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Nav October 1st 04 12:07 AM



DSK wrote:

Nav wrote:

I never fired a modified FN (i.e. with full auto) but the recoil was
quite large and seemed (to me) to make the semi-auto about as much as
one would want. Could you keep it anywhere near a target on auto?



I didn't fire it on full auto from the shoulder. With a bipod it's no
problem.

There are a lot of weapons with worse recoil, and not as good a balance,
as the FN. The roller lock makes the recoil-reload action relatively
smooth.

... How did you make it fire a 3 round burst -was it a further
modification?



It's one of the settings for select fire. Pull the trigger, it squirts
out 3. Usually a pretty tight group even from the shoulder, too.


I think it must be a different rifle than the NATO version 'cos the
selector on the ones I've fired only had a safe and semi position. To
modify it to full auto was, I believe, a courts martial offense. I must
admit that I don't see how the simple firing mechanism could be modified
to make a 3 round burst -full auto is simple the selector just needs
filing down so that when rotated further it can't recatch the mechanism.
As far as balance, I'd say the muzzle tended to kick up about 4" so that
by the time you've let it fall and the next round is chambered it would
be hard to be accurate if the next shot were fired as soon as the recoil
mechanism closed the breach. In that sense I'd say it was a bit muzzle
end light for accuracy on full auto.

Cheers



Nav October 1st 04 12:22 AM

Which bit do you want to loose?

Cheers

Gilligan wrote:

I want to get shot with a Napoleonic Howitzer!

Gilligan

"Steve Daniels" wrote in message
...

On Wed, 29 Sep 2004 22:16:00 -0400, something compelled DSK
, to say:


BTW since our gov't in it's wisdom will not let us have such dangerous
toys, the Glaser "safety" slug is a good close approximation. Loses
accuracy at range, but really kicks ass close up.


If I ever get shot, I hope it's with a Glasser. And the FBI
agrees with me.






Maynard G. Krebbs October 1st 04 01:18 AM

On 29 Sep 2004 18:55:33 -0700, (Joe) wrote:
snip

You can set it for select fire. A 3 round burst, single, or fully automatic.
And they do sell extra clips.

Joe


Magazines Joe. :o)
Clips don't have springs, they just hold the rounds together. The
feed spring is in the weapon. Think M-1.
Magazines have springs to feed the rounds. Think M-14 or M 16.
Mark E. Williams

Sorry, pet peeve #1. LOL

Nav October 1st 04 01:51 AM



Maynard G. Krebbs wrote:

On 29 Sep 2004 18:55:33 -0700, (Joe) wrote:
snip

You can set it for select fire. A 3 round burst, single, or fully automatic.
And they do sell extra clips.

Joe



Magazines Joe. :o)
Clips don't have springs, they just hold the rounds together. The
feed spring is in the weapon. Think M-1.
Magazines have springs to feed the rounds. Think M-14 or M 16.
Mark E. Williams

Sorry, pet peeve #1. LOL


That's your #1?????

Cheers


DSK October 1st 04 04:04 AM

It's one of the settings for select fire. Pull the trigger, it squirts
out 3. Usually a pretty tight group even from the shoulder, too.


Nav wrote:
I think it must be a different rifle than the NATO version 'cos the
selector on the ones I've fired only had a safe and semi position.


All the NATO infantry arms I'm familiar with have full auto, some have
3-round burst.

As for 3-round burst selective fire, you could learn a little about it
with a very simple Google search.

... To
modify it to full auto was, I believe, a courts martial offense.



I didn't realize that any national army didn't trust it's infantrymen
with the option of full auto fire.

... I must
admit that I don't see how the simple firing mechanism could be modified
to make a 3 round burst -full auto is simple the selector just needs
filing down so that when rotated further it can't recatch the mechanism.


Why do you try and bull**** everyone when you ought to realize you don't
have a clue what you're talking about?

And to think, in this great modern age of the Info Superhighway, you
could become an expert of at least Jaxxian proportions very simply.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&i...=Google+Search


As far as balance, I'd say the muzzle tended to kick up about 4" so that
by the time you've let it fall and the next round is chambered it would
be hard to be accurate if the next shot were fired as soon as the recoil
mechanism closed the breach. In that sense I'd say it was a bit muzzle
end light for accuracy on full auto.


IIRC the 3-round burst fires from open bolt.

You don't know what that means either, do you?

DSK


Nav October 1st 04 06:11 AM



DSK wrote:

It's one of the settings for select fire. Pull the trigger, it
squirts out 3. Usually a pretty tight group even from the shoulder, too.


Nav wrote:

I think it must be a different rifle than the NATO version 'cos the
selector on the ones I've fired only had a safe and semi position.



All the NATO infantry arms I'm familiar with have full auto, some have
3-round burst.

As for 3-round burst selective fire, you could learn a little about it
with a very simple Google search.

... To modify it to full auto was, I believe, a courts martial offense.




I didn't realize that any national army didn't trust it's infantrymen
with the option of full auto fire.

... I must admit that I don't see how the simple firing mechanism
could be modified to make a 3 round burst -full auto is simple the
selector just needs filing down so that when rotated further it can't
recatch the mechanism.



Why do you try and bull**** everyone when you ought to realize you don't
have a clue what you're talking about?


But Doug, it's you that is saying the FN FAL has a three round burst
selector, not me. When I fired it that was not the case, and when it was
used by the British Army it had no full auto capability either. When I
took a weapons maintenance course at the British School of infantry at
Warminster (which included servicing and testing the FN semiautomatic
rifle) there was discussion about how it might be illegally modified. At
no time was an automatic controlled burst discussed as an option. I'm
prepared to accept that some clever chap may have worked out how to do
it but I don't see how.


And to think, in this great modern age of the Info Superhighway, you
could become an expert of at least Jaxxian proportions very simply.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&i...=Google+Search


So, I followed your directions and typed in "FN FAL 3 round burst select
fire" and cant't find a site that says the FN has a three round burst.
But you say it does -so why not post the reference so I can read about it?


As far as balance, I'd say the muzzle tended to kick up about 4" so
that by the time you've let it fall and the next round is chambered it
would be hard to be accurate if the next shot were fired as soon as
the recoil mechanism closed the breach. In that sense I'd say it was a
bit muzzle end light for accuracy on full auto.



IIRC the 3-round burst fires from open bolt.

You don't know what that means either, do you?


No, I have no idea how one might modify a old standard NATO FN FAL to
fire an automatic three round burst. Perhaps you can explain?

Cheers



Nav October 1st 04 06:38 AM



DSK wrote:

It's one of the settings for select fire. Pull the trigger, it
squirts out 3. Usually a pretty tight group even from the shoulder, too.


I think it must be a different rifle than the NATO version 'cos the
selector on the ones I've fired only had a safe and semi position.



All the NATO infantry arms I'm familiar with have full auto, some have
3-round burst.

As for 3-round burst selective fire, you could learn a little about it
with a very simple Google search.

... To modify it to full auto was, I believe, a courts martial offense.



I didn't realize that any national army didn't trust it's infantrymen
with the option of full auto fire.


http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/FN%20FAL

"The British adopted their own variant of the FAL and manufactured it
based on an imperial measurement pattern, and incorporated minor
amendments, including folding cocking handle, prong shaped flash
eliminator, folding rear sight, sand removing cuts in the slide and
beefed up magazine catch. The UK variant, and many others, is
semi-automatic only."

Now how do you explain that? It would seem to agree with my recollection
would it not?

Cheers





Scott Vernon October 1st 04 02:38 PM

"Nav" wrote

"The British adopted their own variant of the FAL and manufactured

it
based on an imperial measurement pattern, and incorporated minor
amendments, including folding cocking handle, prong shaped flash
eliminator, folding rear sight, sand removing cuts in the slide and
beefed up magazine catch. The UK variant, and many others, is
semi-automatic only."

Now how do you explain that?


Candy ass limeys?



DSK October 1st 04 02:45 PM

I didn't realize that any national army didn't trust it's infantrymen
with the option of full auto fire.


Nav wrote:
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/FN%20FAL

"The British adopted their own variant of the FAL
.... The UK variant, and many others, is
semi-automatic only."

Now how do you explain that? It would seem to agree with my recollection
would it not?


I'd explain it by saying that you have only seen one particular type of
FN-FAL. I didn't know about it, therefor I learned something. I'm still
a bit surprised that a standard issue infantry weapon would be
single-fire only. That would really limit firepower.

Now, are you saying there is no such a thing as a gas-operated
auto-loader with a selectable 3 round burst? I don't know if the FAL
ever had that option, but some FN SLRs based on the same technology did.
There are several FN-FAL versions that had semi or full auto.

DSK


Nav October 3rd 04 10:19 PM



DSK wrote:

I didn't realize that any national army didn't trust it's infantrymen
with the option of full auto fire.



Nav wrote:

http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/FN%20FAL

"The British adopted their own variant of the FAL .... The UK
variant, and many others, is
semi-automatic only."

Now how do you explain that? It would seem to agree with my
recollection would it not?



I'd explain it by saying that you have only seen one particular type of
FN-FAL. I didn't know about it, therefor I learned something. I'm still
a bit surprised that a standard issue infantry weapon would be
single-fire only. That would really limit firepower.

Now, are you saying there is no such a thing as a gas-operated
auto-loader with a selectable 3 round burst? I don't know if the FAL
ever had that option, but some FN SLRs based on the same technology did.
There are several FN-FAL versions that had semi or full auto.


Well I've not found a reference to the FN-FAL rifle you said you fired
in automatic 3 round bursts. I am well aware of how it can be simply
altered to be full automatic (if that is what one wants). Can you help
me find how it can be altered in the way you describe? Is it possible
you were firing some other weapon?

Cheers




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