[QUOTE=Zakkin;46306321]
[img]http://listings.zenfs.com/en-US/cms/autos/Boldride/Big-Wind.jpg[/img]
The last tank's actually a fire extinguisher tank. It uses jet engines to clear fires in seconds, but I just thought that it looked like a mega-evolution of a tank when I first saw it.[/QUOTE]
would love to see that thing in action
wait nevermind
[video=youtube;mf-6FzH68Zs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mf-6FzH68Zs[/video]
used to put out oil fires
[URL="http://news.boldride.com/2014/05/big-wind-how-jet-engines-on-tanks-put-out-oil-fires-videos/49734/"]http://news.boldride.com/2014/05/big-wind-how-jet-engines-on-tanks-put-out-oil-fires-videos/49734/[/URL]
Alright, you shit-eating pansies. You want stealth? I'll give you stealth. I'll give you one of the quietest goddamn guns ever.
[thumb]http://i.imgur.com/LwkZNDd.jpg[/thumb]
This here bolt-action .45 ACP is one of, if not THE, quietest guns [B]in the world[/B]
[thumb]http://i.imgur.com/aq6SNkz.jpg[/thumb]
Designed in [I]19-fucking-42[/I], the [B][I]De Lisle Carbine[/I][/B] was created by William G. De Lisle who wanted to hunt real quietly. He saw an application by the British looking for silent guns and showed them the gun.
It only fired .22 so they modified it to 9mm which was then modified into .45 ACP.
[thumb]http://i.imgur.com/co1a38w.jpg[/thumb]
[B]OH MY BABY JESUS[/B]
More quiet than a Welrod gun and doesn't wear out cause it doesn't use fuckin' rubber. This gun was used only in special operations and mainly for taking out sentries. You know why? [B]BECAUSE IT'S FUCKING AWESOME[/B]
Unfortunately, less than 130 were made. But here's a video of a near-exact replica:
[B]NOTE:[/B] Moving the bolt is louder than shooting the [B]ACTUAL FUCKING GUN[/B]
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsUALdGog4U[/media]
[B]GODDAMN![/B]
one of the few guns you probably [I]shouldn't[/i] use ear plugs with, otherwise you'd never know your shooting it
Holy moley, the thump of the bullet hitting a target in the distance near the start is a little louder than the gun firing.
After ~50 yds away people can't hear it. And that's without any other sound. It's the greatest fucking thing ever.
The suppressor on that thing accounts for over 2/3s of the barrel's length and half of the overall length with a diameter of 2 inches.
Also:
[video=youtube;xjaCI3eoVxI]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjaCI3eoVxI[/video]
Apparently IWI's taking advantage of the distinct lack of Saiga AK-12s on the US market by releasing their greebled up Galils next year. Originally I really hated the look of those things but now it's kind of starting to grow on me, although I think I'd still rather see about finding an original Galil AR/ARM.
[QUOTE=asteroidrules;46287680]The stock design on the original RK-62 is different, although the RK-95 one more or less copies the Galil. The Galil's fire selector is also different, having a lever on the left hand side of the rifle protruding out over a recessed portion of the pistol grip, allowing the selector to be operated by the user's thumb when held right-handed. The design of the charging handle is also different as on the RK-62 it's pretty much just a standard AK handle, while on the 95 it's angled 45 degrees upward, on the Galil it's a knob that goes straight up from the side of the bolt carrier to allow for better indication of the bolt's position and easier overhanded charging. Being Israeli, the Galil also has a circumcised handguard, leaving the gas tube partially or fully exposed, with the exceptions of the Micro and Ace versions which cover it. Then on the heavier Galil ARM you had a bipod and bottle opener affixed to the barrel and gas block, and on the Galatz sniper variant you had the bipod on the handguard. Also it may just be the fact that Finland has been using the same RK-62 rifles for the better part of 50 years but the RK-62 seems to be showing a lot more wear and tear.
Oh and the RK-62 is a rapist elf while the Galil is a catgurl.[/QUOTE]
By the way, they have been doing RK62's with telescopic stocks now. I've only seen like 3-5 of them in use though.
[QUOTE=Juniez;46308992]the guy just says 'Personally I kind of liked it" and then this guy just blows the fuck up on him on a total tangent. lol[/QUOTE]
I'm sorry for typing out a multiple sentence response to someone's post. In the future I'll limit all responses to the following two; "shit's ugly yo," or "totes cool bro."
[t]http://www.forgottenweapons.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/ke7-2.jpg[/t]
SIG KE-7 LMG
must weight 6 tons
[QUOTE=zombays;46316119]
Designed in [I]19-fucking-42[/I], the [B][I]De Lisle Carbine[/I][/B] was created by William G. De Lisle who wanted to hunt real quietly. He saw an application by the British looking for silent guns and showed them the gun.
It only fired .22 so they modified it to 9mm which was then modified into .45 ACP.
[/QUOTE]
Also was featured in one of the funnest 60s spy games ever, No One Lives Forever, where it was up there as one of the best weapons (and immediately available), though they called it the Hampton carbine.
The motherfucking Winchester Model 30
[t]http://milpas.cc/rifles/ZFiles/United%20States%20Rifles/Winchester/WINCHESTER%20MODEL%20G-30%20EXPERIMENTAL%20RIFLE/Winchester%20Model%2030.jpg[/t]
[t]http://milpas.cc/rifles/ZFiles/United%20States%20Rifles/Winchester/WINCHESTER%20MODEL%20G-30%20EXPERIMENTAL%20RIFLE/Winchester%20Model%2030%205.jpg[/t]
hngggg, come to papa
For a little history lesson:
[quote]Williams then substituted a bolt of his own configuration. This bolt was of tubular form with two locking lugs located at its forward end and an angled slot cut in the bolt's body. The purpose of this slot was to receive a projection milled on the tip of the operating rod. When the rod moved rearward under pressure front the piston, the projection sliding in the bolt slot caused the bolt to rotate out of its locked position before any rearward movement of the bolt could begin. The delay which thereby occurred in the unlocking of the action allowed the pressure generated by the combustion of the cartridge powder to dissipate before the action began to cycle. This arrangement allowed the modified Browning-Williams rifle to be chambered for any high-pressure cartridge by the simple expedient of modifying the bolt slot length to adjust the bolt rotation to the point that the bolt could be safely opened. The versatility of the Williams' design was recognized by the company's management, and a series of samples (below) were authorized for field trials and endurance tests in January 1941.
[/quote]
Fuck me, why isn't anyone reproducing these fuckers? What an amazing little firearm.
[editline]24th October 2014[/editline]
[QUOTE=asteroidrules;46299019]Alright now they're reminding me of the assault rifles of Wolfenstein: TNO
[img]http://img2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20140628182010/wolfenstein/images/7/7f/AR-60.jpg[/img][/QUOTE]
Every fucking time I see this thing, the first thing I think is that it's some sort of horrid inbred child of an M1 Garand an STG-44.
[QUOTE=zombays;46316119]
More quiet than a Welrod[/QUOTE]
But that's actually incorrect, as far as I know, and the bolt operating thing goes just as much for welrod as it goes for De Lisle :v:
I wish I could find a CZ 455 with a De Lisle setup. .22LR + entire barrel silencer = yesh
[QUOTE=PrusseLusken;46321005][IMG]http://www.kammeret.no/bilder/albums/userpics/10083/normal_Alm_heldempet__002_(Medium)_(Small).jpg[/IMG]
your move. integrated suppressors along with regular ones are really common in norway, especially on rimfires and rifles used for chasing moose.[/QUOTE]
... :(
Why must NFA 34 exist?
[Img]http://i46.tinypic.com/qprnfm.png[/Img]
The bob semple tank is the best tank of WW2
[QUOTE=PrusseLusken;46321005][IMG]http://www.kammeret.no/bilder/albums/userpics/10083/normal_Alm_heldempet__002_(Medium)_(Small).jpg[/IMG]
your move. integrated suppressors along with regular ones are really common in norway, especially on rimfires and rifles used for chasing moose.[/QUOTE]
This surprises me. Everywhere else in the world seems to think of suppressors as dead quiet murder devices.
In Norway we barely know what guns are, let alone silencers. Hence why they're not illegal.
[QUOTE=zombays;46316119]-De Lisle-[/QUOTE]
I don't know why but I love handheld guns that have big ol' barrel shrouds like that
[QUOTE=Deathgrunt;46321627][Img]http://i46.tinypic.com/qprnfm.png[/Img]
[/QUOTE]
[b]Kill. Me.[/b]
[editline]24th October 2014[/editline]
[QUOTE=Mr. Jelly;46321881]I don't know why but I love handheld guns that have big ol' barrel shrouds like that[/QUOTE]
Me too. It's simple, there's nothing advanced, it's just "How can we make this quiet but also ensure that the user doesn't melt their hand?"
The answer: A giant fucking suppressor that literally is the barrel
[QUOTE=Deathgrunt;46321627][Img]http://i46.tinypic.com/qprnfm.png[/Img]
The bob semple tank is the best tank of WW2[/QUOTE]
It looks like it was made in a shed. Hell, it looks like it was made [I]out of[/I] a shed.
a tank made of tank treads
genius
Wasn't the idea that the armor would be really hard to pierce with anti-tank rifles because hitting its surface straight on was very difficult?
[QUOTE=asteroidrules;46322584]Wasn't the idea that the armor would be really hard to pierce with anti-tank rifles because hitting its surface straight on was very difficult?[/QUOTE]
well at most it would deflect and hit the "valley" part of the corrugated metal
[QUOTE=Qaus;46322507]a tank made of tank treads
genius[/QUOTE]
YOU SEE IVAN, EVEN ENEMY IF SHOT TREADS, TANK MOVE STILL, BECAUSE TANK [I]IS[/I] TREADS
[QUOTE=EuSKalduna;46322743]YOU SEE IVAN, EVEN ENEMY IF SHOT TREADS, TANK MOVE STILL, BECAUSE TANK [I]IS[/I] TREADS[/QUOTE]
[Img]http://i228.photobucket.com/albums/ee274/Bodston/image6.jpg[/Img]
[QUOTE=Deathgrunt;46322869][Img]http://i228.photobucket.com/albums/ee274/Bodston/image6.jpg[/Img][/QUOTE]
Is that an armoured tractor?
[QUOTE=EuSKalduna;46322878]Is that an armoured tractor?[/QUOTE]
[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NI_Tank]Yep[/url]
[QUOTE=Deathgrunt;46321627][Img]http://i46.tinypic.com/qprnfm.png[/Img]
The bob semple tank is the best tank of WW2[/QUOTE]
what the flying fuck...
here's the best part about the russian "tank" from up the page
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NI_Tank[/url]
[quote]Armament was varied to whatever was on hand, including machine guns ShVAK cannon, sub-turrets from T-26 Model 1931 tanks, new turrets with 37 mm Model 15R mountain guns or 45 mm anti-tank
guns[/quote]
"[I]you get tank with gun, you get tank with cannon, and you...you get tank with broom handles, ok everybody move out![/I]
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