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Originally Posted by
CINDERS
If clerks and cooks have to grab a rifle
Not quite seen like that, all posted to an infantry unit must be well versed in weapons. All travelling overseas have to go through the same pre-deployment. All must be able to fight as infantry, even though that may not be expected. We can't have a small(by comparison) number fighting to protect a large number against undisclosed numbers. Gulf war one taught us that one...that's a long side story.
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12-30-2016 10:32 AM
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Originally Posted by
CINDERS
There was a report done some time ago about the effectiveness of the 5.56 against certain hard & soft targets in Afghanistan and in the words of the soldiers that used the weapon including the 9mm they felt the round wanting as there were cases of multiple hits on enemy combatants and not putting them down. It also lacked penetration on the mud huts according to this report what the soldiers felt was the 7.62 Nato round was adequate for the job the 45ACP was a better choice than the 9mm the 50 BMG was still the Ma Deuce of the battle field in their opinion.
If clerks and cooks have to grab a rifle then the front is in dire straights sort of like the Ardennes in WWII
I didn't say it was the best Infantry weapon. And sure 7.62 had the penetration/kill shock factor as well. I am sure you have used both.
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Someone once told me that one of the factors, but not the only one, in making the decision to switch from 7.62mm to 5.56mm calibre for the standard infantry rifle for the British
army was that it was much more inconvenient to seriously wound your enemy than to kill him. This is because the downed enemy soldier has to be given first aid and then a helicopter may have to be brought in with the associated risk to the helicopter. If the enemy soldier is killed outright then, obviously, they don't have the problem of dealing with a seriously wounded man.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
it was much more inconvenient to seriously wound your enemy than to kill him.
This is another myth that started after the fact. The role of the infantry is to "Kill the enemy"... I never shot with intent to wound. I don't want him coming back.
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Contributing Member
Although I have had foreign "gentleman" point loaded AK's at me in the past, that happily had more to do with separating me from my money than using me a target practice.
As a personal perspective, I am very pleased to be able to say I have never been shot at. My firearms experience is limited purely as a collector, student of and shooter of Milsurps, however if I found myself in a situation (god forbid) like the great sandbox and under fire, I would personally much rather trust my life to 7.62x51mm than 5.56mm. For that matter, I would probably be just as happy with .303 or .30-06!
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
mrclark303
I would personally much rather trust my life to 7.62x51mm than 5.56mm. For that matter, I would probably be just as happy with .303 or .30-06!
They all work OK within their parameters...shot placement is everything. Cover from fire is hard to get through with one single round from anything. A number of rounds on the other hand...if you have them... Yes, bigger is better.
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
Someone once told me that one of the factors, but not the only one, in making the decision to switch from 7.62mm to 5.56mm calibre for the standard infantry rifle for the
British
army was that it was much more inconvenient to seriously wound your enemy than to kill him. This is because the downed enemy soldier has to be given first aid and then a helicopter may have to be brought in with the associated risk to the helicopter. If the enemy soldier is killed outright then, obviously, they don't have the problem of dealing with a seriously wounded man.
I think the NATO change was more or less dictated by the US and the world wide trend for shorter range, urban combat, higher capacity lighter Infantry weapons.
I recall back in the early 1980's, rifles like the L1A1 were regarded as obsolete colonial war throw backs, too heavy, too long with a range and stopping power that was simply no longer required.
No one could possibly have foreseen the 10 years of combat in Afghanistan that were unfortunately to come.
5.56mm has shown it's limitations in that theatre.
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Originally Posted by
martins8589
and in the words of the soldiers
#12 These are the people who made the comments not me on that report I was only paraphrasing what was said by them in that report which is from the people at the sharp end it will carry more weight if the brass is listening than some back room boffin playing with their slide rule that the 5.56 blows arms off and puts them down with hydraulic shock (ala Vietnam conflict). Besides I personally did not say anything belittling the 5.56!!!!!
As a clarification to #10 it was U.S troops that the survey/report was compiled by not Australian
troops, sorry I omitted that which may have caused a tad of confusion.
Last edited by CINDERS; 01-01-2017 at 10:52 AM.
Reason: irrelevant content
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Legacy Member
This is another myth that started after the fact.
This is what was told and explained to me and that is what I have repeated here for the first time since being told this over ten years ago. The person who told me this was ex military, I believe, and at the time in charge of a military museum; I didn't believe at the time he was talking rubbish or trying to start a myth.
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Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
This is what was told and explained to me
I understand.
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