Virtual_Dom said:
So in real life, the m4 can be customized to fit many firearm roles but not to entirely replace? Good to know.
So is the m4 an assault rifle?
"Assault Rifle" is
actually a very vague term. Really all you need for it to be quantifiable as an assault rifle is a detachable magazine, a rifled barrel, and selective fire. You can technecally extend the specification to include intermediate rounds (Which is to say, large caliber than a pistol round, but lower than a full blown rifle like your KAR 98's and Ensfields.) but then you start to run into sticky territory- the earliest models of assault rifles used rifle rounds. While you might not know what an MP44 is, you've probably heard of an AK 47. Both used full rifle rounds.)
Heck, the definition for Carbine is vague in itself. Really the only distinguishing factor is that it have a shorter barrel than it's standard counterpart, and usually fire rounds at lower velocities. In that respect they occupy an odd middle-niche between assault rifle and sub-machine guns where they aim to be more accurate than an SMG but still less than an assault rifle. Meanwhile an SMG will typically aim to have a higher rate of fire, and often a larger standard magazine size.
Most terminology for guns is vague or stuck-on by external media.
Simon1 said:
Divine Miss Bee said:
IBlackKiteI said:
Although I'm curious as to how militaries began to shift from full size rifles and battle rifles to assault rifles and carbines?
coming about as a product of the shift to more urban fighting environments seems like the most logical answer to this-carbines' unique design and abilities lend it well to close situations, as used to be done in the more urban settings before insurgents got smart about it and began engaging military personnel at a greater distance.
Also, battle rifles tend to fire heavyer, larger rounds,(I think) and with the switch from open to confiened space warfare, a larger bullet could overpenetrate, or have the same damage as a smaller round, but in more recoil. (Also, (this is a crazy idea, I think), but wouldn't a .22LR Sub-Machine Gun be just as effective as a carbine in urban warfare and close quarter battles due to the fact that it would have low recoil and impact, but a high rate of fire and ammo capacity? (Just thinking here)
Battle Rifles fire larger rounds, this is correct, though at the moment they're fairly unfavored. They loose a great deal of effectiveness in much of urban warfare because of the drop in their rate of fire- battle rifles are typically semi-automatic.
And again, the difference between carbines and SMGs is fairly minimal. At best it's a different size round fired at different rates. One is less accurate, but fires faster.
Retardinator said:
This is what I've been wondering about for a longer while. What is the actual difference between an M16 and an M4?
And how do you tell them apart?
What actually separates an M16 from an M4 is fairly minimal. Between the M16A2 and the M4 the two have literally 80% of their parts being compatible, which is a major factor in why the US adopted it as their replacement for said M16.
The only things that really distinguish the two are rate of fire (or, rather, that the M16 has an almost mandatory 3-shot burst), and barrel size. It's a smaller difference, but the carbine can fit a smaller under-slung grenade launcher to it.
Mad World said:
I have a question. In some action movies, characters use Desert Eagles. How realistic is that, really? I would have thought that a Desert Eagle would really be a more-impractical choice; it has a ton of recoil, and it doesn't have that many shots in a clip. Would you agree with that?
I'm sure that it has its purposes, but I'm talking about in general.
It's incredibly impractical. The US armed forces don't even use it as a standard issue weapon, and for a number of reasons the weapon in itself is more of a status symbol than anything else. The caliber of round is completely unnecessary, especially given the recoil. It's secretly a pistol that wants to be a rifle.
Beyond that it's prone to jamming.
The clip size is fairly irrelevant- really if you need more bullets for a pistol you're either not putting the bullets where they need to be, or you're just not using the right tool for the right job. What's comical is that at higher calibers you're liable to sprain your wrist before you even finish the magazine.
Oh. And it's magazine by the way. Guns that are clip fed are actually fairly unusual, and they're almost always rifles, not pistols.