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The M14 Battle Rifle (Paperback)
Loot Price: R456
Discovery Miles 4 560
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The M14 Battle Rifle (Paperback)
Series: Weapon
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Loot Price R456
Discovery Miles 4 560
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Featuring specially commissioned full-color artwork and archive and
close-up photographs, this engaging study tells the story of the
M14, the long-lived battle rifle that remains in front-line service
with US forces more than 50 years after its first adoption.
The 7.6251mm M14 select-fire automatic rifle was the primary US
service rifle for only a decade from 1957 before being supplanted
by the 5.5645mm M16, yet many familiar with the M14 consider it the
best rifle ever to see US service. Based on the well-proven M1
Garand rifle, the M14 addressed the perceived "deficiencies" of the
Garand based on the latter's service in World War II and Korea. The
M14 incorporated a detachable box magazine and select-fire
capability, and used a shortened version of the .30-06 cartridge -
the 7.6251mm NATO round - better suited to a "battle rifle."
Though primarily designed for a war in Europe, where it would take
its place alongside the other 7.6251mm battle rifles (FAL, G3,
etc.) in the hands of NATO allies, probably the first combat use of
the M14 was with the 82nd Airborne Division in the Dominican
Republic in 1965-66. The M14 also saw action during the early days
of the escalating US involvement in the Vietnam War, though it
proved rather too heavy and lengthy for jungle usage and was
supplanted in that theater by the M16 in 1966-67. Even so, some
Army engineer units continued to use the M14 as did US Marines, who
often retained one or two in each squad. Even after the adoption of
the M16, US troops in Europe retained the M14 until 1970 for
compatibility with other NATO armies.
Although the M14 was intended to replace four weapons, namely the
.30-06 M1 Garand, the .30 M1 Carbine, the .45 M3 submachine gun
(SMG), and - in its M15 and M14A1 models - the .30-06 Browning
Automatic Rifle (BAR), this proved to be an overly optimistic goal.
The new weapon was deemed virtually uncontrollable on
full-automatic in the SMG role, but its 7.6251mm round proved too
light for the BAR's squad automatic weapon role.
Even so, the M14 has remained a Phoenix among US infantry weapons,
rising again and again when a more powerful battle rifle has been
needed. Its accuracy and reliability led to its modification and
adoption in 1975 as a semi-automatic sniping weapon - the M21 -
which remained the Army's primary sniper rifle until 1988, although
seeing widespread service in Iraq well after that date. Since 2001
the M14 has seen a resurgence as a Designated Marksman Rifle, being
employed by all branches of the US military, especially in
Afghanistan where the open terrain makes longer-range engagements
common. It has remained a viable limited-use US infantry weapon for
over five decades, and appears likely to see action wherever US
forces require a longer-range, accurate battle rifle for some years
to come.
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