Posted on 09/15/2012 10:00:47 AM PDT by smokingfrog
Soldiers of the 1st Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, became familiar with their new M14 Enhanced Battle Rifles as they trained for Personnel Security Detachment duty for their battalion Sept. 6, at Johnson Field.
The EBR is a magazine-fed, gas-operated, shoulder-fired weapon that also has a Mark-4 tactical scope and cantilever mount with an aluminum billet stock. The M14 EBR also has a new adjustable buttstock, cheek rest and M4-style pistol grip but can also be returned to its original configuration with no permanent modifications.
Today we are practicing and familiarizing ourselves with our new M14 7.62mm weapon before we go to the range in preparation for our fall deployment to Afghanistan, said Spc. Daniel Lueptow, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Bn., 327th Inf. Rgt. Though I understand the need for adjustment for this upcoming deployment, I enjoyed the older model and did well with it on my last deployment.
(Excerpt) Read more at fortcampbellcourier.com ...
And don’t dry fire it with out a snap cap or a casing that is already fired, other wise the firing pin will break.
Yep.
I qualified expert with both the M14 and the M1 Garand, which is much more difficult for a left handed shooter.
Generally they prefer that you fire right handed but an adept left handed shoter can handle either rifle with ease.
And, depending on available cover, a left handed shooter is sometimes handy to have around.
For humping the mountains in triple canopy jungle with many days between resupply, the M16/M4 is the way to go.
That’s my take. I always found the M-16A1 very reliable and more accurate than an AK. Yes, it requires maintenance. So does the M-14. I would much rather have 600 rounds (sometimes as much as 1200 rounds on my body.
Flipside is range. If I am in a rolling hills environment with engagement ranges out to 5-600 meters possible, obviously the M-14 is more capable. It is a sweet shooter.
That thing looks heavy.
Did you guys use these during your last training?
I always preferred to run out of targets before I ran out of ammo.
Who makes that laser sight in the pic?
I got to carry one around in ‘76.
That's not an "Old Dog".
That's a brand new rifle.
You can buy it for $1,532.
Click the link on post 6.
7.62 vs. .223. No contest.
That is a whopper of a user name, FRiend.
Not your father’s M-14.
FMCDH(BITS)
.460 weatherby vs 7.62
No contest....
“Doesnt look anything like the M-14 I qualified with back in 1962 (last year in USMC).”
Yeah, that was my first thought too. With the square fore-end and exposed gas tube, it actually looks a lot more like an updated BAR than an M-14.
I don't know. Since you signed up on 9/11/12 I would be a little bit wary.
No offense meant. Your screen name is a little bit weird. Can you explain?
FMCDH(BITS)
FMCDH(BITS)
I remember the”7.62 mm; gas operated; air cooled....”, but don’t remember the weight of the old M14’s in ‘68 at Fort Ord.
This one looks easier to handle though.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wyrd is a concept in Anglo-Saxon culture roughly corresponding to fate or personal destiny. The word is ancestral to Modern English weird, which retains its original meaning only dialectically.
The cognate term in Old Norse is urðr, with a similar meaning, but also personalized as one of the Norns, Urðr (anglicized as Urd) and appearing in the name of the holy well Urðarbrunnr in Norse mythology. The concept corresponding to "fate, doom, fortunes" in Old Norse is Ørlǫg (cf. Dutch oorlog 'war').
The Old English term wyrd derives from a Common Germanic term *wurđíz. Wyrd has cognates in Old Saxon wurd, Old High German wurt, Old Norse urðr, Dutch worden (to become) and German werden. The Proto-Indo-European root is *wert- "to turn, rotate", in Common Germanic *wirþ- with a meaning "to come to pass, to become, to be due" (also in weorþ, the notion of "worth" both in the sense of "price, value, amount due" and "honour, dignity, due esteem").
Old English wyrd is a verbal noun formed from the verb weorþan, meaning "to come to pass, to become". The term developed into the modern English adjective weird. Adjectival use develops in the 15th century, in the sense "having the power to control fate", originally in the name of the Weird Sisters, i.e. the classical Fates, in the Elizabethan period detached from their classical background as fays, and most notably appearing as the Three Witches in Shakespeare's Macbeth. From the 14th century, to weird was also used as a verb in Scots, in the sense of "to preordain by decree of fate". The modern spelling weird first appears in Scottish and Northern English dialects in the 16th century and is taken up in standard literary English from the 17th century. The regular modern English form would have been wird, from Early Modern English werd. The substitution of werd by weird in the northern dialects is "difficult to account for".[1]
The now most common meaning of weird, "odd, strange", is first attested in 1815, originally with a connotation of the supernatural or portentuous (especially in the collocation weird and wonderful), but by the early 20th century increasingly applied to everyday situations.[2] [edit]
Mentions of wyrd in Old English literature include The Wanderer, "Wyrd bið ful aræd" ("Fate remains wholly inexorable") and Beowulf, "Gæð a wyrd swa hio scel! ("Fate goes ever as she shall!").
M14s in 68 Weight 9.8 lb (4.4 kg) empty
11.5 lb (5.2 kg) w/ loaded magazine
Thanks. It’s been a while.
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