Louis R wrote:More than likely. That was the US Army, after all.
And controllability of anything fully hand-held with a battle-rifle cartridge is a definite problem. As is durability. Other people using the NATO round dealt with them by issuing a heavier full-auto version with a heavy barrel and bipod. Take off the bipod and the FN C1 and C2 are actually quite difficult to tell apart until you get up close - and there were stories of C1s with worn sears going full auto without much warning. [as well as of people doing it deliberately] In full-auto mode, you were supposed to go prone and use the bipod, since there was no telling where your rounds would go if you tried to use it standing. You could fit a C2 sear into a C1; I was told that the lighter barrel would burn out after a few hundred rounds - and I suspect that info came from somebody who got it first-hand
quote="n7axw" quote="Theemile"
I was going to say, my father told me various stories of the M14 in full auto mode during is stint in the Army in the 1960/70s.
In his basic group, there was one green city boy that was afraid to fire a rifle and would not set it against his shoulder after several days of rifle training. (In my experience holding the gun away from the shoulder just increases the kick, but my dad said it really happened...) Supposedly the Drill sergeant took a belt and tied an M-14 to the side of the kid's head (against the shoulder) and flipped the selector to full auto, and had the kid fire off several mags.
I guess the swelling of his cheek went down after a week or so. /quote
Gracious.
I take it that this incident went down in the training manual for drill sargeants as an outstanding example of superior leadership...
Don
- /quote
I certainly would not be one to mention that all it took was a piece of a paper match under the sear - something every good soldier should carry - to convert a C1 to fully automatic. Or that if you were so stupid as to do that, and fire several magazines that way that the barrel would melt, and should you be fortunate enough to be caught before that occurrence, the 3 RCR Sargent in charge of your training that night would most likely tear you a new asshole.
On the other hand, C1s and C2 were very easy to tell apart. C1s had a fully enclosed forward barrel, whereas the C2 had an open barrel with a collapsed bipod beneath it. Also C2s were issued with 30 round magazines, whereas the standard issue for C1s were 20 round magazines.
10 Characteristics of the C1:
Gas Operated
Magazine Fed
Capable of firing single rounds
20 round magazine
Flash eliminator of the slotted tube type
Front blade sight
Carrying handle at the point of balance
Folding rear disk sight
All operations carried out with the left hand
Weighs 10.5 pounds fully loaded
I have no idea why we had to memorize that.
I have even less idea why I still remember it.