[QUOTE=Jimmaye;34876649]Over and unders are sexy.[/QUOTE]
Side by Sides are better looking.
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34882804]O/Us are more balanced, more accurate, more comfortable to use and much more reliable/sturdy.[/QUOTE]
yeah but side by sides are 200% more badass (and more comfortable IMO)
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34882804]O/Us are more balanced, more accurate, more comfortable to use and much more reliable/sturdy.[/QUOTE]
I'm at odds with your talking points again but w/e
We don't have a knife thread (as far as I can find), so i guess this could go here
KNIFE GET
[img]http://i.imgur.com/cnYxd.jpg[/img]
One KCB-70 M1 bayonet (for the M16 and Stoner 63)
One Bulgarian AK-pattern bayonet
One FN FAL bayonet
all for seventy dolla
SEVENTY DOLLA
BARTER LVL 100 BITCHES
i might get some shitty ak or m16 in the near future, so these will be useful just in case i need to charge the opponent in close quarters
I'm no bayonet expert, but isn't the mounting on the FAL bayonet wrong? I've always thought of bayonets for slashing downwards, but that's either upwards slashing or wrong.
[QUOTE=Campin Carl;34884520]I'm no bayonet expert, but isn't the mounting on the FAL bayonet wrong? I've always thought of bayonets for slashing downwards, but that's either upwards slashing or wrong.[/QUOTE]
It's not for slashing, it's for digging under ribs.
Clearly superior...
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/XzvNp.jpg[/IMG]
[editline]26th February 2012[/editline]
[QUOTE=Campin Carl;34884520]I'm no bayonet expert, but isn't the mounting on the FAL bayonet wrong? I've always thought of bayonets for slashing downwards, but that's either upwards slashing or wrong.[/QUOTE]
Don't they get mounted upside down on top of the barrel?
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34884712]list them in the right order next time, people aren't able to tell by themselves
FN FAL/SLR L1A1 have bayonet lugs on the back of the flash hider/just behind it on the barrel
they're mounted below the barrel
CETME types (G3, HK33 etc) have bayonets mounted above the barrel
bayonets are for thrusting/stabbing attacks, not slashing. they were designed to replace pikes (long spears with pointed metal head)
there is a reason you risk getting court-martialled for sharpening bayonets.
they are supposed to pierce, not cut.[/QUOTE]
Fixed the order, and thanks for clarifying on the bayonet issue.
Well, now I've learned this too. I had to ask because I didn't know.
Also, the next time I'm taking the train, I'm bringing a rifle, just so I can kill those damn moose that makes my train run late.
Whenever a train run over an animal and it isn't dead right away, they have to call the Viltnemd to have them execute the animal.
Trainconductors used to have a rifle or a .357 for taking care of this, but they distcontinued this practice around 10 years ago from what I know.
Just driving up to my cousins house this evening to meet family, and I can see signs he and his merry band have been on the same route a while ago, a lot of the road signs are shot with holes from 12 bore shells. It's kinda nostalgic.
There were a period back home where you couldn't find a moosewarning sign that wasn't shot to bits.
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34884712]bayonets are for thrusting/stabbing attacks, not slashing. they were designed to replace pikes (long spears with pointed metal head)
there is a reason you risk getting court-martialled for sharpening bayonets.
they are supposed to pierce, not cut.[/QUOTE]
Figured it was common knowledge that bayonets were for stabbing. After all, you wouldn't try to swing a rifle or anything, and the length of the rifle helps for said stabbing. Also stuff like a Mosin nagant spike bayonet wouldn't work in any fashion except stabbing.
[QUOTE=The Luftwaffle;34885238]Also stuff like a Mosin nagant spike bayonet wouldn't work in any fashion except stabbing.[/QUOTE]
It actually works very good for a screwdriver, but that was the one Nugget we had at school that was in for deactivation.
Fucking cosmoline, just when you thought you have all of it gone, you get light primer strikes not setting the rounds off and a stuck-open holding-open device for the bolt because the tiny bit of cosmoline left is freezing.
[QUOTE=ewitwins;34879378]Does anyone here have any experience adjusting the sights on an M91/30? The bayonet thing is completely true and I would love to fix that.
Also good purchase y/n?
[url]http://www.ebay.com/itm/7-62-X54r-Cartridge-Laser-Bore-Sight-/260957430641?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3cc2466371#ht_2554wt_1163[/url][/QUOTE]
Helpbump, does anyone actually know [b]how[/b] to sight a 91/30?
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34885607]what's the problem
are your ironsights off?
if it shoots to the left then use a brass punch and a hammer and move it a tiny bit to the right
vice versa if too much to the right
if it shoots too low then you need to adjust the sight post by grinding it down
if it shoots too high you need to get a new sight post or make one, then adjust it[/QUOTE]
Awesome, thank you. I'll pick up that laser bore sight.
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34884712]
there is a reason you risk getting court-martialled for sharpening bayonets.
they are supposed to pierce, not cut.[/QUOTE]
so you cant sharpen your bayonet to use it for other things like cutting rope/fabric and splitting kindling?
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34885607]what's the problem
are your ironsights off?
if it shoots to the left then use a brass punch and a hammer and move it a tiny bit to the right
vice versa if too much to the right
if it shoots too low then you need to adjust the sight post by grinding it down
if it shoots too high you need to get a new sight post or make one, then adjust it[/QUOTE]
On top of this, I've heard putting a "coffee straw" over the front post will work as an alternative to getting a new front post if its too short.
I need to sight in my mosin too, with the bayonet on it gets heavy and I don't like it.
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34888055]as odd as it may sound, it is - or was - banned by the geneva convention.
i've heard of people sharpening their bayonets (both in domestic and foreign service). shit hits the fan if you're caught and it can land you in a lot of trouble.[/QUOTE]
Oh yes... serrations on a bayonet is a war crime... though I never heard sharp knives to be wrong. Also odd shapes like triangles and stars are banned. As a matter of fact, and if my memory is worth anything, some Germans were issued bayonets made to also serve as wood saws, needless to say when Allied troops found a Nazi with a saw on the end of his gun life wasn't all too kind to him.
Got Hoppe's #9 solvent, now to get oil.
[QUOTE=PrusseluskenV2;34882804]O/Us are more balanced, more accurate, more comfortable to use and much more reliable/sturdy.[/QUOTE]
Wouldn't all of those points be up to the users opinion? I find that side by sides are more accurate, more comfortable, and reliable/sturdy.
Well my M9 was plenty sharp, AND it was serrated?
[IMG]http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b100/89Sunbird/Shooting/DSC_0008.jpg[/IMG]
i'm not usually one for M4s like that, but that's fucking sexy
[QUOTE=Ridge;34888572]Well my M9 was plenty sharp, AND it was serrated?
[IMG]http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b100/89Sunbird/Shooting/DSC_0008.jpg[/IMG][/QUOTE]
how is that foregrip attached?
[QUOTE=beanhead;34889076]how is that foregrip attached?[/QUOTE]
Its a MOE handgaurd and a Magpul foregrip so they mount without rails
[QUOTE=beanhead;34889076]how is that foregrip attached?[/QUOTE]
MAGIC
No, actually, Magpul makes a foregrip designed specifically for their handguards. One screw goes through into the handguard and is held on with a nut.
thats pretty cool i guess
Can you guys cite where it says serrated bayonets are illegal?
[QUOTE=download;34889612]Can you guys cite where it says serrated bayonets are illegal?[/QUOTE]
'Mericans don't play by the rules.
Geneva Convention
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