Post cool, old "tactical" guns, no rails allowed.
Post cool, old "tactical" guns, no rails allowed
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I cant post pictures on Jow Forums
I've always thought that an m1 carbine "pistol" would make quite the truck/nightstand gun.
It's one of my favorite funs
An M1 cut down to a pistol would suck to shoot in the dark of night.
I’m contemplating building one with either a side folding brace or one of those “PDW” collapsing braces. I’ve got an unbarreled receiver and a barrel blank (and enough parts minus barrel and receiver to build fiver or six of them). Part of me doesn’t give a fuck about using a USGI receiver as it’s only a Saginaw, but the other part wants to use my shops tooling (which they’re cool with) to machine a new receiver.
M2 stinger is peak performance. Imagine m2 black tips at 1500 rpm
The fuck even is this
>M2 Stinger
The AN/M2 Stinger was a customized field modification of the AN/M2 aircraft machine gun. Intended to be an improvement over most machine guns of the time, the AN/M2 Stinger was a man-portable modification of the AN/M2 machine gun to provide additional firepower to troops of the time. The weapons were very prominently used during the Pacific Theater of World War II.
Nicknamed as such due to its extremely high rate of fire which led to the weapon having "quite a sting",[1] most of the Stinger's fame comes from its use by Cpl. Tony Stein, who used it during the Battle of Iwo Jima to provide covering fire for his platoon mates. While often attributed as Stein's work, the Stinger was actually the brainchild of two marines, namely Sgt. Milan "Mel" J. Grevich and PFC John Lyttle.
>Intended to be an improvement over most machine guns of the time
You put it like it was issued to soldiers intentionally by the Ordnance Board, it was rather an improvised thing made in the field from a crashed plane.
I kinda like this. What sight is that?
So basically an American and heavier MG42 with a slightly higher rate of fire chambered in 30-06.
Nydar reflex sight
Always gotta go with the classic tactical mag top off.
A very early kind of reflex optic. Not that fantastic, it's kind of hard to see.
There was similar technology in WW2 fighter planes.
how does this work?
Beretta SCS-70
The short barrel folding stock version of the AR70.
I forget how the light is powered, It's some kind of battery obviously. The copper looking plates on the grip would act as a conduit and when you grabbed it you bridge the connection.
kek, operator as fuck, good sir.
I think you should machine a new one, because any gun the bioluminescent bois don't know about is a good gun. Also it would make for a cool thread.
I didn't know this was a thing, now I don't want to live knowing I can't have it.
Yeah man. Makes the later SCP-70/90 look bulky and unwieldy by comparison.
imma dump a few. start off with a pre-picatinny rail tactical AR (I think this is Larry Vickers' gun actually when he was in Delta in the 80's)
Vicker`s gun didn`t have a full carry handle
It was a CAR15, it had a fixed carry handle.
How would they even classify these?
What similarity does it even have with MG42, except high fire rate?
It looks damn heavy and unergonomic. Was it even possible to change the barrel in battle?
Remington 7188- a full auto Model 1100. It was designed as an "ambush buster" for the SEALS and probably other special forces in Vietnam.
It would also be a lot of fun for sporting clays, especially if you mounted a longer barrel and didn't tell anyone about the special feature.
How do you hold that firearm? it has spots for 3 hands
Pretty much just high fire rate and the theory behind the MG42. Meaning a rate of fire so high no one can cross whatever you're suppressing.
Old night sight have that something
just like any other stocked pistol...
Watch the video.
The luger is an sbr, the mosin needs a suppressor stamp at the least. If the integral suppressor is less than 16" sbr as well.
stare at this gun and listen
It's based off an m1919 not an m2
Mediocre
it wasn't a car15 it was a colt 723 but it did indeed have a fixed carry handle
IIRC Colt would use the term Colt Commando to market both CAR15s and later 700 series AR15 carbines, which may be where that confusion comes from.
Yes it did. He mentioned however that some of his team mates in delta would cut the carry handle down to where it was just the rear sight and then have an armored drill and tap the top of the receiver to screw in a pic rail.
>not posting the entirely more aesthetic East German AKS-74NK
I love how goofy old night vision scopes looked
Fucking impressive.
Yea sure it was called an m2 but most people associate that with .50 cal
meanwhile,
I've been waiting for a beat up m1 to come along to do a replica of this thing
It is a replica he made of his gun in Delta.
Make the stick figure bigger
Amerimutt intelligence...
All guns are the same when you're 12.
Whats that thing hanging from the bottom of the grenade launcher? Some kind of an even heavier grenade?
It’s a fishing reel
They're great. That particular kind was so fascinating, it had a big infrared spotlight on top, which bathed what you looked at in infrared light, invisible to the naked eye, but viewed through the scope you'd get an illuminated picture, really quite clever.
A famous setup like that is the old M3 Carbine, an upgrade kit for the M1 Carbine or the M2 Carbine (worked and was done on either), and for the time it was actually highly suitable because the nightvision only reached like 75ft, where the .30 Carbine cartridge still had decent performance, and given the heavy ass backpack you had to carry on your back, with the power supply and shit, having the gun actually being light and handy is a nice offset. I also figure the added weight of the optic probably made the M2 Carbine slightly more controllable in full-auto.
It was used by some American sentries in the Pacific, during nightwatch they would occasionally catch and engage enemy Japanese trying to sneak up on their camp, who had no clue they could be seen this way.
There was also a similar rig for the Sturmgewehr 44 (I think they called it "Vampire" or something), and it seems the Czechs played around some with the idea too, as there's some pics of a Vz-58 fitted with one (in the post I'm replying to even), and there was an AR10 setup made by someone as well.
In the movie Omega Man, you can see Charlton Heston fit the M3 kit on a BAR.
All I remember about that ww2 ppsh is that it was tested by one group in city combat, think I have seen pictures of that same group using some heavy steel plates and some other experimental weapons.
Effective range of sight was 50m and that is taken from some froum that had translated it from original sources.
Within 50m would be where a swarm of 7.62mm Tokarev shines, so that'd make sense as a pair for this early NV tech.
I don't see an IR spotlight attached to that PPSh-41, so maybe it's missing from the photo, or they figured it added so much bulk that it would be used separately, maybe a companion would illuminate targets for the guy with the scope, or it was used from a mostly fixed position.
It's interesting, the kind of stuff they were playing with even back then.
Idiot
well....
>Jarate!
(????)?
Shape charge launcher
Neato. I'm not sure I'd be entirely confident in the reliability of the light, but fuck me if that isn't the coolest shit I've seen in a while.
what exactly is an "ambush buster"? Does that imply that it's used to gain the upper hand when your springing an ambush, or do you bust it out for defense to blow away the enemy if you fall into an ambush
where my /dillingergang/ bois at
I've always been curious what it actually looks like when you view through those first night sights. Black and white/tinted, grainy/blurry/sharp etc
Gook spooker
IIRC this gun held the longest-range kill record for quite a while.
ППШ. Хэк oф a шoтнyн.
wtf I love m1s now
Slightly greenish monochrome I think.
looks like al pacinos gun in heat..
www.eww.yikes
TFRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
TFFRRR TFRRR
Not quite, the aesthetic is admittedly somewhat similar, but Pacino's rifle was an FN FNC.
I'd be lying if I said I wasn't imagining myself taking pot-shots at bank robbers in downtown L.A. while shooting mine.
It's a tow system for controlling the trajectory of the launched grenade.
Can someone post his load out or his guns when he was arrested