The British service M16A2 assault rifle with firearms and weapons expert Jonathan Ferguson

The M16 is undoubtedly one of the most recognisable weapons in the history of firearms. But, did you know that the Colt Model 715 M16A2 was also adopted into limited use by British armed forces. Join Jonathan Ferguson as he explores the key differences between a British service M16 and its American counterpart and looks at whether history could have looked a little different, should this iconic American firearm have seen wider adoption in place of the SA80.
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Пікірлер: 1 300

  • @jasoncornell1579
    @jasoncornell1579 Жыл бұрын

    Well let's see it would've cost £46,000,000 to adopt the M16A2 rather than the £92,000,000 it cost us to have H&K 'fix' the SA80 so yes yes we should've adopted the M16A2

  • @danielhenderson8316

    @danielhenderson8316

    Жыл бұрын

    And you’d probably end up with Diemaco/Colt Canada guns which are better built and higher quality than Colt USA rifles.

  • @stephen7571

    @stephen7571

    Жыл бұрын

    A grand old British tradition of throwing good money after bad! I’m sure there are many more examples? Is it just the British who have this habit?

  • @lawrencezimmerman8769

    @lawrencezimmerman8769

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stephen7571 I think it’s just inherent of all governments. Someone is always getting a kick-back or looking to get one.

  • @non-masturbatingtyrannosau3476

    @non-masturbatingtyrannosau3476

    Жыл бұрын

    L85 is a better rifle

  • @samithonjames370

    @samithonjames370

    Жыл бұрын

    @@non-masturbatingtyrannosau3476 Heh no.

  • @mindless-pedant
    @mindless-pedant13 күн бұрын

    British Army, Belize 82/83. We used the M16. Loved it.

  • @ConnorVanEck
    @ConnorVanEck Жыл бұрын

    I can say, with 100% confidence, that if I ever got a terminal illness and had a make -a-wish request, it would be to meet Jonathan Ferguson and get a tour of the Royal Armouries arsenal. The amount of history in that room astounds me

  • @wakeupworld7673

    @wakeupworld7673

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought you were going somewhere else with that... 😄

  • @epl803

    @epl803

    Жыл бұрын

    My day at the NFC (without Jonathan sadly) was one of the best days of my life. Any gun you could hope to fanboi over is there, I touched Hiram Maxim's prototype machine gun (no trigger, just pull the bolt back and let go and it'll run), Lahti and Solothurn 20mm's, an AK captured at the Battle of Ia Drang (We Were Soldiers battle), an HK417 all beaten up because the SBS used it in Afghanistan, Dreyse and Chassepot needle riflles, the list goes on; heaven...

  • @Bigtimecharliepotatoes

    @Bigtimecharliepotatoes

    Жыл бұрын

    The purge 😂

  • @timyo6288

    @timyo6288

    Ай бұрын

    I can say, with 100% confidence, that if I ever got a terminal illness and had a make-a-wish request, I would spend all night with Ur Mom.

  • @deekim8164

    @deekim8164

    Ай бұрын

    My goal is to have an arsenal like that. As an American I can, once I hit it big in the Lottery.

  • @Oliverdobbins
    @Oliverdobbins Жыл бұрын

    The most complicated things to explain in the world: 1. Quantum physics 2. The history and variations of the M-16 rifle 3. The offside rule ...but very nicely done sir!

  • @PolymurExcel

    @PolymurExcel

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the number 2 can be interchanged with the AK as well. Both have endless copies and variants. Thought I do believe the AK just edges out the AR as they had some fundamental changes early that made the early AKs unable to interchange parts with later AKMs. I’m pretty sure the M16 bolt carrier group can be used universally with almost any AR.

  • @Clean97gti

    @Clean97gti

    Ай бұрын

    @@PolymurExcel Oh boy, the early AKs are a thing unto themselves. There were the very early AKs that were stamped receiver guns but the Russians couldn't quite get the welding processes for the side rails right. The next ones to go out were the milled receiver guns (which fixed the welded rail problem by not having welded rails from 1951 until around 1957 when the Russians got the stampings right and the stamped receiver AKM was accepted into service in 1959 and has existed since in its present form. And then the AK-74 came along, then the 74M, then the various Eastern Bloc variants...yadda yadda yadda. Some parts from the early guns will fit AKMs and some won't. For the most part, trigger groups exchange. Some gas pistons will and some won't depending on the diameter. Early barrels from milled guns will not fit later stamped guns because the trunions are different. The AK had a solid 10+ years of field testing and iterative development to make it as good as it is.

  • @tonybanham2301

    @tonybanham2301

    26 күн бұрын

    Quantum physics is relatively straightforward.

  • @robertmajors1737

    @robertmajors1737

    2 күн бұрын

    Let us not forget US military procurements in general. There are some truly inexplicable decisions that have been made in that department.

  • @Hibernicus1968
    @Hibernicus1968 Жыл бұрын

    One feature you forgot to mention of the A2 configuration -- and one that most people seem always to overlook -- is the slight reinforcing at the rear of the lower receiver, where the buttstock attaches. This was added because of the way infantrymen are taught to break their fall forward during a three to five second forward rush. This is for advancing under fire, but not such heavy fire that you have to low or high crawl behind cover. You bounce up, rush forward as fast as you can in under five seconds, and you throw yourself down flat again (hopefully behind cover). You break your fall by extending the rifle butt out in front of you so it hits the ground first. You use your arms like a shock absorber to slow your fall down, and you roll to one side when you hit the ground. You do this holding the rifle by the front handguard and by the wrist of the stock. That puts quite a bit of stress on the receiver where the stock attaches, so the A2 upgrade adds additional metal in this area to strengthen it.

  • @ViktoriousDead

    @ViktoriousDead

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s field manual type stuff. Doesn’t happen in actual combat and is frankly a ridiculous way of breaking your bound. Had to do it in EIB (expert infantryman’s course) and it is just an all around bad idea

  • @mattmccartney5996

    @mattmccartney5996

    Жыл бұрын

    "I'm up. He sees me. I'm down."

  • @Hibernicus1968

    @Hibernicus1968

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ViktoriousDead That is exactly how I was taught to do it at Fort Benning back in 1996. Probably not every soldier does it that way, but that _is_ what the army teaches you -- or it was at the time the M16A2 was designed. And they felt the need to reinforce the receiver on the A2, because enough soldiers _did_ do it that way to bend or crack lower receivers from time to time. They certainly didn't add the material to reinforce the receiver against the savage recoil of the 5.56mm round.

  • @zoiders

    @zoiders

    Жыл бұрын

    That's a lengthy explanation of "I'm up, he's seen me, I'm down" which you only want to do when doing pairs fire and manoeuvre. The rolling and special way of falling bit is rather odd/contrived.

  • @atadbitnefarious1387

    @atadbitnefarious1387

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah we went away from training that. Some old heads still do reading straight out of old field manuals. But the way we do it now is to brace yourself with your offhand as you get down. The ol "point, post, sprawl." Same movement when you get down to the front leaning rest, push up position, but one handed, and you lower yourself to the ground without bashing your face in with your rifle.

  • @LRRPFco52
    @LRRPFco52 Жыл бұрын

    Units within the UK who have the choice of what weapons they carry and employ started acquiring AR-15s soon after it went into production from 1959-1963, namely the SAS, followed by the SBS. SAS used them in Borneo, for example. The Colt Commando variants also became very popular in SAS and SBS, with carbine variants still in service there to this day.

  • @T0nyGTSt

    @T0nyGTSt

    Жыл бұрын

    You'll find this is the case almost throughout the West. While the standard soldier used the SA80 or AUG or G36, the special forces used an AR variant, maybe piston driven... so why would you go to the expense of fielding a 'national' rifle when you could have just saved money and adopted the essentially royalty free AR? unless for some reason you did not want to be seen a vassal state of he US... in the same way the old Eastern Bloc looks like satellite states of the USSR with the AK variants.

  • @jonathanferguson1211

    @jonathanferguson1211

    Жыл бұрын

    As I mention in the video, I'm researching this at the moment. The 715 is just one of the spinoffs of that. First issue was 1964, although the earliest example in our collection (and likely acquired for T&E purposes) was made in 1959.

  • @jonathanbohm6489

    @jonathanbohm6489

    Жыл бұрын

    SAS and SBS also tended to use the HK roller locking series such as the G3 and HK33 and ofc the MP5 but that goes without saying

  • @steven-k.

    @steven-k.

    Жыл бұрын

    Gurkhas used them in Borneo as well, iirc.

  • @ballagh

    @ballagh

    Жыл бұрын

    The M16a1 also had a fair amount of service with the Royal Marines. One of the most memorable foot patrols I saw as a school kid in Northern Ireland was Royal Marines with 2 M16’s, 3 gpmg’s, a Bren and a L42a1 sniper rifle. Not exactly normal, always wondered what they were up to.

  • @Azureisfun
    @Azureisfun Жыл бұрын

    I’m probably biased as an American veteran but I think it was a mistake not to adopt the m16. Everyone is switching to the ar platform regardless. It’s just a solid rifle.

  • @memenadekhanh3992

    @memenadekhanh3992

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the patent for the AR/M16 is expired so any manufacturer can copy the platform making it even more desirable.

  • @shermantank7216

    @shermantank7216

    Жыл бұрын

    @@memenadekhanh3992 yep... after the mid-80s it was open platform. What's weird is there are various manufacturers that beefed up the AR15 platform to use the 450 Bushmaster and companies, like Windham, then beefed up the basic AR15 platform to fire .308 and they reinvented the AR10. They can't even swap magazines with the AR10 and not even screw in common.

  • @Spaced92

    @Spaced92

    Жыл бұрын

    Eh the main difference is HK are taking over Europe. New Zealand switched to an AR-15 platform and they had a recall because they were all poorly made. China don't have an AR platform, it's more like an AK. Australia and Britain are staying with bullpups for decades at least, Israel actually moved from AR to Tavor. It's mostly countries that want less maintenance costs.

  • @Chopstorm.

    @Chopstorm.

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@Spaced92Turns out the UK is going with an AR now.

  • @eddietat95

    @eddietat95

    Ай бұрын

    @@Spaced92 I think OP is referring to "the West" which doesn't include Communist-occupied China (why would they adopt their enemy's rifle?) As for the H&K rifle you are probably referring to - the HK416 - it's just an AR-15 with an AR-18 piston - both Stoner designs. You can put the latest HK416 upper with buffer/buffer spring on a Vietnam-era XM177 lower and it will fit/function perfectly... they're the same platform, just incremental changes. Britain's expeditionary forces (SOF, Royal Marines, the new Rangers, etc.) run a new KAC-built AR. Australia's SOF and MPs run ARs. The bulk of the IDF uses US-supplied ARs, as seen in the current Gaza War. New Zealand's AR recall was short-lived. They finally funded replacement parts (which was more of a gov't management debacle than a rifle debacle) and the ARs are back in service. If anything, the maintenance cost factor is *keeping* the bullpups in service for longer for the basic infantry masses. They already made the investment, so changing would be even worse, especially with tight defence budgets as opposed to real military powers with real defence budgets. The AR is not being used by "everyone" as OP suggests, but they are being used more widely and more successfully than you suggest.

  • @rogiervis2306
    @rogiervis2306 Жыл бұрын

    This type of rifle, made by Diemaco, was my service rifle in the Dutch army in 1997. Although the rear sight wasn't easy to adjust for windage or elevation, with some decent training we all could easily hit the chest size target a 300 meters. Privately I owned a accurized AR15 A2 for target shooting. With match ammo I won matches at 600 meters. Never had any stoppages or problems with the Diemaco C7 or AR15. Its a reliable and accurate system.

  • @Gloomshadow100

    @Gloomshadow100

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah Diemacos are great, cold hammer forged barrel from Canada , well made AR

  • @TK199999

    @TK199999

    7 ай бұрын

    Also the long barrel guns that use the Stoner Gas system seems to be more reliable than short barrel ones. Its because the Stoner Gas system does better, relatively speaking, with longer gas tube than a shorter one.

  • @adamg574

    @adamg574

    29 күн бұрын

    Used the C7 in the CAF. Its better than the M16 imo. Diemaco is Colt Canada now. You could buy semi-auto C7 clones from Colt Canada before Trudeau’s AR-15 ban.

  • @basvleeskruyer

    @basvleeskruyer

    18 күн бұрын

    Helemaal mee eens. Weinig problemen en makkelijk in de omgang.

  • @dohc22h
    @dohc22h Жыл бұрын

    I'm a Former US Marine from the 90's and this is the weapon I was issued. This rifle is dead accurate at 500 yards and even further. The recoil was basically nothing. Easy to clean and maintain. 4 years in the Marine Corps with 4th award Expert using the M16A2.... Ooh-Rah

  • @josedorsaith5261

    @josedorsaith5261

    Жыл бұрын

    And it's a LOT lighter than our SA80

  • @peterchessell28

    @peterchessell28

    Жыл бұрын

    Did you feel it was necessary to tell us you were a murine

  • @JOEFABULOUS.

    @JOEFABULOUS.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josedorsaith5261 didn't have the range of a SLR

  • @sgtpickles1319

    @sgtpickles1319

    Жыл бұрын

    Semper Fi brother. I was still using the M16A4 in 2011, pain to carry in and out of trucks but awesome for table 1 rifle qual.

  • @josedorsaith5261

    @josedorsaith5261

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JOEFABULOUS. I wish we could still own FN SLRs.

  • @jimplaysbadly3881
    @jimplaysbadly3881 Жыл бұрын

    I met two flavors of Army Brit in the service; the young woodland DPM guys with battle bowlers and L85A1s, and the maybe-middle-aged guys with "long" hair, big moustaches, and spray-tan AR platform carbines. The former said "smaller, lighter" about their rifles, and the latter said "they rattle because we work them to bits" about their carbines. For what it's worth, at that time, mine was an iron-sighted Colt M16A2-- never fired in anger, as far as I know-- and it was ubiquitous in American hands. Seeing AR-anything in the hands of the British Army just blew my mind, and I'm glad y'all have shown me more about the history of that odd-to-me relationship. Thank you!

  • @Curdledgorilla
    @Curdledgorilla Жыл бұрын

    The birdcage flash suppressor is held in place with a crush washer. If it's been removed and reinstalled without a new crush washer, often it'll end up misaligned, as in the video.

  • @john-paulsilke893

    @john-paulsilke893

    Жыл бұрын

    Or, some of us over clock on purpose. My guns are used for competition so I clock mine to about 1:30ish for a .1 second per magazine advantage. Most of the good to great shooters do the same, (I’m slightly below good myself).

  • @jonisawesome69

    @jonisawesome69

    Жыл бұрын

    @@john-paulsilke893 how exactly does that help you?

  • @john-paulsilke893

    @john-paulsilke893

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jonisawesome69 it’s all about recoil management and if you can time your brake to your hand you can sneak a tiny bit my recoil managment.

  • @gonuts4donuts

    @gonuts4donuts

    11 күн бұрын

    @@jonisawesome69the A2 flash hider being closed on the bottom acts as a sort of compensator. Depending on the shooter, the rifle can recoil up and slightly left or right. Timing the flash hider to a 1:30 or 11:30 position can mitigate the vertical and slight horizontal movement. Much like the slant flash hider on the AKM is offset rather than redirecting gases straight vertical to the 12:00 position

  • @alanmeyers3957

    @alanmeyers3957

    2 күн бұрын

    Actually it’s held in place by tourque, if you’ll actually look instead of assuming, it’s actually a peel washer.

  • @johnpeterson214
    @johnpeterson214 Жыл бұрын

    In Belize 1978 i was issued an early pattern AR15 3 prong flash hider , triangle handguards , no forwards assist , and A1 sights , well worn and rattled like hell but reliable and accurate and above all light to patrol with

  • @markpoole5390

    @markpoole5390

    Жыл бұрын

    Did my Belize tour in 86 got issued the same gats, even more worn and rattley, loved the light weight over the slr

  • @duncanwills8939

    @duncanwills8939

    Жыл бұрын

    They were also used on VCPs in NI during the mid-1970s to early 1980s. Presumably because the full-auto capability was a useful option and more effective than throwing a Sterling SMG at a departing vehicle if it crashed the checkpoint.

  • @chrisakers3499

    @chrisakers3499

    Жыл бұрын

    We did a tour of Belize at short notice in 1982,issued with AR 15,found it a nice weapon, light,reliable, easy to clean,perfect for the jungle and unlike the SLR,it had an automatic setting, which was fun to fire a few burst down the range,on the rare occasions we got to Airport camp!

  • @mindless-pedant

    @mindless-pedant

    13 күн бұрын

    I was in Belize 82/83 ish, for 6 months. Drums, 1 Royal Anglian. We were based in tin huts near Punta Gorda. I can't remember the camp's name.

  • @MyDailyUpload
    @MyDailyUpload Жыл бұрын

    I learned some new things today. I did not know the 715 went to the British. I bought an "M16A2" back in the 1990s from a dealer who described it as an "export" version and it turned out to be a Model 715. I still have it. I did appreciate that it did not come with the burst feature. I did source a genuine Colt A2 sighted upper to make it more US-like. I don't think I ever checked to see if the rifle has multiple serial numbers stamped on it.

  • @jefforymitchell5697

    @jefforymitchell5697

    Жыл бұрын

    That's pretty cool that it did it's job and then found it's way back home. Take care of it.

  • @ChefPew

    @ChefPew

    Жыл бұрын

    If its a transferable full auto lower, they are worth about 50k if not more, very few hit the states so they can fetch a premium in the collectors market from the right person

  • @ChefPew

    @ChefPew

    Жыл бұрын

    But the exported models were usually model 719s

  • @wrxs1781
    @wrxs1781 Жыл бұрын

    Great rifles, reliable and accurate, my oldest is an AR15-SP1, still shoots like new even after forty five years of use.

  • @meltedplasticarmyguy
    @meltedplasticarmyguy Жыл бұрын

    I trained on the A2 when I went to basic back in '99, and I never had an issue with the rifle, so I don't know what the problems other people had. I consistently scored high sharpshooter each time I went to the range. Granted, I was more keen on machine guns and explosives, but I could handle the rifle just fine. Sadly, I never got to use any of the M4 variants before I left in '07. The M16A2 will always have a special place in my heart.

  • @kev3d

    @kev3d

    Жыл бұрын

    My father primarily used an A1 when he was in the infantry in 1967-68 while serving in Vietnam. I don't know the details of all the variations, but apparently the chamber wasn't chrome plated. Maybe that wasn't an issue in testing or in dry environments but in the humidity of southeast Asia, it proved to be a terrible problem causing the rifle to fail exactly when you needed it most. If I remember correctly, rust in the chamber would interrupt the cycle and the empty shell would fail to eject. However, US GIs became quite fastidious about cleaning the rifle (probably a good idea anyway) and eventually chrome plated chambers became standard.

  • @jockellis

    @jockellis

    Жыл бұрын

    That was because the army’s low IQ idea started at the top with McNamara.

  • @cockbeard

    @cockbeard

    Жыл бұрын

    I was a couple of years older but we never used anything but SA80 until we reached unit. Admittedly at unit there were different variants available, mostly mission specific choices, surprised that during basic only a couple of years later you were using a completely different and not in wide issue weapon. That said, I've assumed you were UK, and that's probably my mistake

  • @PolymurExcel

    @PolymurExcel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kev3d the chrome plated barrel was actually added upon the adoption of the A1. It was one of the major quality of life features they added when they swapped variants. If they were in Vietnam long enough or at the right time, then they would have been there to witness the switch in service rifle models.

  • @DavidJones-hr9bn

    @DavidJones-hr9bn

    11 ай бұрын

    @@PolymurExcel chrome lining of the chamber and barrel solved only part of the problem. McNut (McNamara) and his sycophants elected to go with ball powder as a propellant versus the stick powder Stoner used in development. Jungle humidity caused the ball powder to bloat expanding the brass casings in the chamber preventing extraction upon the round being fired; didn't matter if the chamber was chrome lined or not.

  • @dillcarver7731
    @dillcarver7731 Жыл бұрын

    Whilst the SLR was our mainstay rifle, I served during the late 1970s to mid 1980's and during tours in Northern Ireland and Belize we carried the M16. The light weight of weapon and ammo was a benefit, but I only really trusted my SLR and always opted to carry it given the choice.

  • @clivemortimore8203

    @clivemortimore8203

    6 ай бұрын

    We had them issued to us in Belize, many of us preferred to have the SLR in our hands. Not it bothered me much as I would normally end up with the L4 LMG, oh the fun being a REME gun fitter with the artillery.

  • @jarink1
    @jarink1 Жыл бұрын

    I'm surprised there was no mention of one of the more significant differences between A1s and A2s - the twist rate of the rifling. It was increased from 1:12 in the A1 to 1:7 in the A2 to accommodate the new, heavier SS109/M855 ammunition. Firing ammunition in the 'wrong' barrel will result in improper stabilization of the bullet and decreased accuracy, especially past 100m.

  • @ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz

    @ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz

    9 ай бұрын

    The 1:7 is for the M856 due to it oddly long length, just fun fact. It matches the twist on the Minimi/M249. And just in case, remember that National Match shooters use 1:7.7 barrels to stabilize 80, 90, and 100 grain bullets out to 600 yards just fine so the much lighter and shorter 62 LAP round doesnt need all that twist.

  • @The10thManRules
    @The10thManRules Жыл бұрын

    I was an NSW Armorer in the U.S. Navy for 20 years. The units I worked with never used the standard infantry M16. We only ever had the M4 and Mk18 for assaulters, and the Mk11 and Mk12 for the snipers. The configurable upper/lower nature and the AR/M4/M16 makes it a great choice. I build my own rifles (including AR pistol and SBR) and primarily choose Aero Precision receivers and freefloat handguards. It's no small thing to be able to have options of caliber by buying different barrels for the AR15 from 5.56, 300 Blackout, and 300 HAM'R. Suppressed subsonic 300 Blackout is ridiculously awesome. Having a 30 caliber barrel option in a soft (low recoil) shooting platform with a short barrel is what I would have wanted while was in service.

  • @garypulliam3740
    @garypulliam3740 Жыл бұрын

    I used the M16A2 in the Infantry and never had a problem with it or with the three round burst. Sometimes I think people create a problem where a problem doesn't exist.

  • @andrewshepherd1537

    @andrewshepherd1537

    8 ай бұрын

    Same story here. My first rifle issued to me out of Basic was an A2. The only time I ever had an issue with the burst function was the first time I fired it on burst with a BFA and blanks. I just had to tighten the BFA more, and it ran just fine. I heard people bitch about burst was to say if you only triggered off one or two rounds, you would only get one round on the next trigger pull, but I always just told them to use burst was it was intended and hold down the trigger till all three rounds are fired, and then release. The kinds of people who've complained about the burst function are the kinds of people who have either a) never used it in a stressful situation, or b) just want something to complain about. My only gripe with my A2 was the weight, but over the years I've come to love it so much that my personal AR15 is a clone of the A2, and I regularly argue with people about it vs the M4. I miss my old girl, and I would trade my M4A1 for my old M16A2 any day

  • @harveywallbanger3123

    @harveywallbanger3123

    21 күн бұрын

    The 3-round burst was a solution looking for a problem. Burst firing at range is stupid, and burst firing at close range (vs. full auto) is also stupid. It was the worst of all worlds.

  • @dwatts64
    @dwatts64 Жыл бұрын

    3:45 there is no controversy among us in the USMC regarding burst fire. Even many of our M4's are burst only. We almost never use anything but semi-auto. Full-auto is unnecessary, we have a Squad Automatic Weapon for that purpose. And I always get bothered when people say full-auto is good for "covering fire" because the truth of the matter is (I know from personal experience) that slower, well-aimed, single shots are nearly always more effective for covering fire. Unless you're trying to suppress a whole area in which case we have a weapons system for that purpose in the squad (SAW.) The burst is a good "oh shit" mode that won't burn through your whole magazine at the worst possible time. If someone is unloading full-auto at me and the rounds are sort of all over the place, I may be willing to roll the dice and take a couple of quick snap shots back at you or risk taking a peek at where your movers are going while you try to pin me. The odds of one of those inaccurate full-auto rounds happening to hit exactly where I pop my head out are pretty slim. But slow, deliberately accurate shots are way scarier. I won't risk popping out under that because I KNOW you've got me dialed in.

  • @kurttate9446

    @kurttate9446

    15 күн бұрын

    The story of the first contact at Khe Sahn comes to mind. A mortar squad was doing night patrol out front when it bumped into high level (field grade) NVA personnel doing recon on the Marine's position. Everyone (the Marines, that is) lit up full auto. Back at the base they heard a god-awful racket for a few seconds then silence for as long as it takes to change magazines then more shooting (hopefully on semiauto this time).

  • @johnp8131
    @johnp8131 Жыл бұрын

    In the eighties, as an ex RAF Armourer, there was more than a suggestion that these, or a derivation of it, 'may' be issued to us for left handers, as the incomming SA80 was impractical for said left handers! Don't know how the other armed services left handers faired, but this weapon must have been preferential to the SA80. Luckily, with my secondary role and rank, I was armed with a 9mm Browning. In earlier years having to proof test fire an LMG was awkward enough!

  • @MichaelGallagher97

    @MichaelGallagher97

    Жыл бұрын

    Then the MOD said wait it's cheaper to just tell left handed people they're right handed now and to get over it.

  • @chrishitchings8712

    @chrishitchings8712

    Жыл бұрын

    @William Tell one of the best shots in my platoon was a leftie firing from the right. Never bothered him.

  • @gleggett3817

    @gleggett3817

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MichaelGallagher97 I think most people signing on to British Army have never fired a weapon before so training them all to operate one right-handed from scratch is not so much of an issue.

  • @billwassell8902

    @billwassell8902

    Жыл бұрын

    I am right handed but left eye dominant so shot the L1A1 from my left shoulder, I shot marksman ,the SA80 would have chewed my cheek off

  • @ashleystyles6888

    @ashleystyles6888

    Ай бұрын

    All of a sudden you become left handed. My A2 jammed after 3 rounds on the range prior to my going to afghan. Awful awful awful.

  • @Gloomshadow100
    @Gloomshadow100 Жыл бұрын

    I carried the A2 in service with the 506th and the 327th Airborne Infantry, great rifle we loved it. Simple sturdy dependable , was great in -40F Korean winters.

  • @jacksonthompson7099

    @jacksonthompson7099

    Жыл бұрын

    Wooooooooow that is stupid cold.

  • @asdf456ghj

    @asdf456ghj

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@jacksonthompson7099 he's exaggerating. Winter here doesn't going down till -40F

  • @garymitchell5899

    @garymitchell5899

    Жыл бұрын

    Plus the Korean war was 70 years ago. The guy's a Walt.

  • @ShootatASL

    @ShootatASL

    Жыл бұрын

    @@garymitchell5899 Yes the war ended a long time ago. The US still has a massive presence on the peninsula. The 101st has had Regiments rotate in and out of there for a long time.

  • @Gloomshadow100

    @Gloomshadow100

    Жыл бұрын

    @@asdf456ghj at night up near Imjin Gak maybe -20C at night back in 1991 up in the mountains in the northern region with all that Siberian wind maybe -40C it was COLD! Even the KATUSAs had never seen anything like it, so not -40F but COLD.. it was a long time ago. It was probably -40C not -40F.

  • @Spiderwolfer
    @Spiderwolfer Жыл бұрын

    This is very fascinating. Even though it’s on the more technical side, it’s great to see more modern weapons discussed. This is probably my favourite video yet. Thank you!

  • @jonathanferguson1211

    @jonathanferguson1211

    Жыл бұрын

    That's nice to hear, thanks :)

  • @bebo4374

    @bebo4374

    Жыл бұрын

    Meet me at the old bayonet factory next to the grenade depot across from the naval meat processing wharf. We’ll settle this like men…

  • @Cloggie1967
    @Cloggie1967 Жыл бұрын

    My service rifle for 10 years was the Canadian made Diemaco C7A1, a licensed built version of the Colt M-16A2 . The rumour was that the Diemacos had better barrels than their American brothers. Either way, I loved that rifle. Accurate, easy to shoot and maintain.

  • @TheMylittletony

    @TheMylittletony

    Жыл бұрын

    I've heard the c7 has a 'sqeeze barrel', increasing the accuracy. Also, the machining quality of Diemaco/Colt Canada is said to be better than Colt US.

  • @rayjames6096

    @rayjames6096

    Жыл бұрын

    Nonsense

  • @geographyinaction7814

    @geographyinaction7814

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rayjames6096 It isn't nonsense. The machining, round powder, and barrel are made to finer tolerances and in better quality. The former Diemaco and now Colt Canada products are chosen well ahead of the US M4 variants by the likes of the SAS.

  • @rayjames6096

    @rayjames6096

    Жыл бұрын

    @@geographyinaction7814 it's nonsense and made up.

  • @rayjames6096

    @rayjames6096

    Жыл бұрын

    @@geographyinaction7814 The M-4 is designed to specific tolerances to operate under all conditions and environments. They're all the same tolerances. Issuing weapons before an assignment don't involve specific manufacturing factories and operators are not given their choice, and its doubtful they even give that a thought.

  • @therealinak
    @therealinak Жыл бұрын

    Funny story about the mix-match stuff - the first M16A2 I qualified on was a mix of A1 and A2 bits, with an A1 (possibly pre-A1) lower with the AUTO marking X’d over by hand and BURST hand stamped under it. The lower was almost entirely in the white, while the upper was a likely Reagan-era A2 with a bit more of its finish remaining, giving the gun a nice two-tone aesthetic. The rifle itself operated primarily as a bolt-action, cycling maybe every third round on its own. Even the primary purchasers of M16s kitbash them together; they just give the wrecked rifles to boot camp kids to thrash.

  • @snuffthisrooster7043
    @snuffthisrooster7043 Жыл бұрын

    I was in the Marines and had an M4 with semi/burst, we were taught never to use burst unless we were literally being attacked by human waves. The only time we ever shot burst was when we're getting rid of leftover ammo after a range. The recon/marsoc marines had special full auto m4's but again they usually only used semi auto.

  • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine
    @0neDoomedSpaceMarine Жыл бұрын

    The heavier barrel profile on the M16A2 is by far the worst feature. At a first one may think it would aid with the gun staying cool, but in reality it does not, as most of the heat gathers in the rear half of the barrel, making the added weight on the front half wasted for the purpose. The actual intent of the new barrel profile was that armorers thought soldiers were gradually bending them through bayonet drills and using the rifles for prying, as they could not get straightness gauges to go in some of them. In reality, these barrels were not bent, the gauges just stopped on tiny (and insignificant) burrs protruding from gas port. A mistaken belief is that this gov't barrel profile is necessary for mounting the M203 grenade launcher, as the barrel has a step for it, but this is just to bring the diameter down so that the M203 can fit, and it designed to fit on the old thinner pencil profile to begin with. Overall, the new barrel profile does nothing but add useless weight, the M16A1 with its thin pencil profile heats up at the same rate and has the same inherent precision, it mounts the M203, and it wasn't bending.

  • @jonathanferguson1211

    @jonathanferguson1211

    Жыл бұрын

    Henry at 9 Hole Reviews has an interesting take on this - worth watching his video. I am allergic to unnecessary weight on firearms, so I tend to agree with the critics of the 'government' profile, but I respect his position as a veteran and experienced shooter.

  • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine

    @0neDoomedSpaceMarine

    Жыл бұрын

    The burst is also pretty bad, having an unintuitive setup which will not reset itself until 3 rounds have cycled, with the possibility of discharging 2 or even 1 round while the cam is engaged, which then gets 'counted' for the next burst trigger pull, leading to possibilities of firing only 2 or even 1 round the next time you pulled the trigger on burst. This has occasionally been reported as malfunctions by people who didn't know better, but it's just an awkward quirk of an awkward feature. This would be less bad if the burst mechanism didn't also make the triggerpull noticeably worse in semi-auto, which is what you'd be using like +90% of the time, affecting precision and practical rate of fire. Burst is a waste of time and ammunition when used in a situation where you'd normally use semi-auto, and it's simply inadequate for situations where you really want full-auto (which do still come up), like for breaking contact. The M16A4 still has the gov't profile and the burst. The M4A1 drops the burst but still keeps the gov't profile (just shorter). These aspects can be improved on.

  • @IvorMektin1701

    @IvorMektin1701

    Жыл бұрын

    I definitely prefer the pencil barrel.

  • @zoiders

    @zoiders

    Жыл бұрын

    Karl at Inrange has tested the AR15/M16 with the pencil barrel and they do indeed suffer with wandering zero once you have put rounds through it and heated it up. The A2 profile was 100% to prevent that problem. Modern metallurgy may have reached the stage where a pencil barrel can handle rapid fire but the metallurgy of the early 80s when the A2 was adopted was not able to create a heat resistant pencil barrel. A2 barrels are not step cut for grenade launchers as they mount the same way as full length delta ring hand guards . Shorter M4 barrels have that feature because the M203 is longer than the carbine length front sight post so it must clamp around something. Previous Colt carbines that the 203 was designed to mate with have thinner profile barrels.

  • @genericpersonx333

    @genericpersonx333

    Жыл бұрын

    The irony is that the M16a2 is still far lighter than most service rifles around, especially in the 1980s, but people got so used to the M16a1 being so much lighter that they forgot just how heavy service rifles used to be. Not saying the M16a2 was an improvement or necessary, but it shows just how expectations can change. For a British Squaddie who spent a lifetime schlepping an SLR at about ten pounds fully-loaded with another several pounds of 7.62mm on his pack, a M16a2 has its charms.

  • @TheArmourersBench
    @TheArmourersBench Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic run down, this project has been super interesting so far, even if tracking the variations has been a bit stressful!

  • @berryreading4809

    @berryreading4809

    Жыл бұрын

    Please make sure someone posts a video of that Cody Firearms Museum symposium presentation! 🙏🏼 sounds like an awesome project! Between this video and Henry's 9hole reviews Falkland pick one video I'm very excited to hear about this presentation, especially to learn more about the earliest "acquisitions" of UK used AR patterns and the accompanying back stories! Thanks for all the hard work! 👍

  • @johnc2438
    @johnc2438 Жыл бұрын

    Issued the A1 model in Vietnam more than a half-century ago, while on Navy active duty -- first with the Seabees in the Mekong Delta and later at Cam Ranh Bay. Very easy to carry and accurate to shoot (fortunately, I never shot it except on the training range or "by the pond out back"). Liked the fact that I could carry extra ammo when out on a trek with a couple other guys in a jeep (were on our own in the Mekong, traveling about).

  • @saya-tf1rl
    @saya-tf1rl7 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Jonathan! I've been searching for the information about the ribbed handguard and you're a life savior!

  • @doolittlegeorge
    @doolittlegeorge9 күн бұрын

    As a former US Army unit armorer and before that combat soldier actually using various iterations of the M16A2 I'm actually a huge fan of the standard issue rifle in and of itself (as opposed to the M203 and M249 both of which i used as well as a field piece in the field) as it was incredibly effective in a "knife fight" very agile, no extras but all essentials, if the enemy turned and ran could be used as a ranged weapon as well to out 300 yards effective absolutely. M4 carbine was well liked and in demand still today true is my understanding anyways. Had a cleaning back in an otherwise solid butt stock, could fix a bayonet to it modern versions obviously have "over attachment issues" so definitely high time for an upgrade but in the hands of some type of Constabulary Force still a very deadly weapon even if not "charged"(loading with live rounds.) It has a "toy" like feel because of the pistol grip but again...makes this item even more deadly imo as can shoot one handed even if need be. With proper fire control very well put together in pieces parts but even better holistically as well. Lighter weapon means carrying more ammo as well and of course more money available to spend on quality ammo.

  • @connormatthews522
    @connormatthews522 Жыл бұрын

    Always captivated from beginning to end. Sometimes wish I'd pursued a similar mastery/knowledge of firearms, just so interesting

  • @RoyalArmouries

    @RoyalArmouries

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the feedback Connor. Never too late ;)

  • @KravKernow
    @KravKernow Жыл бұрын

    "Hi, I'm not Ian, and welcome to another video..." But loved this.

  • @KGBBooks
    @KGBBooks Жыл бұрын

    I trained on the M16A2 in basic in 2000. It’s always been my favorite.

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper Жыл бұрын

    I love this rifle over anything. I have used it during my time in service with the US Army as a Paratrooper and Infantryman. I had no issues with it in combat from Panama to Iraq. As an Infantryman always clean your weapon, clean and check magazines, and clean ammunition. They run well under all conditions because it's a closed action with the dust cover for the bolt and very fast to reload under combat conditions. Very easy to maintain under all conditions as far as cleaning and oiling. The gas system is over pressured for reliable cycle and the chamber and bore is chrome lined for better resistance from rust. The bolt and trigger components are heavily chromed and Phosphated to further reduce corrosion resistance. It's been in service with the US for over 50 years now. Elite units in other countries use the M4 variant use the M16 system as their primary weapon.

  • @Gloomshadow100

    @Gloomshadow100

    Жыл бұрын

    it was sweet shooting too, 300m hits no big deal. 11B 90-94 1/506th 1/327th

  • @Chiller01
    @Chiller01 Жыл бұрын

    One knows one is old when one’s service rifle is classified as a curio or relic in the US or in museum collections. Well actually the Colt SP1, the semiautomatic civilian version is C&R but it still hurts. Not at all too nerdy, I enjoyed this episode. I was aware of the Diemaco carbines in service with the SAS etc but I was not aware of these.

  • @kaz6916
    @kaz6916 Жыл бұрын

    I have a rifle that I assembled from a complete Model *719* kit (everything except the lower receiver) on a semi auto lower. The 719 is basically the same rifle as the model 715….except it has a Safe-Semi-Burst fire control group instead of Safe-Semi-Auto. The latter feature is largely irrelevant to me of course because obviously I did not put any of the fire control components from that kit in the lower, but the 719 is yet another interesting variation of AR-pattern weapon.

  • @michaelamos4651
    @michaelamos4651 Жыл бұрын

    Great video Jonathan. Just watched Ians video on AR10 15 etc. Learning so much from both of you . Thanks

  • @PaulP999
    @PaulP99917 күн бұрын

    I could happily work at the Royal Armouries, I have the interest, the enthusiasm, the willingness to learn, the attention to detail - where it could all break down is on money and how much I am prepared to pay them.....

  • @capcloud652
    @capcloud652 Жыл бұрын

    The m16/ar15 are fine weapons if you keep up with the maintenance. I have owned multiple versions. While the L1a1 I acquired in the 90’s was a fine rifle .The ar15 a2 is a lot more pleasant for a day at the range and make a fine varmint and home defense weapon when using the .55 gr m193 the m855 is a lousy round and the m262 .77 gr hpbtm is phenomenal .( yes , I live in America in a free state so it legal ) .

  • @JJW3
    @JJW3 Жыл бұрын

    I've always liked A1 features over the A2 "improvements". One of my favorite light and handy AR-15s that I put together many years ago consisted of an A1 upper, a 16 inch A1 profile barrel with mid-length gas. I used an old surplus M16A1 stock and pistol grip, but the mid-length hand-guards were of the oval A2 profile.

  • @Gloomshadow100

    @Gloomshadow100

    Жыл бұрын

    I carried both of them in the airborne Infantry, we all liked BOTH .. the A2 was more solid , more robust..

  • @thedeathwobblechannel6539

    @thedeathwobblechannel6539

    Жыл бұрын

    My favorite current rifle is what would Stoner do lower with an A1 16 inch carbine upper. It's either sporting the large round hand guards or the Magpul SL carbine gas also

  • @armynurseboy

    @armynurseboy

    6 ай бұрын

    For a fixed length stock, the A1 was better overall lengthwise.

  • @TheBuelliganRides
    @TheBuelliganRidesАй бұрын

    I was issued and qualified with an A2 in Basic Training in 1982. Fine weapon.

  • @garygannon6999
    @garygannon69998 ай бұрын

    I had an A2 with full Auto and A1 sights in South Armagh in the late 80's. It also had an M203. Lovely piece of kit.....!!

  • @LadyAnuB
    @LadyAnuB Жыл бұрын

    The rifle I was issued at my duty station was the A2 variant. (I prefer the round handguard of the A2.) We had two weapons in my unit that were the weapons of firepower support, the M60 and the 90mm recoilless rifle. Both of which weren't the best weapon to lug around on foot. (My unit was part of the 7th ID (Light).)

  • @user-mz4do7fw9m
    @user-mz4do7fw9m Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, we grew up with those beloved rifles..., you can pick them up in any local gun shops here in the States.

  • @Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming
    @Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming2 күн бұрын

    I used the AR15 in the Royal Marines back in 1992. Our troop moved on the CAR in 1996. I cannot wait to get my hands on the new KS1 when we get it. The Envision Technology ballistic calculator and a Pixels-on-Target thermal sight will be a brilliant tactical addition.

  • @robertbaxter4720
    @robertbaxter47205 ай бұрын

    I really like your content, I like the way that you add the history as well as the tech details on your videos, I really enjoy them.

  • @hoosierdaddy2308
    @hoosierdaddy2308 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. I was in the US Army from 79 to 83. I shot the A1 a lot and then I worked at a machine gun company afterwards. I've shot every version and I like the round stock A1 version shorty from the Vietnam war best. 💪 Regards from the Midwest USA. My famy is originally from England being that my last name is Smallwood. ♥️

  • @poorfordtransitowner1627

    @poorfordtransitowner1627

    Жыл бұрын

    60 million people in britain mate an ive never met the queen either

  • @brentfellers9632

    @brentfellers9632

    Жыл бұрын

    My condolences to your wife on the "small wood"

  • @guyharrison5773
    @guyharrison5773 Жыл бұрын

    Q. Should the UK have adopted the M16/AR-15? A. Yes. The worst implementation of the M16 is superior in just about every possible way to what we did choose.

  • @mtdusmc9437
    @mtdusmc9437 Жыл бұрын

    I was the last series (2052) through Parris Island (May-Aug 85) that trained with the M16A1. The barrels of our weapon were silver at this point from being continuous cleaned. During my 30 years' service, I carried the A2, the M4, the 1911 and the M9. The A4s were certainly in service; however, due to my rank I never carried one.

  • @MrNpc81
    @MrNpc81 Жыл бұрын

    The short answer is yes. The long answer is HELL YES.

  • @jonathanferguson1211

    @jonathanferguson1211

    Жыл бұрын

    Or alternatively, yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees.

  • @ce6654
    @ce6654 Жыл бұрын

    Honestly, we're in an age where we're starting to see the pinnacle of perfection from M16-pattern platforms. Between the ability to find piston-driven platforms, and now even complete internal bolt/buffer systems (Sig MXC, Palmetto State JAKL, etc.), you can't find a better system. Lately, the US DoD has been seeking replace these great systems, not with a good updated version, but with a completely new system based on the Sig MXC Spear. Granted, it's familiar, but it is HUGE with an insane new 6.8mm round built on the .308 chassis. They always love justifying these moves by saying that our guys had bad experiences in Afghanistan, as if the M4 is the reason we lost. I served in Afghanistan and used the M4, as well as the MK18 mod 0, and the MK12 SPR version. We never losses a tactical engagement during the entirety of Afghanistan, and the US military as a whole was not losing tactical engagements, with regular army using the M4 and the USMC using the M16A4/A5. So, the loss in Afghanistan wasn't coming from an ineffective platform or ineffective round. We always had the tactical advantage.

  • @reinvanitaz4834
    @reinvanitaz4834 Жыл бұрын

    Love the new thumbnail, keep it up Royal Armouries and Mr. Ferguson😊

  • @davydatwood3158
    @davydatwood3158 Жыл бұрын

    If I ever make it back to the UK, visiting the Armouries is high on my list of things to do, and these videos are a big part of why. :D

  • @andysavill8580

    @andysavill8580

    Жыл бұрын

    If you want to see these weapons, they are in the NFC - a separate part of the Royal Armouries. It is not open to the general public, but you can arrange a visit if you are carrying out research!

  • @jacksonthompson7099
    @jacksonthompson7099 Жыл бұрын

    One of the best videos on the M16A2 (imo) is by Henry with 9 hole reviews where he went out to 500 yards with his M16A2 clone rifle. What also standout about his episode is the added interview with a Marine who was shot in the head in Fallujah and lived. That Marine service rifle was the A2, both the former marine (his name escapes me atm) and Henry went into great detail on the use and expected capabilities of the M16A2 in combat, might have some useful information for the paper you are writing for the Cody firearms museum. Loved the video!

  • @robertwood1416
    @robertwood1416Ай бұрын

    The model 604 was issued in limited numbers to units deploying to S ARMAGH. Close Observation Platoons elsewhere in the Province also had limited numbers of the 604, but at some point they were withdrawn. The furniture/hand guard was the same as the Vietnam era rifles.

  • @aaronsanborn4291
    @aaronsanborn4291 Жыл бұрын

    I used the M16A2, A4 and M4 during my Army career there's absolutely nothing wrong with the rifle. I never scored less than Expert in 15+ years. I carried the A2 in Bosnia and the M4 during two tours in Iraq. The M4 did everything I asked of it as a Scout and Infantryman

  • @sfoeric

    @sfoeric

    Жыл бұрын

    What’s the difference between the A2 and A4?

  • @lionheartx-ray4135

    @lionheartx-ray4135

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sfoeric A2 had the Handle while A4 had a picatinny rail above the chamber. A4 allowed for more options with Optics and scopes.

  • @lionheartx-ray4135

    @lionheartx-ray4135

    Жыл бұрын

    I think anytime I had issue with M16/M4 had more to do with Magazine then the rifle it self.

  • @sfoeric

    @sfoeric

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lionheartx-ray4135 Thanks for the explanation!

  • @PolymurExcel

    @PolymurExcel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lionheartx-ray4135 yeah, apparently I found this out recently, those aluminum stanmags were actually supposed to be disposable. They were never meant to be used for years on end.

  • @Mrgunsngear
    @Mrgunsngear Жыл бұрын

    Thanks

  • @nikhinson3703
    @nikhinson370315 күн бұрын

    The M16A1 was quite prevalent in British use in the 1980s pre SA80 where a lighter calibre was required. We had them in Belize, I was a big fan of the low weight, low recoil and high accuracy.

  • @hoffmiermp
    @hoffmiermp Жыл бұрын

    The A2 was/is one hell of a service rifle imo. I grew up with on during my career in the Corps. Never had the chance to use the A4 but qualified with the M4 walking out with my 7th award expert.

  • @sampointau
    @sampointau Жыл бұрын

    The XM177/CAR-15 was the first introduction of the rounded ribbed forend from memory, mid 1960's for a short barrelled (10" & 11.5" versions) collapsible stock variant for use by special forces.

  • @vhscopyofseinfeld

    @vhscopyofseinfeld

    Жыл бұрын

    I think some regular army SLs & PLs/PSGs used it as well

  • @andreweden9405
    @andreweden9405 Жыл бұрын

    American here. I actually used to own a civilian model Colt AR-15 (the LE6920). Sadly, financial difficulties compelled me to sell it, with the hope of getting another one once I had recovered. Well, little did I know that, in that brief interim, Colt would suddenly decide to stop selling them to the civilian market due to political pressures! I have literally shed tears over this set of circumstances. In other words, right after I had to sell mine, they went from being the proverbial "dime a dozen", to nearly unobtainable collectors' items!😥 Btw, do you have any videos about AK-47s in the works?

  • @gunsnchoses8309

    @gunsnchoses8309

    Жыл бұрын

    They didn't. You can still find 6920s all over the place. Colt hasn't stopped selling commercially and anyone who told you otherwise is an idiot.

  • @solwindp78-1

    @solwindp78-1

    Жыл бұрын

    That is not accurate. Civilian Colt AR-15s are not 'unobtainable collectors items'. Colt paused sales for a fairly short period and then resumed commercial rifle sales in 2020. You can buy a Colt CR6920 today from all major retailers which is considered to be almost exactly the same rifle as the LE6920, just with slightly different markings. Just stay away from the outsourced Colt 'Expanse' models. It was not 'political pressure' that stopped their commercial sales, it was an oversaturated AR-15 market and military contracts taking precedent. Everyone who said it was 'political pressures' was purely speculating because Colt released a vague statement once. In truth the Colt AR-15s have always had an inflated price for comparatively basic features and aren't exactly competitive with other companies these days. They mostly sell for the brand recognition and the appeal of having a certain rollmark on your lower receiver and 'C' marks on the BCG. At the time they chose to pause sales rather than drop prices to compete.

  • @andreweden9405

    @andreweden9405

    Жыл бұрын

    @@solwindp78-1 , Just looked it up to confirm, and I stand corrected! Apparently, they resumed sales to the civilian market only 9 months after suspending it. I heard it via the news when they announced that they'd be stopping civilian sales, but the coverage of their resumption of civilian sales must have been more "quiet". Anyway, thank you for sharing the correct information with me!

  • @andreweden9405

    @andreweden9405

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gunsnchoses8309 , They most certainly did suspend sales of their AR-15s to civilians. I simply wasn't aware of the fact that they had resumed civilian sales a mere 9 months later!

  • @danielhenderson8316

    @danielhenderson8316

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andreweden9405 The quiet part Colt tried not to mention was Colt had enough surplus inventory they could stop producing rifles and still fulfill orders. Pre-CoVID they were overpriced for what you got and post-CoVID everyone is selling ARs at sticker price.

  • @scouncil2028
    @scouncil202814 күн бұрын

    Mr. Ferguson has done a better job at discussing this American rifle than most American gun experts I know. It's not about the knowledge, it's about the communication skills, which we Americans absolutely need to improve, IMHO.

  • @andyleighton6969
    @andyleighton69692 ай бұрын

    Burst fire/full auto switches - my "Major DS" at the School of Infantry was an Australian who'd served in Vietnam...yes, I am that old. He said that one night a VC just popped up right in front of him and, in a flat panic, he's put a full box of 20 rounds from his SLR into him before he had time to drop. You don't need a fancy setting - just adrenaline! 😉

  • @nonsibi1087
    @nonsibi1087 Жыл бұрын

    Interesting to hear this for me, as it reinforces the opinions I heard of MOD officials when I visited the Nottingham MOD production center in 2002 (I was a US government employee who was visiting & meeting with staff in the nearby MOD Pattern Room, then @ Nottingham). My British counterparts expressed, not so seriously, that it made little sense to have British military shoulder arms made by HK, a German company, when the tried & true M16A2, made by a long-standing close ally, the US, was available & ready.

  • @scwhk1

    @scwhk1

    Жыл бұрын

    I assume the HK rifle here is the L85a2. It should be pointed out that at the time of L85A2 HK was owned by BAE, a British company.

  • @andysavill8580

    @andysavill8580

    Жыл бұрын

    The M16a2 is an excellent rifle, but the MOD wanted a bullpup configured rifle for dismounted close combat. The bullpup is the only way to maintain optimal terminal ballistics in a short rifle. The French, Austrians, Israelis and many other Armies came to the same conclusions.

  • @GeorgiaBoy1961

    @GeorgiaBoy1961

    Жыл бұрын

    H&K was then owned by BAE, British Aerospace - their ordnance division - so they were keeping the funds for the refurbishment "in-house" so to speak. I do agree with you, for what it is worth, that the Brits might have been better off adopting the M-16 than the SA80, but "not invented here" syndrome is real and since the SLR (FN FAL) was a foreign design, maybe the MOD thought it was time for a homegrown design.

  • @steven-k.
    @steven-k. Жыл бұрын

    We had an Armalite in our armoury; not entirely sure how it got there, but it was an original Colt-made one with the early three-prong flash hider and original buffer. Literally everything on it was bent. Barrel was bent, front sight was slanted, the push pins were U-shaped, most of the finish was gone, the teeth in the handguard were badly broken, the bottom of the pistol grip was worn off and the stock was cracked. Gas tube was bent, etc. It was used only for familiarisation. "And this lads, is an Armalite." Rattle, rattle. I remember when I was at Warminster once a Para showed me his 715 with an M203, the Paras actually had L85A1s at the time but they also had some 715s with M203s fitted. I think the history of the Armalite in British service is definitely worthy of some study, mainly the enormous list of excuses given for not generally adopting it. The thing that always makes me laugh is that the A2 upgrade was justified as being more cost-effective than general adoption of the L119A1 because that would require re-training. Every front-line unit has Armalite experience and my regiment was about as rear-line as possible and we had a crappy old one.

  • @Treblaine

    @Treblaine

    Жыл бұрын

    The Armalite as in the AR15 or the AR-18? The latter had a very boxy looking steel upper receiver with a charging handle protruding through the ejection port.

  • @steven-k.

    @steven-k.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Treblaine AR-15. Colt never made the AR-18 and they were never used by the British Army AFAIK.

  • @Treblaine

    @Treblaine

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@steven-k. Ah, yes, you did say colt-made, I shouldn't skim read. Colt of course weren't interested in any other designs Armalite made other than AR15. I did see a British army training video where a Sergeant showed off an AR-18 (or AR-180) and introduced it as an Armalite saying "it's great, I'd personally choose this gun". Judging by the film grain and moustaches it was in the 1970s or early 80s, so before the SA-80/L85. Should have adopted the C7 just like Netherlands and Denmark did but it seems that there were shenanigans afoot with the SA80 as some sort of scheme to boost the value of Enfield before the government sold it off. I do find it strange that for a long time the US had the worst variant of the AR15 with the A2 model: over-designed sights, clunky bust-fire mechanism and bizarrely proportioned barrel profile plus no provision for any sort of optical sight.

  • @wildcardbitchesyeehaw8320

    @wildcardbitchesyeehaw8320

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Treblaine Would've been so much better if they just adopted a straight up AR-18 instead of wasting all the time and money to turn it into a bullpup and just ending up with one of the worst service rifles out there.

  • @benstoyles1297

    @benstoyles1297

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Treblaine The "Armalite" referring to the AR-18 is more of an IRA thing. A batch of them were sent over to Ireland so they were in fairly regular service with the IRA, as much as any rifle could be said to be (the song "My Armalite" is about the AR-18, not the AR-15 as usually inferred). If the Sergeant had experience N.I. then he might have picked that name up there.

  • @tmutant
    @tmutant Жыл бұрын

    2:54 I trained with the M-16 (no bloody A1 or A2) in the USAF in the early '80s. The Air Force never adopted the A1 and switched to the A2 when it came out. My unit didn't receive it until I already left the service. The case deflector would have been a welcome addition. I got a blister on the back of my neck from hot brass while firing prone.

  • @seanmurphy7011
    @seanmurphy7011 Жыл бұрын

    The round handguards were interchangeable with the A1, and I had an M16A1 in my reserve unit in the early 1990s with the A2 handguard. Second, a controlled 3-round burst with all three rounds on target inside 200m is very doable. 3rd the M4 carbines that I had, and I had several, all had 3-round burst.

  • @garrybaldy327
    @garrybaldy327 Жыл бұрын

    You know you have a problem when British servicemen never have a good word to say about the SA80.

  • @peterstubbs5934

    @peterstubbs5934

    Ай бұрын

    THAT mate is OLD HAT. The SA80 is now a VERY decent piece of kit. Accuracy wise, the SA80 brought you up a level from the SLR, even if the SLR had the SUIT/SUSAT sight. Having said that, we wouldnt have moved to the 5.56 SA 80 if the yanks hadnt forced NATO to go there. I sussed out the 5.56 weakness in Malaya in 75 when we were firing in the jungle lanes ranges. Rather than penetrating the foliage, some rounds were bouncing off and spraying all over the place.Later, the Americans began to realise in Iraq that it had nowhere near the stopping power of the SLR 7.62 and started to move some systems back to 7.62mm. I served 22 yrs Brit Airborne and was most 2 Para shooting teams with both the SLR and then the SA80. It wasnt as bad as the nay sayers portrayed it to be.

  • @semperfi2023
    @semperfi202310 күн бұрын

    We used to shoot competition against the Royal Marines in the Marine Corps matches and in Quantico at the Interservice matches in the 90s. We had open sight M16s, and they had their bullpup with a scope. We mopped the floor with them... and they had scopes. Their badasses thru and thru but their level of marksmanship isnt what our is in the U.S. This is most likely due to our hunting and sporting history...which is diminishing im sorry to say.

  • @cosmo9882
    @cosmo9882 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent. Thank you

  • @kiwiadventures3773
    @kiwiadventures37733 күн бұрын

    I used the SLR and the M16. I have to tell you the SLR was still my favourite

  • @victuff5302
    @victuff5302 Жыл бұрын

    Back in 1984 I worked part time as the armourer for a well known UK gun dealer and Section 5 dealer. He bought around 10 'commercial sales' SA80 rifles from RSAF Enfield. As we were the UK agent at that time for IMI and had seen how many hoops they had to jump through to get ATF approval for the Galil rifles for civilian sale, I rebuilt an SA80 to be an civilianised ATF compliant rifle for the US market and sent it back to Enfield for evaluation... they 'poo, poo'ed ' the idea (they would have sold thousands to the USA)! To get to the caveat, we found out that Colt had offered the M16A2 to the British Army as a 'tagged on' order to the back of the second US Marine Corps purchase at a unit cost of around $74 USD per rifle.... Guess what we did? 😂🤣😂

  • @thecurlew7403

    @thecurlew7403

    Жыл бұрын

    The scar h 762 should be adopted by uk its a battle rifle it takes the SLR to the level it never reached .

  • @gregandy4277

    @gregandy4277

    Жыл бұрын

    You decided to go with a bonfire of the taxpayer’s money! 😃

  • @DavidJones-hr9bn

    @DavidJones-hr9bn

    11 ай бұрын

    @@gregandy4277 he's full of $#!+ ! U.S. contract price in that era was around $450 per copy! At $74 per unit, Colt U.S. would have basically been supplying them for free. Maggie Thatcher would have never passed up that deal ..... had it actually existed!

  • @neilmorrison7356
    @neilmorrison7356 Жыл бұрын

    Remember some units in BAOR had them painted with a cameo pattern.

  • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine

    @0neDoomedSpaceMarine

    Жыл бұрын

    A Colt 715 with camo paint would be one of the coolest rifles you could have in the day.

  • @aac7183

    @aac7183

    Жыл бұрын

    Word Up ?

  • @chrissheppard5068
    @chrissheppard5068 Жыл бұрын

    I carried an AR15 in NI in 84 preferred it far more than that ker rap SA80 which replaced the SLR later. Brit Jobs over kit won out.

  • @johnmurray1529
    @johnmurray15293 күн бұрын

    We still shot with A2s in 2005 going through USMC bootcamp. I imagine they swapped to A4s around 2010. While the US army and Marine Corps used burst. I learned from a Navy Seabee that their A2s are full auto. Being they weren't issued Squad Automatic Weapons.

  • @zaqzilla1
    @zaqzilla1 Жыл бұрын

    The UK definitely should have adopted the M16. The US had already done all the R&D, and through the Vietnam conflict had smoothed out the kinks in the system. So all the UK would have had to do is license the thing. Instead they sunk money into developing the SA80. Which ended up being one of the worst modern rifles ever adopted. Then they spent mountains of pounds paying H&K to fix it.

  • @jayarmastice4010
    @jayarmastice4010 Жыл бұрын

    It’s crazy that the Brit’s have weapons like this only available in museums and videos like this, meanwhile I have one sitting a few feet away from me in the safe

  • @memenadekhanh3992

    @memenadekhanh3992

    Жыл бұрын

    Because the Brits vote for more gun control laws (big mistake).

  • @spaceageGecko

    @spaceageGecko

    Жыл бұрын

    @@memenadekhanh3992 Not really a mistake, we are quite happy with the way things are.

  • @HOI4TUTORIALS

    @HOI4TUTORIALS

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spaceageGecko I'm not, so stop saying it like you represent all brits please

  • @spaceageGecko

    @spaceageGecko

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HOI4TUTORIALS You'd find most are fine with the current regulations, last thing we need is easy access to firearms.

  • @Dave-hu5hr

    @Dave-hu5hr

    Жыл бұрын

    @@memenadekhanh3992 Really.. ? Would love you to inform me of the next vote - don't recall having one before. 🥔

  • @LexCinnabon
    @LexCinnabon23 күн бұрын

    Great video, I appreciate all the details! In America, legal M16s cost over $30,000 and A2s are around $50,000. I plan on buying an A1 and using it for an early M4 (A2) parts kit I’ve had for years. God bless!

  • @roverboat2503
    @roverboat2503 Жыл бұрын

    I was issued an AR15 when I was serving in Belize. The total lack of recoil when compared with an SLR made it easy to get superb grouping on the range. Interestingly they were painted pale grey for some reason.

  • @Murph945

    @Murph945

    Жыл бұрын

    Mine was green and probably grey and Black in Belize in 1986. I don't remember if they had the forward assist. I think not.

  • @alancranford3398
    @alancranford3398 Жыл бұрын

    In the modern US Army, it's not just ammunition consumed. There's worry over "every bullet carries a lawyer" and limiting the number of shots fired limited commander liability.

  • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine

    @0neDoomedSpaceMarine

    Жыл бұрын

    That's basically the same reason the .50BMG SLAP cartridge wasn't allowed to be used with guns fitted with any kind of muzzlebrake or flashhider, as sabot petals would on occasion deflect inside the muzzle device and then strike the projectile in flight, which could cause really extreme point of impact shifts at long ranges. Very unsafe, even on a shooting range.

  • @tristanc3873

    @tristanc3873

    Жыл бұрын

    @@0neDoomedSpaceMarine More than that the sabot can get stuck in the muzzlebreak and cause a massive pressure spike in the gun. That Kentucky Ballistics was almost killed when a SLAP round blew out his rifle, and there's a good chance that it was at least partially because the muzzle was plugged with a sabot.

  • @m249machinegun2

    @m249machinegun2

    Жыл бұрын

    Nonsense

  • @Sableagle

    @Sableagle

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tristanc3873 In the video of that incident, you can see the round _before_ the one that blew it up skipping off the ground in front of his target. I took it as a sign that the ancient ammo he was using was well past its use-by date. Consider it a reminder that the correct response to "WTF?" is "F that! Unload!"

  • @indigohammer5732
    @indigohammer5732 Жыл бұрын

    I think the SAS got the M16 in 65-66 for use in Borneo. Radway Green produced ammunition in 66. Interesting that they decided not to import cartridges from the US. Your paper sounds very interesting. Could you give a heads up when the presentation is? Thanks

  • @tileux
    @tileux Жыл бұрын

    Used one of these as a scout in the Australian army. Hated it. Stoppages all over the place, dust and mud made it worse. Never had any confidence in it at close range. Only good thing was the weight compared to the SLR which nearly everyone else had.

  • @HabitualButtonPusher
    @HabitualButtonPusher Жыл бұрын

    I carried an A1, A2 and M4. We never had any issues with barrel rise shooting auto or 3 round burst. You would only use that for close quarters or suppression fire. Anything with distance was totally single shot so you knew you would drop your target.

  • @SingularNinjular
    @SingularNinjular Жыл бұрын

    My dad was issued an M16 of some description while deployed to Belize. He said he liked that it was lightweight and easy to field strip, but thought it didn't have the power to punch through the thick jungle foliage. He said that if he'd actually had to fight, he'd have preferred an L1A1.

  • @harry9392
    @harry9392 Жыл бұрын

    I served on Op Banner home service Battalions (UDR CGC, Royal Irish CGC) I worked alongside the Royal Marines Cop teams had M16's , as did the Paras I also carried an M16 on our Cop team training. But sadly had to stick with the old SLR back at Battalion.

  • @skylongskylong1982

    @skylongskylong1982

    Жыл бұрын

    If I remember rightly during NITAT , the Fire Teams had a mix of weapons. The point man carried the M16 , as it could fire a full magazine on auto in 1.5 seconds. The SLR had the advantage of once being hit by a 7.62 you stay down. Once met a Officer who took 5 rounds from a M16 in an ambush, but kept on running till out of the kill zone. Also clearing a double feed on a M16 is far slower than a rifle with a side cocking/ charging handle. One third of the time on a M16 you need a clearing rod to clear it. A superb weapon, but not without its flaws.

  • @harry9392

    @harry9392

    Жыл бұрын

    @@skylongskylong1982 One of my mates was an instructor at NITAT

  • @skylongskylong1982

    @skylongskylong1982

    Жыл бұрын

    @@harry9392 At STANTA ?

  • @PolymurExcel
    @PolymurExcel Жыл бұрын

    I always found the story of the birdcage flash suppressor funny. The original M16 had this three pronged thing. If it is true, supposedly they swapped it out because service-members kept warping them. They were apparently using the prongs to pry apart the metal mesh wires that tied supply crates together because it worked better their crowbars. The bird cage didn’t help as apparently the service members would in response, shove the entire barrel under the wires and tear them apart like a crowbar. Now they were bending the barrel which was worse than what they did before. If this true, all I gotta say is freakin grunts.

  • @davidneale6950
    @davidneale6950 Жыл бұрын

    1st time I saw the M16 family in UK military use was during my Op-Banner Tour 85-86. Having delivered members of the KOSB's by Helibedford to their tour Barracks, a number of them (around 6) climbed down carrying these weapons. Being a wide eyed Trog, with his 1958 stamped wood furniture SLR, to say I was gobsmacked would be an understatement 😳😊

  • @awildman69
    @awildman69 Жыл бұрын

    Any colt 602/603 from the Malayan Emergency in the collection? Would be be some good history in those

  • @jonathanferguson1211

    @jonathanferguson1211

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes - I'll be covering these in the symposium I mentioned :) None with any known combat history unfortunately though. They were passed around quite a bit.

  • @Stewart682
    @Stewart682 Жыл бұрын

    FYI The Canadian version of this rifle is the C7 family. It is used by Canada, New Zealand, The Netherlands, Denmark and a few others. I believe that the British SAS use one of the variants as one of their primary weapons. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colt_Canada_C7

  • @454FatJack

    @454FatJack

    Жыл бұрын

    Falkland’s M16’s

  • @chooseyouhandle

    @chooseyouhandle

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought the Canadians used the C8

  • @Stewart682

    @Stewart682

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chooseyouhandle Yes, but the C8 is the carbine version of the C7 so is only used for certain applications. Vehicle mounted troops etc.

  • @shanemartin2491

    @shanemartin2491

    9 ай бұрын

    NZ got the LMT MARS-L. Its the only acquisition project that was done well by our country in the last 20 years. Except the Bushmasters. I had a couple of mates included with the weapons trials. They rated the LMT as the 2nd best after the updated AUG which was probably based more on familiarity than anything actually technical. But the LMT is a great weapon. Had some issues initially which LMT was very good about fixing. AUG had advantages in some respects like urban fighting in ergonomics in that alot more weight is towards the rear especially with a 203 on it. But generally for future soldiers the MARS is better. Compared to C7 I have no idea.

  • @TheGrimFoot
    @TheGrimFoot29 күн бұрын

    A 20 inch m16 is a great rifle inside 500 meters. Even my 18 inch SPR build does very well. And is Sub MOA with good wind.

  • @Johnny84mm-sn4gj
    @Johnny84mm-sn4gjАй бұрын

    UK should have adopted the C7/C8 series of rifles. They are brilliant.

  • @johnfisk811
    @johnfisk811 Жыл бұрын

    I had one issued to me in British army service in Central America in the 1980s. Horrid thing. I would have preferred my L1A1 or L2A3 Machine Carbine. I was told we had M16s in the jungle as we were a long way away in distance and time from replacement ammunition and could carry more rounds with the M16.

  • @bigbake132

    @bigbake132

    7 ай бұрын

    Why was it "horrid"? Were you issued the A2 or A1?

  • @johnfisk811

    @johnfisk811

    7 ай бұрын

    God knows. Just never felt soldier proof and trial shooting made the rounds swerve about glancing off small branches. Jungles have a lot of branches. My L1A1 just went through everything converting cover into concealment as they say. The L2A3 was ideal to spray despondency and dismay in any general direction giving time to run away or run right over them. Maybe it was that I was given it with no instruction and had to make it up as I went along on a long patrol. Still would have done the job if needed I dare say.@@bigbake132

  • @JelMain
    @JelMain Жыл бұрын

    Having started my soldiering on the No 4, then SLR, and become an attractive proposition to the SAS (in the form of an unsolicited job offer, which I turned down, because the same issues arose with interference by incompetent politicians as happened here), I got to handle the SA80 on the TAVR Platoon Commander's Course at Warminster in 1978 (which I came out top of). That's structurally almost back to the flintlock, in terms of generation. Two major issues existed. Firstly, weight. Secondly, shape. A fighting infantrymen relies on camouflage, and the key to that is the "S"es - shape, shine, silhouette, shadow. A long line is manmade. Pull it back into a bullpup and you get rid of the "long". Your forearm breaks it up too. What were key factors at the time? 1. Economic cost - the economic model being learned the hard way at the time says local production stimulates the economy, I'm not talking about unit price, mind. 2. Accuracy. The No 4 would kill an enemy through the tree he's hiding behind. The flex in the barrel of the SLR caused by the blowback mechanism would kill him by going around the tree. The M-16 would kill him by dropping the tree on his head while he was trying to suss where the bees were. Bees? A burst of tumbling bullets buzzed. It turned out the SA80L1 would kill him laughing as it turned into a clown car, disassembling itself That, as we all know, was eventually fixed.

  • @sevenmangsb
    @sevenmangsb25 күн бұрын

    In something of a coincidence, after watching this video I started reading the latest Jack Reacher book (The Secret) and on page 15, investigating some missing M16s it had: "The model was old, from before the switch to three-shot bursts". And there is a theme of someone switching parts out so the military version is now semi auto only and the full auto lower receiver has been replaced. But I don't know how that pans out yet... Thanks for another interesting video 👍

  • @NullbYte-gk5jq
    @NullbYte-gk5jq11 күн бұрын

    The SAS armoury has a Colt Commando XM177, I fired it in 1971, nice little weapon😊

  • @klackon1
    @klackon1 Жыл бұрын

    The M16 was on limited supply to British Army units serving in Northern Ireland. I was part of the covert army (I did not wear uniform or patrol the streets) and one day I happened to visit the defence company armoury. I was surprised to see a lone M16 among the SLR's and enquired as to who used it. Apparently, no one wanted it; as all those engaged in patrolling preferred their SLR''s. I was told that it was mine for the asking. I would eagerly have exchanged my SMG for it, but alas, the M16 was too long and would not fit in the sack I used to covertly carry my folded SMG. I would have given it a go had it been a CAR version, as I was not a fan of the SMG, preferring my FN Browning GP35, which replaced my dreadful Canadian Inglis HP35.

  • @jacksonthompson7099

    @jacksonthompson7099

    Жыл бұрын

    That HP35 must have had alot of wear and tear on it

  • @ArnoldsKtm
    @ArnoldsKtm2 ай бұрын

    That's a brilliant looking firearm.

  • @kevinong1735
    @kevinong173511 күн бұрын

    0:39 The top one is a legitimate M-16A2 with its micrometer adjustable rear sight and heavy barrel. The one on the bottom looks like a M-16A1 with an A2 pistol grip and fore end due to its pencil barrel, shorter stock, and less adjustable rear sight (I say less because one needs a tool or a round to adjust for windage).

  • @tommy4244
    @tommy4244 Жыл бұрын

    I carried an AR15 for sometime when in the military. In the mid 1980’s we had our AR’s taken away and were given the new SA80 weapon to trail. We parachuted with it, took it to the Arctic, dropped it down the side of mountains, got it soaked in sea water and generally abused it. To be honest we didn’t really like it as there were far better, combat proven, weapon systems on the market that were all way way better. After around 6 months of testing and numerous failures the trials team came to chat to us. They sat down and to,d us that they had read our less than glowing reports about the SA80 and then asked what they could do to make it better. The answer was unanimous “Give us back our AR15’s and M203’s but attach the sight from the SA80” To say they were not impressed is an understatement…..