- Joined
- Jun 3, 2021
That would be fine if there wasn't 40 years between 9x39 being developed as well as 50 years for the 5.45 round. Usually when something with significant advances is developed you cycle the old thing out for the new thing. 40/50 years is long enough to sell off old stocks as the US did when they deleted the M14 from mainline service.9x39 is a special purpose round and the guns made to use it are special purpose guns issued exclusively to special purpose units. Why would Russia melt down or scrap the literal millions of AKM family rifles it has, destroy the billions of 7.62x39 rounds it has, and then spend however much money making new 9x39 pattern rifles and stocking armories with them?
Both the AKS-74 and AK-74M are side folders.Uhhhh OK? Yeah sidefolder stocks have a different rear trunnion than fixed stocks. If this is the best example you have then this shit is weaksauce brother, nobody is in the field scrounging around for a new rear trunnion for their rifle.
There's a lot of images of squads of non SOF types using both variants. It's an issue that is easily preventable with standardization.You're misrepresenting the situation with regards to AKMs and AK74's and playing word games. The AK74 is the "standard issue rifle". The AKM is not. It's used when it is needed or when it's given to units that are not part of the regular Army. The sorts of guys that also don't wear digiflora camo.
He also used an image that doesn't have Russian inert/training rounds, omitted shotgun shells (Not sure if those off the wall KS-23 shells are still in use) as well as 9x19, which is in Russian use.1/3 of the ammo in that list isn't used anymore.
I always hate how inconsistent this shit is. There's 3 flavors of 54R there for some reason, but only 1 of every other type. If you're going to show the full spectrum of ammo types show each variety of each caliber, like the US picture does (although it doesn't show everything either).
Neither picture is very good honestly.