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Posted: 8/15/2004 9:48:39 AM EDT
| A russian weapon guy wrote that the Saiga and Tigr rifles are purposedly watered down to reduce reliablility and durability, in order to satisfy the Russian law that civilian weapons must have 15% of the military capability takenout.. one of the things, supposed, is reducing the depth of rifling so the barrel will wear out faster. Just wonder if anyone has paid attention to the rifling, in comparison to Bulgarian or Polish. |
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If they want rifles with 15% less durability, they take away the vodka from the workers! BTW I've heard more than 1 "BS'ish" tale about Saigas and other Russian rifles... one is how Saigas crimp the neck of the casing after each bullet leaves the chamber. Some say its because Russian law requires commercial chambers to do that so the Russian LEOs can figure out if it was a civilian that commited a crime or if it was military. However, the Russian VEPRs do not crimp the neck of the casing and they're exported as "sporter" rifles. Then there's the side that says the crimping only occurs with military spec chambers. Now why would mil-spec chambers be required to crimp the casing? Perhaps its a Saiga-only thing? VEPRs are made in a factory that used to make real military RPKs... I do not know if this has any bearing on the exported barrels/chambers. |
Gonna have to join you in that chorus of "BS" there! How the heck does a rifle crimp a casing after it fires the round??? Not likely, unless it has an "active chamber" or some other type of BS... |
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