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Well the irl model was a 7,65 anyway. (Or is it 7,62? I dunno...)
Well I didnt use any exact measurements except my two eyes anyways.
WP material for the weapons geeks! ;)
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RusHHouR spake:
>
> Well the irl model was a 7,65 anyway. (Or is it 7,62? I dunno...)
> Well I didnt use any exact measurements except my two eyes anyways.
>
> WP material for the weapons geeks! ;)
Looks like 7.62mm - the caliber I used in the SADF in the FN FAL. Also used
by the American M240B / M60 range of machine guns by the United States, and
in the FN MAG machine gun used by just about everybody (including Belgium,
England and South Africa). 7.65 (.32) is traditionally, as far as I know, a
small pistol caliber - 7.62 is mostly used in machine guns and older battle
rifles. (5.56 is used in the FN "Minimi" and the M-16A2 and is the de
rigeur these days)
Well modeled though! If you give them a purple ring around the percussion
cylinder they'll look just like the boosted MG ammo we were issued with
once.
--
Stefan Viljoen
Software Support Technician / Programmer
Polar Design Solutions
Post a reply to this message
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Stefan Viljoen spake:
>
> Looks like 7.62mm - the caliber I used in the SADF in the FN FAL. Also used
> by the American M240B / M60 range of machine guns by the United States, and
> in the FN MAG machine gun used by just about everybody (including Belgium,
> England and South Africa). 7.65 (.32) is traditionally, as far as I know, a
> small pistol caliber - 7.62 is mostly used in machine guns and older battle
> rifles. (5.56 is used in the FN "Minimi" and the M-16A2 and is the de
> rigeur these days)
>
> Well modeled though! If you give them a purple ring around the percussion
> cylinder they'll look just like the boosted MG ammo we were issued with
> once.
>
Well, 7.62 it is then, also used in what is sometimes called the ak4? or
kalasjnikov. Thank you.
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RusHHouR spake:
> Well, 7.62 it is then, also used in what is sometimes called the ak4? or
> kalasjnikov. Thank you.
Yep - though there is a difference between the 7.62 round used in the AK and
the 7.62 "NATO" - 7.62 as used by the Western powers during the coldwar had
a longer casing, the AK's casing was shorter. Leading, of course, to the AK
being said to have 7.62 "short" ammunition.
--
Stefan Viljoen
Software Support Technician / Programmer
Polar Design Solutions
Post a reply to this message
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