­ton gas oper­at­ing sys­tem vs. the gas blow back of the Stoner AR sys­tem that is what the U.S’s, M-​​16 fam­ily uses.
    Currently the rack car­bine M-4’s are ran­domly checked for accu­racy by the man­u­fac­ture and have to meet a Mil Spec. of 3 MOA, mot as I’ve been told come in around 2.25 MOA. The full bar­rel M-​​16, rack rifles are expected to do a 2.5 MOA or bet­ter, most come in around 2 MOA. The M-16’s going to Marine sharps shoot­ers, dif­fer­ent bar­rel and bolt among other tweeks, that are built to use the Black Hill 77 gr. match round typ­i­cally come in a less then an MOA.
    As far as accu­racy goes, the off the rack Kalashnikov in sin­gle shot well aimed mode has an accu­racy of about 10 MOA for the first few rounds, when the weapon heats up the accu­racy id degraded, in more under­stand­able jar­gon it is prob­lem­atic that that a min­i­mally trained ter­ror­ist or mem­ber of an Asian mil­i­tary could hit a human tar­get at 100 meter or more. That is the rea­son that most of the time the oper­a­tor used the Kalashnikov on “rock n’ roll” and hopes for “spray a’ pray”.
    I have on many time been on the receiv­ing end of Kalashnikov fire and at over 50 meters any hit were acci­den­tal.
    As a for­mer com­bat sol­dier I strongly resent all those who blame the indi­vid­ual sol­dier or marine for the prob­lems of the AR rifle/​carbines. As long as this has been a prob­lem if there ever was and I sin­cerely doubt there ever was a prob­lem with main­te­nance this prob­lem would have been deal with by the chain of com­mand. In short if you have never been in a sit­u­a­tion like that of the sol­diers at Wanat, you are not enti­tled to an opin­ion, be you some­one who has yet to served a day in the mil­i­tary or a “chicken” Colonel who lack the guts to chal­lenge his supe­ri­ors.
    ALONS,
    Byron Skinner

    Reply
  11. Mat says:
    October 22, 2009 at 5:18 pm

    New made AK 102–103 shoots far beter that 10Moa and is quite close to M16 ‚the thing is the AK47 you find on the bat­tle field are mostly 30+ years old M16 would be scrap metal by then and not even close to work­ing con​di​tion​.An there are con­cep­tual prob­lems with AK mostly the leaf sight with short sight line , many clone ver­sions of AK with proper sights is not much worse than M4.Second is that AK47 with 7.62x39 round also has more of a kick than smaller 5.56 nato rounds so more muz­zle clmb after first round.
    But event tough afghan are spray&pray shoot­ers ‚i seri­ously doubt that they are much worse than US forces 250.000+ rounds per dead insur­gent ratio. Big difer­ence is that they know they need and do get in close com­bat to do dam­age Us forces on other hand do their best to fight at long range

    Reply
  12. Zandor says:
    October 22, 2009 at 6:30 pm

    Dear ProjectThor:
    You are funny.
    Not smart, just funny.
    Zandor

    Reply
  13. Big Daddy says:
    October 22, 2009 at 7:43 pm

    Again I agree with you Bryon, no we are not the same per­son peo­ple.
    The Soviet doc­trine con­cern­ing infantry com­bat is not pred­i­cated on aimed accu­rate fire from their sol­diers. It’s a com­bined effort based on the RPG, fire­power and their over­whelm­ing num­bers. They learned the lessons the Germans of WWII did.
    Most con­tact will be close, no need for rifles that fire accu­rately to 200+ meters. But they know how impor­tant snipers and marks­man are, even their track com­man­ders were issued SVDs from what I under­stand. The Russians iden­tify a need and make a weapon to fill it, yes as cheaply as pos­si­ble but they make an attempt.……do we? Not until it’s usu­ally after the fact, we are never proac­tive, our politi­cians and mil­i­tary react to sit­u­a­tions.
    Has any­body looked at the inven­tory of Russian weapons.…..they have a lot of over­lap­ping sys­tems and weapons to give their sol­diers. Why don’t we? Why do the Marines always seem to come up with some­thing and the Army never does unless it costs bil­lions of dol­lars and doesn’t work all that well. Anybody remem­ber some­thing called the Sgt. York sys­tem?
    The prob­lems our mil­i­tary has can be fixed very eas­ily, but because of the way we do things they never are. The Washington bureau­crats and mil­i­tary per­son­nel who care more about their careers and not doing the job are what caused 9/​11 and every mess this coun­try has got­ten itself into.
    And you can­not fight a war were there are rules of engage­ment, that means your sol­diers are police­men not com­bat soldiers.

    Reply
  14. Charles says:
    October 22, 2009 at 8:16 pm

    Procurement should be done by peo­ple who have served on the front line. One won­ders where they get pro­cure­ment offi­cers from. A busi­ness school?
    But it’s impor­tant to assess every­thing. If nec­es­sary go tab­ula rasa on our small arms.

    Reply
  15. Byron Skinner says:
    October 22, 2009 at 10:02 pm

    Good Evening Folks,
    I agree with you Big Daddy the Russian doc­trine calls for a wall of fire instead of aimed shots. As to the tech­ni­cal improve­ments in the Kalashnikov weapon sys­tems, and yes they are many with the most dra­matic being the Russian 5,45mm ctg. and the Chinese 5.8 mm ctg. But these weapons other then as a bin Laden prop are not in the field with the ter­ror­ists.
    As for the range where most of the action takes place in Afghanistan, I would hope it’s at 200 meter or more.
    The KIA reports from Afghanistan seem to sup­port this, the major­ity of KIA’s, and also assum­ing WIA’s are com­ing from some form of road side devices. This would make sense for the Kalashnikov, and the RPG ‚which has a hard time engag­ing a sta­tion­ary tar­get at a ranges greater then 50 meters, are the main small arms of the Taliban and al Qaeda. The M-​​16 off the rack, when it’s func­tion­ing can eas­ily with a typ­i­cal U.S. Infantryman fir­ing it can engage tar­get out to 300 meters on iron sights.
    Again I’m speak­ing from being their not watch­ing the Military Channel or History Channel.
    ALLONS,
    Byron Skinner

    Reply
  16. Tom Garrison says:
    October 23, 2009 at 2:45 am

    As a com­bat arms leader deployed at the tac­ti­cal level three times now, i have to say i am with big daddy and skin­ner. AK is a good weapon. It is durable and tough. It is not a pre­ci­sion weapon. Not sure if any­one on this post is read in but we train to pre­ci­sion level oper­a­tions. Try to get the sol­diers to sur­gi­cal lev­els. That is a whole other chal­lenge though. Good luck doing that with an AK. I have spent ample amounts of time train­ing for­eign forces with the AK. I wouldn’t trade M4 for AK. This com­ing from some­one that wants to get rid of the M16 fam­ily of weapons. Have you ever done a reflex­ive fire drill with an AK? it’s absurd, the safety loca­tion in itself is pro­hib­i­tive. Have you ever car­ried twelve mags of 7.62 while wear­ing full kit? Because many sol­diers exceed basic load with 5.56 and carry up to 12 mags. Because in a gun­fight you shoot a lot of bul­lets. That is never going to change. You need to be able to sup­press. Gunfights can go on for a while too. I am really tired of the AK vs M16 debate. Our next weapon is not going to be an AK. I really think we need to go ground up. Reassess the cal­ibers, the ergonom­ics, the mate­ri­als, and maybe mod­u­lar­ity of weapon (though that usu­ally means, able to do many but good at none) I say this know­ing that there will be grum­bling and com­plain­ing about how junky (it is before my time, but i am track­ing that is how the M16 was received when it first came out. Everyone hated it, now it won’t go away) it is and how the AK or M16 are bet­ter. Then, twenty years later this argu­ment will be going on again between weapon x and weapon y.

    Reply
  17. Tom Garrison says:
    October 23, 2009 at 2:48 am

    Also, that mean time between stop­page sta­tis­tic is false. I take good care of my weapon. My sol­diers have too. The weapon sees a stop­page rate of about 1 in every 100, if not worse. Never mind if car­bon starts to build up. Cheap mags, cheap parts…

    Reply
  18. AK_shooter says:
    October 23, 2009 at 7:01 am

    Mr. Skinner,
    With all due respect to your expe­ri­ences, your last state­ment regard­ing the Kalashnikov sys­tem is flawed. A 60’s era Chicom Type 56 isn’t the same as an Arsenal 5.45mm AK-​​74 or bet­ter yet one of their vari­ants cham­bered in 5.56 NATO. Both are sig­nif­i­cantly more accu­rate than the Communist rifle you were forced to face in bat­tle. (I can promise you my own civil­ian SLR-​​106F and SLR-​​106UR SBR are eas­ily 2-​​3x as accu­rate com­pared to the 7.62 AK-​​types I own from China and Romania. This even before the addi­tion of red dot sight­ing sys­tems to my Arsenals.) The same goes for Kalashnikov deriv­a­tives like the Sako Rk.62 and 65, the IMI Galil and the Vectopr/​Denel R-​​4.
    One thing you may be for­get­ting is that ammu­ni­tion qual­ity has a huge bear­ing on accu­racy. The 7.62 rounds you faced in Vietnam are some of the least con­sis­tent car­tridges man­u­fac­tured in the 20th cen­tury. That same car­tridge man­u­fac­tured by Norma in Finland or by one of sev­eral U.S. man­u­fac­tur­ers is another mat­ter entirely. Again, from my own expe­ri­ences over 20+ years as an AK shooter, sim­ply using these car­tridges as opposed to rounds man­u­fac­tured in Russia, China or Yugoslavia typ­i­cally halves group sizes.

    Reply
  19. freefallingbomb says:
    October 23, 2009 at 8:21 am

    To the poster Mr. Byron Skinner:
    You wrote: “…it is prob­lem­atic that that a min­i­mally trained ter­ror­ist or mem­ber of an Asian mil­i­tary could hit a human tar­get at 100 meter or more. That is the rea­son that most of the time the oper­a­tor used the Kalashnikov on ‘rock n’ roll’ and hopes for ‘spray a’ pray’. I have on many time been on the receiv­ing end of Kalashnikov fire and at over 50 meters any hit were acci­den­tal.“
    To sum up:
    The Kalashnikov hits noth­ing, but fires reli­ably
    The M-​​4 car­bine hits “every­thing”, but fires unre­li­ably.
    Stalemate.
    Next gun.

    Reply
  20. Kevin Doell says:
    October 23, 2009 at 9:57 am

    COL Tamilio posted some more infor­ma­tion about the M4’s reli­a­bil­ity and sys­tem upgrades.
    You can find the infor­ma­tion at:
    http://​peosol​dier​.armylive​.dodlive​.mil/​2​0​0​9​/​1​0​/​2​1​/​m​4​-​r​e​l​i​a​b​i​l​i​ty/

    Reply
  21. freefallingbomb says:
    October 23, 2009 at 11:24 am

    To the poster Byron Skinner :
    You wrote: “I agree with you Big Daddy, the Russian doc­trine calls for a wall of fire instead of aimed shots.“
    Since you and the poster “Big Daddy” were both in the Vietnam, in the same year and even in the same Regiment, have the same opin­ions about arms pro­cure­ment in the U.S.A., about the indi­vid­ual traits of indi­vid­ual weapons and about “Russian doc­trine” etc., use the same lan­guage and even the same WORDS to express that (that’s what your var­i­ous nick-​​names ran afoul of with me), and obvi­ously agree totally with each other in pub­lic, I won­der: Do “you two” also have the same age, live in the same gen­eral area, drive the same cars, have the same num­ber of kids and the same opin­ions about every­thing else too?
    Have a nice weekend!!!

    Reply
  22. Big Daddy says:
    October 23, 2009 at 12:06 pm

    I never said I was in Vietnam…LMAO. I was sta­tion in Fulda Germany with the 1/​11 ACR. I was a 19 Delta and I HATED the army. I did more police call and clean­ing up then train­ing as a scout. But that’s another story.
    There is always at least one of those types on every forum, blog, mes­sage board or what­ever. They have some­thing wrong with them and like a trav­eler car­ry­ing his per­sonal stuff they carry their per­sonal issues. So wher­ever they go so comes their issues. They can never get infor­ma­tion right due to their issues. They come up with some laugh­able obser­va­tions and can­not be taken seri­ously. Their neu­rotic behav­ior becomes obvi­ous and dis­rup­tive which is their twisted objec­tive.
    So basi­cally that free falling bomb land­ing on someone’s head.
    Another poster also twisted what I said and came to some off the wall con­clu­sions about what I meant. Why must cer­tain peo­ple do that? It amazes me when peo­ple read some­thing then take it out of con­text and build a com­plete false­hood about what that state­ment was sup­posed to mean. Kind of like what politi­cians do.……
    The way a mil­i­tary trained mind is sup­posed to work is to report back exactly what you were told, heard and/​or saw. To the posters who are unable to do that I ques­tion whether they were in the mil­i­tary or lost those basic abil­i­ties for some rea­son. Basic as in that was the first thing you learned in basic train­ing, repeat­ing gen­eral orders. That taught you to do as I described.
    But as usual I digress because of the posters here who rather than state facts and their own expe­ri­ences they attack other posters who don’t agree with them.

    Reply
  23. Byron Skinner says:
    October 23, 2009 at 2:04 pm

    Good Morning FFB.
    Since you were never in the mil­i­tary you haven’t a clue of what it is. Yes you learn a new jar­gon and much of it is unique to what ever branch or unit you served in. Big Daddy and I served in the same unit most likely a decade or more apart on dif­fer­ent con­ti­nents doing dif­fer­ent mis­sions against dif­fer­ent but sim­i­lar ene­mies.
    In my case I fought a mil­i­tary throughly steeped in Soviet Doctrine and NVA com­man­ders pretty much fought by the book. Big Daddy faced the Soviets who were trained and would have fought from the same books.
    And yes Big Daddy I also HATE the Army.
    To those who want to com­pare your “civil­ian” weapons be they Kalashnikovs or M-16’s it’s not the same as the rack rifles that a sol­dier would have. First off the sol­diers weapon most likely has fired thou­sands, many on three round burst as fast as she/​he can pull the trig­ger of rounds of ammo, the rifling is worn, the bar­rel form being heated and cooled is warped, the bolt in the receiver is sloppy from wear etc.
    The civil­ian ver­sions of these weapons are hand selected and made for a com­pet­i­tive mar­ket place and I would sus­pect that a Soldier or Marine will run more round through trough his/​her weapon in a week of com­bat then you will in sev­eral life time of use.
    That said I will gladly give credit to the women/​men who make up the seri­ous civil­ian AR marks­man­ship com­mu­nity for many of the changes that have been made avail­able to the mil­i­tary weapons design­ers includ­ing the adap­ta­tion of the short stroke gas pis­ton oper­at­ing sys­tem. The engi­neers and design­ers at Colt and with in the Pentagon had over 30 years to fig­ure this out couldn’t, the mar­ket place did it in less the two after the ban was lifted.
    The mil­i­tary ball ammo like the M-​​855 62 gr. 5.56x45mm ser­vice round for the M-​​4/​M-​​16A4 is not even legally avail­able to you as is the stan­dard Soviet/​Russian Model 43 122.9 gr 7.62x39mm round for the Kalashnikov. Both have steel core are are con­sid­ered AP.
    The rel­e­vance of com­par­ing of the two weapon gen­res might be inter­est­ing to other own­ers but really have noth­ing to do with this dis­cus­sion.
    ALLONS,
    Byron Skinner

    Reply
  24. AK_shooter says:
    October 23, 2009 at 4:22 pm

    Mr. Skinner,
    I’m sorry but you con­tinue to make incor­rect state­ments and make ad hominem attacks against those with whom you dis­agree.
    “To those who want to com­pare your “civil­ian” weapons be they Kalashnikovs or M-16’s it’s not the same as the rack rifles that a sol­dier would have. First off the sol­diers weapon most likely has fired thou­sands, many on three round burst as fast as she/​he can pull the trig­ger of rounds of ammo, the rifling is worn, the bar­rel form being heated and cooled is warped, the bolt in the receiver is sloppy from wear etc.“
    That’s not nec­es­sar­ily true. A cou­ple of my older Kalashnikovs have sev­eral thou­sands of rounds through them, cour­tesy of the plen­ti­ful and cheap Chicom ammo avail­able in the 1980’s. The par­tic­u­lar rifles in ques­tion shoot no worse than they did dur­ing the Reagan era. By that same token most of the M4’s and many of the M16’s in com­bat zones today are new pro­duc­tion. They are far from worn out.
    “The civil­ian ver­sions of these weapons are hand selected and made for a com­pet­i­tive mar­ket place and I would sus­pect that a Soldier or Marine will run more round through trough his/​her weapon in a week of com­bat then you will in sev­eral life time of use.“
    That’s quite an assump­tion, don’t you think? It’s becom­ing quite evi­dent that much of your argu­ments are based on sim­i­lar assump­tions. Regardless, I only noted my own expe­ri­ences with civilian-​​legal AK deriv­a­tives to illus­trate the point that the over­all design is not the inac­cu­rate plat­form many believe it to be. Highly accu­rate AK’s are used by Polish troops fight­ing side-​​by-​​side with us in the GWOT. The Israeli Galil, Finnish Rk’s and S. African R-​​4 are exam­ples of what a Kalashnikov-​​based selec­tive fire arm is capa­ble of when built to Western tol­er­ances and fed qual­ity ammu­ni­tion. None are “cherry-​​picked” civil­ian arms.
    BTW, my own per­sonal expe­ri­ence is far from lim­ited to civil­ian arms. I proudly served as a U.S. Army Combat Engineer for six years, first with A/​299 Eng. Bn. and end­ing my ser­vice as a mem­ber of the 420 Eng. Co., USAR.
    “The mil­i­tary ball ammo like the M-​​855 62 gr. 5.56x45mm ser­vice round for the M-​​4/​M-​​16A4 is not even legally avail­able to you as is the stan­dard Soviet/​Russian Model 43 122.9 gr 7.62x39mm round for the Kalashnikov. Both have steel core are are con­sid­ered AP.“
    Pardon my direct­ness but that bla­tantly wrong state­ment alone calls into ques­tion any author­ity you may have with respect to this dis­cus­sion in gen­eral. M855 is not only very legal but widely sold through­out the United States. It is often the most com­mon 5.56 ammo one can find. I have fired sev­eral thou­sand through my AR’s (yes, I do own those as well) and 5.56mm AK’s.
    “The rel­e­vance of com­par­ing of the two weapon gen­res might be inter­est­ing to other own­ers but really have noth­ing to do with this dis­cus­sion.“
    As stated, that’s your opin­ion but it’s becom­ing more obvi­ous with each post that your per­sonal knowl­edge of the sub­ject leaves a great deal to be desired. I respect­fully attempted to respond to glar­ing errors you made in an ear­lier post. You in turn resort to thumb­ing your nose at some­one with almost cer­tainly more trig­ger time with both AR and AK-​​based firearms and clearly more over­all firearms knowl­edge. Perhaps it was an effort to main­tain your lofty post as DT’s res­i­dent expert of all things. That’s fine. The peo­ple who have expe­ri­ence at both ends of these weapons can see you for what you really are.

    Reply
  25. Mat says:
    October 23, 2009 at 5:03 pm

    Off coure 250k rounds per insur­gent in for whole Us forces usage,but real com­bat use tally is still only somet­ing like 2210 rounds per insur­gent fird by rifle­man in com­bat and only 1.3rounds per insur­gent for snipers .
    Of course that is also result of the sim­ple fact that only small % of troops realy fire too kill ‚in ww2 this per­cent­age was some­where around 1,5% of all troops now this closer to 4% .And inter­est­ing fact is that from these 1,5% about half were nat­ural born lead­ers and the rest were psy­hi­caly dus­turbed type killers which actu­aly enjoy doing it and guess which part increased in todays wars,hint its not nat­ural born leaders.

    Reply
  26. Colonial-Marine says:
    October 24, 2009 at 12:04 am

    Mat the vast major­ity of that ammu­ni­tion fired is for sup­pres­sive fire work. Everything from heli­copter mounted mini­guns fir­ing at 6000 rounds per minute, coax machine guns on our tanks, M249s pin­ning down the enemy in a build­ing, and M4s and M16s fir­ing adds up.
    And what are you rav­ing about “nat­ural born killers/​leaders” for? You either have a good sol­dier or a lousy one. It doesn’t mat­ter how much they care about the ter­ror­ist SOB they just shot up.

    Reply
  27. Mat says:
    October 24, 2009 at 6:05 am

    Yes sure how may hot infils/​exfils do you see in afganisatan,and when in comes to com­bat Us forces are almost as much spray & pray as any other.That is why you dont give them full auto rifles.

    Reply
  28. Dork says:
    October 24, 2009 at 8:13 am

    I am look­ing for a place to buy some shoes.
    Can any­one here help me out?

    Reply
  29. Big Daddy says:
    October 24, 2009 at 10:22 am

    It’s true Bryon you can get M855 ammo or just about any­thing else you want includ­ing HE war­heads depend­ing on what state and if you have the paper work and want to spend the money.
    There are a few types of rounds that will not be sold to civil­ians.
    All the weapons we are talk­ing about and their ammo are anti­quated and there are bet­ter weapons out there right now. There are also coat­ings that require no lube that should be used on our weapons but it’s all about giv­ing the infantry cheap stuff. And spend­ing the money on the F-​​35 which will never fly and will hope­fully be can­celed. The guy in the trenches always gets the shaft except the day they made one good deci­sion and adopted the M-​​1 Garand.

    Reply
  30. Byron Skinner says:
    October 24, 2009 at 1:40 pm

    Good Morning Big Daddy,
    You are cor­rect you can pur­chase M-​​855 ammo, most of the M-​​855 that is on the street now is DoD rejected prod­uct from the Lake City plant in Mo. before it was closed down for mod­ern­iza­tion, the equip­ment was just worn out. That said if you look at US Code and the sec­tion deal­ing ammu­ni­tion the M-​​855 is clearly an AP round and it’s sale is ille­gal.
    Most this ammo was unloaded to whole­salers, assumed for for­eign sales? What ever. It can be found for sale at some gun shows and by retail­ers who oper­ate in an envi­ron­ment where the enforce­ment of fire arm laws is not a high pri­or­ity for either the Feds or local law enforce­ment.
    The ques­tion of Federal legal­ity is rather mute, that is of course until the ATFE wants to make a bust. I can by “med­ical mar­i­juana” at at least four store from loca­tion from walk­ing dis­tance from the house, and have been able to for well over a year.
    Marijuana is still an ille­gal sub­stance under Federal Law but the retail sales and small amount con­sump­tion has been a very low pri­or­ity for the DEA . The last local bust was a sin­gle retail out­let on 07, it was done as a photo opt for the media and so far nobody has as of yet been charged with any­thing.
    One thing I might add for other posters here, don’t brag about you own weapons col­lec­tion or what kind of ammo you have. The Feds watch this site and oth­ers where the topic often comes up. I know of at least one exam­ple of where some­one one was brag­ging about hav­ing M-​​855 ammo and the assault rifles he owned. The lived in Wyoming a state that has rather loosy-​​gossy fire arms laws and very lax enforce­ment. He got a visit from ATFE, they were inter­ested in one of his rifles he talked about in a post, a Bushmaster with a short bar­rel, 10″. The weapon started out as a 16″ but was “mod­i­fied” and thus very ille­gal.
    When asked for the reg­is­tra­tion or other paper work, like a receipt or a bill of sale he admit­ted he bought it for cash from a pri­vate party. The ser­ial num­ber was checked, bad news, the Bushmaster was stolen from a gun shop in another state.
    The result is, the guy did a plea bar­gain on a Federal Weapons charge a Federal Felony, he go a sus­pended sen­tence but because he is con­vected felon his days of fire arm col­lect­ing are over, the told him to try stamp col­lect­ing.
    Moral of the story, be very care­ful of what you say on the web.
    ALLONS,
    Byron Skinner

    Reply
  31. Big Daddy says:
    October 24, 2009 at 2:20 pm

    That story rings a bell, how true it is I don’t know. There is so much BS on the inter­net and so many nut jobs I really find myself not even read­ing nearly as much about my inter­ests as I have in the past.
    This site as well as so many oth­ers are con­stantly pol­luted by left wing, right wing and just plain old nut cases. I don’t even like to post any­where any­more. Sports sites are even worse than mil­i­tary ones.
    Do ya think the arm­chair com­man­dos are bad here…ha.….I play music, go to a gui­tar site and deal with those wannabee gui­tar gods…LMAO…they are much worse.

    Reply
  32. freefallingbomb says:
    October 25, 2009 at 10:22 am

    To the poster “Mat” :
    You wrote: “Off course 250k rounds per insur­gent in for whole Us forces usage,but real com­bat use tally is still only some­thing like 2210 rounds per insur­gent fired by rifle­man in com­bat and only 1.3rounds per insur­gent for snipers.“
    NO NEED to get so mod­est after you were so ter­ri­bly right about some­thing! Alas, you’re even MORE RIGHT than you pos­si­bly imag­ine, I just wasn’t imme­di­ately aware of it: In mod­ern wars, only a SMALL FRACTION of all sol­diers gets killed by other sol­diers! The biggest killer on the bat­tle­field is still the Artillery, fol­lowed by the Airforce. Meaning: If MOST of the Iraqi + Afghan Insurgents get killed by the U.S. Artillery and dur­ing air raids = N-​​O-​​T BY U.S. RIFLEFIRE , then the SAME AMOUNT of rifle ammu­ni­tion is needed to kill only a SMALLER num­ber of remain­ing Insurgents, ergo every Insurgent needs to be killed BY EVEN MORE rounds than you ini­tially stated!
    In math­e­mat­ics it’s defined like this: “The smaller the divi­sor, the big­ger the quo­tient” :
    DIVIDEND /​ DIVISOR = QUOTIENT
    The DIVIDEND is the total amount of rounds spent,
    the DIVISOR is the num­ber of Insurgents killed by U.S. rifle­fire (which shrinks of course, after you dis­count all those killed by other, heav­ier ord­nance),
    the QUOTIENT is the result­ing num­ber of rounds needed to kill every indi­vid­ual Insurgent.
    Let’s imag­ine that the num­ber of Insurgents killed by U.S. infantry­men is only HALF of all the dead Insurgents.
    Then it takes not 250.000 rounds to kill every sin­gle Insurgent, but TWICE AS MANY = 500.000 rounds!
    And if (pre­sum­ing that…) only one quar­ter of all dead Insurgents are killed by U.S. rifle­fire, then the total num­ber of rounds needed to kill each sin­gle Insurgent is a mind-​​numbing QUADRUPLE of 250.000 rounds = A WHOLE MILLION !
    If every STANAG mag­a­zine car­ries 30 rounds, that’s 33.333 mag­a­zines to kill a sin­gle bul­bul (who are the REAL “rag­heads” here?) !!!
    But since some STANAG mag­a­zines carry only 20 rounds, that could make as much as 50.000 mag­a­zines to suc­cess­fully drop each bul­bul! (I must be the BEST SNIPER of the whole god­damned U.S.A. …)
    I won­der: Do U.S. infantry­men allow their tar­gets to go home, have lunch, take a dump, go to work, attack out­posts, go shop­ping, enjoy the night-​​life and even sleep sound between hits, all the while fir­ing non-​​stop at them?
    I’m also begin­ning to con­tem­plate the prospect of Europe being invaded by the U.S.A. one day with increas­ing optimism!

    Reply
  33. Charles says:
    October 25, 2009 at 12:03 pm

    Mat is pulling old Vietnam era num­bers down to a T. I don’t know if they’ve changed in mod­ern con­flict or not.

    Reply
  34. Sepp says:
    October 25, 2009 at 12:41 pm

    “CONSTRUCTION — The bul­let must either have a core made ENTIRELY out
    of one or more of the listed met­als, or be a full jack­eted type bul­let
    with a jacket com­pris­ing more that 25% of its weight. Thus SS109/​M855
    .223 (5.56mm) bul­lets would not be cov­ered, because their core is only partly
    steel, and partly lead. Lead is not a listed metal, and bul­lets with
    cores made partly out of lead are OK. ATF has expressly ruled that
    SS109/​M855 bul­lets are not cov­ered.
    ”

    Reply
  35. Mat says:
    October 26, 2009 at 8:29 am

    Numbers are not Vietnam based they are cur­rent US small arms ammo usage stats. Yes and cal­cu­lat­ing insur­gent casu­al­ties by air launched muni­tions or artillery the num­bers go up and the num­bers are worse than Vietnam as the war is not so ‘tar­get rich’.But as said actual stats per sol­dier in com­bat is cca 2210 rounds per ‘bad guy’.

    Reply
  36. M855 says:
    October 26, 2009 at 10:25 am

    Skinner got owned. ALLOFFS!
    “CONSTRUCTION — The bul­let must either have a core made ENTIRELY out
    of one or more of the listed met­als, or be a full jack­eted type bul­let
    with a jacket com­pris­ing more that 25% of its weight. Thus SS109/​M855
    .223 (5.56mm) bul­lets would not be cov­ered, because their core is only partly
    steel, and partly lead. Lead is not a listed metal, and bul­lets with
    cores made partly out of lead are OK. ATF has expressly ruled that
    SS109/​M855 bul­lets are not cov­ered.
    ”

    Reply

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