-
Advisory Panel
I had one and it worked, but that's not to say for an extended period. I did sell it after all. Doubt the next guy used it much. The ones pictured are probably the only ones made. The military takes a dim view of people cutting down rifles for entertainment's sake even in wartime. Mods are prohibited. Ask Peter... The ones that are sold today are re-engineered I'll bet. I've seen the short barrel, short gas model in my hands and it looked good. They must work or they wouldn't be able to sell them. Personally, I'd still rather the full length rifle. They worked fine.
-
Thank You to browningautorifle For This Useful Post:
-
11-28-2016 10:27 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Contributing Member
Also this well known example, with the Australian
Army collection, there is some film of this thing rocking and rolling on the internet somwhere..
-
-
-
Advisory Panel
The danger tape would be about right...the flames would burn you from there.
-
-
Legacy Member
-
The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Vincent For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel
Yup, moving the gas port back would help. But to be fair, mine did that too. Can't say how it is now. Thing is, the M1
rifle had the gas port at the muzzle too. I know, that's apples and oranges...
-
-
What I do find totally non-understandable about these 'Australian
SAS' special in-theatre blow-up tyres and wind-up window type shorties is this. When the short statured populated nations around the world wanted to buy a shorter variant of L1A1 type rifles, why didn't they simply ask Lithgow to cut the barrels short. Why did they bother pursuing the short flash eliminators. Maybe someone can look up the archives at ADE Maribyong to see how the shorties fared. Even the well thought out improved L2 (that was being trialed at Caunugra in 1969 but I forget what it was called) had a standard length barrel. Like I say, maybe the handy-hacksaw specialists knew better. Just my pragmatic amateur askance view of things.
Moving the gas port rearwards brings with it yet MORE problems. Cleaner gas residue but diamond hard build-up from the word go and .......back to my student notes now........
Last edited by Peter Laidler; 11-28-2016 at 11:04 AM.
-
Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member
Thing is, the
M1
rifle had the gas port at the muzzle too. I know, that's apples and oranges...
The FN49 gas port is relatively near the muzzle too. Maybe still apples and oranges, but a lot of the FAL gas system comes from the 49.
I would guess that shortening the barrel wastes a fair bit of the 7.62x51 cartridge propellant. Something like 7.62x39 would be better suited for the shorter barrel.
Last edited by Vincent; 11-28-2016 at 11:22 AM.
-
-
Contributing Member
What I do find totally non-understandable about these '
Australian
SAS' special in-theatre blow-up tyres and wind-up window type shorties is this. When the short statured populated nations around the world wanted to buy a shorter variant of L1A1 type rifles, why didn't they simply ask Lithgow to cut the barrels short. Why did they bother pursuing the short flash eliminators. Maybe someone can look up the archives at ADE Maribyong to see how the shorties fared. Even the well thought out improved L2 (that was being trialed at Caunugra in 1969 but I forget what it was called) had a standard length barrel. Like I say, maybe the handy-hacksaw specialists knew better. Just my pragmatic amateur askance view of things
Didn't the Papua New Guinea Contract rifles have recoil reducing properties built into the short FE's Peter?? I guess the RAEME guys attached to the ANZAC SAS units in Country, just responded as best they could with the kit they had available (or borrowed from the Americans) to the request for certain kit for specific jobs and it snowballed from there.
There seems to have been a myriad of different variants on the core "Automatic L1" theme.
-
Thank You to mrclark303 For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Vincent
I would guess that shortening the barrel wastes a fair bit of the 7.62x51 cartridge propellant.
And give you the basket ball flame in low light.
-
-
Contributing Member
As well as roar like a Lion Jim!
-