I do love the AK's beefy hammer, as opposed to non-mil spec AR hammers.
I thought AKs are dummy proof and built for idiots.
They just don't have $ to buy a decent assault rifle.
I has ebonics but I not has opinions on AK. It double tap and triple tap for real?
Could have been using a 50year old beat to sh!t rifle. Could have had smuggled surplus ammo that spen time in the bottom of a flooded basement. Could have had sh!t magazines.
OR you could have had a guy firing away on full auto and not realized he was empty. Take any firearm and out it in the hands of a novice and tell the to start firing away. Good chance they will continue to try and fire after empty.
I believe that he try to say the combatant put the gun on safety. For the ammo, beside Wolf what else can you buy in Brussell?
You have to reload every once in a while. These guys don't kill everyone, they want witnesses too.
There was some talk that these were "deactivated" weapons. I don't know if that is the same as our dewat or some lesser procedure. Or that could have just been anti-gun talk without factual basis.
In Europe, deactivated firearms are common because people happen to like collecting guns, but their governments won't let them have functional ones. The standards to which they're deactivated depend on where and when it was done. European countries don't regulate firearm receivers like we do in the US. Often, they only care about barrels and bolts.
I've seen pictures of deactivated AK's in Finland where only the barrel (welded and drilled) and bolt (face ground at an angle) are deactivated. It would not be too difficult to smuggle in functioning barrels and bolts from the US to reactivate them. Because of that, some countries have set stricter standards, such as cutting locking lugs and receiver rings or heavier welding. Since 1995, the UK has essentially required deacts to be welded solid.
http://dwsuk.org/epages/057184c7-2f...e87657239/Categories/Deactivated_Weapons__FAQ
These pictures show what is required by law in Germany. All you need is a new barrel, bolt, and possibly trigger group if you can't cut and clean up the welds.
http://www.zib-militaria.de/AK47-wood-stock-ex-Poland-deactivated-assault-rifle
Obviously, reactivating these is a lot easier than it is to build an AK in the US from a parts kit, but it's still possible to screw it up, especially if done by individuals with limited technical knowledge.
I has ebonics but I not has opinions on AK. It double tap and triple tap for real?
I mean the AK fires in bust of 2 or more rounds every time I pull the trigger. It real fun but not allow at the range on Plant Road (Cryptsharp Range I believe). To fix it, I have to file the trigger sear and replace trigger spring and recoil spring.
1. Who knows what AK they got, how old it was, and maybe it was some cobbled together piece of crap they swiped off the battlefield and smuggled into France. Probably not a new Arsenal or Vepr.
2. Could have been just out of ammo. No bolt hold open, adrenaline manic behavior, may have just had an empty chamber, pulled the trigger, got a click, and tried to work the charging handle in a panic.
3. Bad ammo. You guys have seen the video of the guys loading the ammo in the shack in the middle east, right? OR, they were using Remington Golden bullets.
4. Or the lady had someone watching over her?
AKs can fail just like any gun. Maybe they used cheap Korean mags?!
I do love the AK's beefy hammer, as opposed to non-mil spec AR hammers.
I don't believe that the Daesh's AK had a failure {due to malfunction} to fire outside that Paris restaurant {although it could have happened}. He possibly ran out of ammo, or decided not to shoot them --- Though I've jammed two of my AK's twice, by pulling the charging handle half-assed back, too see if I had a live round in the chamber --- Instead of ejecting the live round out of the ejection port, the live round ejected into the lower half of the receiver and lodged in the trigger group; thusly jamming the trigger --- Field stripping is the only remedy, for that type of jam.
My AK's are outfitted with the Tapco trigger group...that does have a tendency to bumpfire, unless the trigger is pressed all the way back, as opposed to leaving my trigger finger resting on the trigger; just after the sear breaks.