It's a shoulder-fired 84mm recoilless rifle with access to HEAT and HE ammunition. Weighs 21lbs, has an effective range of 1,000m, and its HEAT round can penetrate 400mm of armor steel.
Our MP5 can accept 15-round stick, 30-round stick, 50-round casket magazine, 50-round drum, or 100-round C-Mags, fire at 900rpm, and is highly controllable due to the use of a closed-bolt roller-delayed blowback system.
@Wahoo12 Well this not-a-pistol is referred to as a "bike pump" because it is totally not based off the Welrod, which was nicknamed as the "bike pump" by those who used it because of the resemblance to one without the handle.
It was in the M14. Chrome-lining the chamber and bore was requested by the Army but the advisers of Secretary of State Henry Kissinger aka the"Whiz kids" who were basically "by the numbers" computer nerds, declined this, since the Army had previously made attempts to slow down introduction of the rifle in service and believed that it was not necessary as Eugene Stoner did not include it in the original rifle. @PyrusEnderhunter
As long as you use them as an interceptor in good weather.
The accident rates of users who used it as an interceptor (Japan, ROC, Italy, and Spain) were very low in comparison to those who used it as a fighter-bomber (Canada, W. Germany).
Japan, of its 200-250 aircraft, lost three.
Spain, in 17,000 flight hours, didn't lose any.
The loss rate of the Italian Air Force F-104 was a pretty average for fighters, and lower than the loss rate in US service.
The reason why the Germans and Canadians lost so many F-104s is because they took an airplane with high wing loading, made it even higher, and flown it in crappy weather at low altitudes with anything less than an experienced pilot. @PINK
Shh... have some sympathy. @ChiChiWerx
Our troops use the Carl Gustav M2.
It's a shoulder-fired 84mm recoilless rifle with access to HEAT and HE ammunition. Weighs 21lbs, has an effective range of 1,000m, and its HEAT round can penetrate 400mm of armor steel.
Thanks! @YuukaNeko
Yep. @Supercraft888
Gotcha. @AccipitrisEnterprises
Nice! Wait till 1966 though. @Liquidfox
Our MP5 can accept 15-round stick, 30-round stick, 50-round casket magazine, 50-round drum, or 100-round C-Mags, fire at 900rpm, and is highly controllable due to the use of a closed-bolt roller-delayed blowback system.
@YuukaNeko
YuukaNeko has one. Though I wouldn't mind doing one. @BaconEggs
Do you know what game the quote referred to? @Supercraft888
@NativeChief1492 It was actually based off the Beretta M12.
@FennVectorCWA Thanks!
I thought you guys had F-104s?
@YuukaNeko
Actually, I may want to make a version of this gun.
@Wahoo12 Well this not-a-pistol is referred to as a "bike pump" because it is totally not based off the Welrod, which was nicknamed as the "bike pump" by those who used it because of the resemblance to one without the handle.
@JackTheBestBoss Not at all. It's perfectly safe.
I'm in Hawaii.
Close enough. @ColonelStriker
@MemeKingIndustriesAndMegaCorporation ...
M16 production is operating at full capacity. We can license production, although it will require CNC milling. @MemeKingIndustriesAndMegaCorporation
@MemeKingIndustriesAndMegaCorporation I can review this vehicle after I remaster the M6A4.
@MemeKingIndustriesAndMegaCorporation Belkan Kalashnikovs are cheap.
Gotcha. 400,000 M16A1 rifles coming up. @MemeKingIndustriesAndMegaCorporation
I don't think a Brit will say that about someone else's tank.
Nice tank though.
At least the commander can now see outside the tank without having to pop open the hatch.
"Hua Long," or "Fire Dragon," seems like a good name.
I think you should use Chinese names for ROC aircraft.
So, 1940's or now? @marcox43
It was in the M14. Chrome-lining the chamber and bore was requested by the Army but the advisers of Secretary of State Henry Kissinger aka the"Whiz kids" who were basically "by the numbers" computer nerds, declined this, since the Army had previously made attempts to slow down introduction of the rifle in service and believed that it was not necessary as Eugene Stoner did not include it in the original rifle. @PyrusEnderhunter
@Supercraft888 Ehhh...
My interest is in real firearms, not necessarily those exclusive to the realm of fiction.
@PyrusEnderhunter This IS a real firearm.
What era is this tank supposed to be in?
Gotcha. @Supermini555
@Supercraft888 NP!
@Supercraft888 Correct!
Not everyone knows who Bill is.
Five upvotes for the first person who can recognize what game I am referrencing in the description.
@YuukaNeko @GoldenEagle @PINK
Sure! @MemeKingIndustriesAndMegaCorporation
Sure! I prefer to keep RP interactions from more personal interactions.
But I'm still not giving back the former SNAS. @Sniper16
Yep. All my creations are designed for high physics. @Supermini555
I was able to do so on mobile and on PC. @Supermini555
Thanks! @PyrusEnderhunter
@Spikerya Indeed.
@PINK Fixed.
@PINK Noted.
As mentioned, it was reasonable.
@PINK It was.
@JakeTheDogg @PyrusEnderHunter
They're perfectly safe to fly.
As long as you use them as an interceptor in good weather.
The accident rates of users who used it as an interceptor (Japan, ROC, Italy, and Spain) were very low in comparison to those who used it as a fighter-bomber (Canada, W. Germany).
Japan, of its 200-250 aircraft, lost three.
Spain, in 17,000 flight hours, didn't lose any.
The loss rate of the Italian Air Force F-104 was a pretty average for fighters, and lower than the loss rate in US service.
The reason why the Germans and Canadians lost so many F-104s is because they took an airplane with high wing loading, made it even higher, and flown it in crappy weather at low altitudes with anything less than an experienced pilot. @PINK
Want F-104s?
@Mellons Cool!