Archive for December, 2009


More on the SWAT / Lego gun incident

I am late in blogging it but in case you missed it ... Last week Jeremy Bell, a Toronto resident, was arrested by SWAT officers when someone in the neighboring apartment saw him handling a gun built out of Lego bricks. I found his twitter page where he tweeted the experience ...

Hilarious! 12 cops and a chopper! I could imagine this response in a city where handguns are illegal, but unless I am mistaken handguns are legal in Toronto.

leog gun 1 tfb More on the SWAT / Lego gun incident photo
Brickgun's Glock

He was building the gun from a kit sold by a company called Brickgun. In a recent tweet they said that they are overwhelmed by the orders that have been pouring in since the incident.

Thanks for Chris and Jon for sending me the links.

Posted by Steve on Dec 8th 2009 | Filed in News | Comments (18)

More confirmation on Gen-4 Glock features

SaysUncle has tapped into a well placed source and has independently confirmed many of the rumored next-gen Glock features and also noted that there will be internal differences.

One things Uncle said got me thinking ...

It will have a different frame texture, which I have heard from others is somewhere between the standard Glock frame and the Glock Rough Textured Frame.

Could this new texture be the RTF3 texture which I blogged about earlier this year?

(Hat Tip: Blue Gun Blog)

I have also heard from a trustworthy source (I cannot reveal the source) that the Gen-4 G17 and G22 models will be initially offered, with the 19 and 23 compact models following shortly after. I also heard that Glock is planning on introducing a model chambered in .22 Long Rifle, although this is not expected for a while yet.

Posted by Steve on Dec 5th 2009 | Filed in handguns, News | Comments (17)

A note on the blog comments. Please read.

Over the past few weeks there has been more than a little nastiness in the comments.

The Firearm Blog attracts people from vastly different cultures, races, religions, political views and countries. From Azerbaijan to Nigeria to Portugal and to the West Indies, the readers here span the globe. Without the variety of readership, The Firearm Blog would be less interesting place.

Personally, I have lived in different places around the round and among many cultures, of which few I have been able to truely understand . What needs to be the focus is that we are all passionate about firearms and share the belief that firearm ownership should be a right recognized universally.

Let us get beyond the petty arguments, difference and opinions and instead focus on the marvels of engineering that are firearms.

For the remainder of the year I will be extra vignlant in moderation the comments, earing on the side of caution. I suggest everyone takes a minute to read the comment policy (the text above the comment form).

Remember "Firearms, not politics".

That is all. Have a great weekend.

Posted by Steve on Dec 5th 2009 | Filed in misc | Comments (0)

Update on the IAR competition

A couple of days ago I blogged about H&K winning the USMC's IAR competition. There has been much confusion regarding the IAR competition since then.

Dan Lamothe, who broke the news, updated his The Marine Times article and added that it now appears that the H&K IAR has not officially won but is the frontrunner ...

With several months of testing ahead, the decision isn’t considered final, but it makes the H&K model the clear front-runner in the competition.

...

The Corps will now put H&K IAR through five months of testing beginning in January and taking place in locations ranging from Panama to the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center and Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center in California, Eby said. The Corps has ordered 24 H&K IARs for testing, said Capt. Geraldine Care

Rob Curtis who blogs at GearScout (also part of the Military Times) wrote that the DoD appear to done a downselect, rather than awarding H&K an outright win ...

From what we understand, this is actually a downselect to just one system as opposed to a contract win

Dan send me an email regarding my previous comments on the supposed weight of the H&K IAR, which is almost identical to the standard HK416 carbine. He sent me the spec document which H&K provided him with. It does indeed list the weight as just 7.9 lbs!

hk iar 1 tfb Update on the IAR competition photo

Daniel E. Watters wrote that he suspects that the Marine command may have been framing the IAR as a partial M249 replacement but in reality they may have just wanted a piston operated full-auto carbine. By procuring what is sold as a new class of weapon they could sidestep the inter-service politics and bureaucracy ...

The weird thing is that the HK416 IAR is roughly the same weight as the M16A4, if not lighter when the latter is fitted with the M5 ARS. I'm certain that someone in Congress will ultimately ask what the HK416 can do that their issue M16A4 retrofitted with full-auto trigger groups can't.

Like others have mentioned, I can't help but wonder if the USMC didn't game the IAR requirements so that a basic carbine could win instead of a HBAR. The idea would be to gradually increase the number of IAR issued so that they could later justify standardizing on it to replace not just the infantry squad's M249, but their M16A4 and M4 as well. By framing it as a service-specific supplement to their M249, they skirted the need to argue with the other service branches over a set of joint requirements.

As for winning the contract, everyone needs to remember that Colt, FN, and HK were already awarded Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity contracts for their IAR last year. An IDIQ contract guarantees the awardee that they will have a specific minimum of items ordered, with the possibility of additional orders up to a specific maximum. There is no guarantee that more than the stated minimum will ever be ordered. I've long suspected that contracting officers have been purposefully making multiple awards of IDIQ contracts prior to a final downselect in order to head off potential award protests by the disgruntled losers. It is my understanding that by accepting their IDIQ award, the contractor only has grounds to protest if the guaranteed minimum has not ordered before the end of the contract. They cannot protest that they did not receive additional orders in excess of the guaranteed minimum.

Make of all this information as you will. All I know is that DoD procurement was never designed to be understood by a mere mortal such as myself!

Posted by Steve on Dec 5th 2009 | Filed in military, News, rifles | Comments (94)

Hotchkiss Model 1922 LMG found in Afghanistan

CombatDriver writes at HighRoad.us ...

I discovered this light machine gun last month at a SF team house here in Afghanistan. Its an old post WWI French Mdle 1922 light machine gun in 7.92mm Mauser. There were two models one that fed from a box magazine on top and this one that used stripper fed clips (15,24 &30 rd cap). The French made them is several calibers, including 6.5mm Mannlicher-Schoenauer (Greek), 7x57 Mauser (Spain), 7.7x56R (.303, UK) and 7.92x57 Mauser (Czechosolvakia). This one is missing the charging hande, bipod and muzzle brake.

Cleaning rod has been jammed into the bolt carrier and used as improvised charging handle.

Posted by Steve on Dec 5th 2009 | Filed in machine guns | Comments (10)

H&K / Umarex MP5 A5 and MP5SD .22 Tactical Rimfire

Umarex is also manufacturing .22 LR carbines patterned on the famous MP5 and MP5SD. These carbines features ...

  • Metal revievers.
  • Compensators
  • NAVY style pistol grip.
  • Retractable stocks.
  • H&K style diopter iron sights. Adjustable for elevation or windage.

MP5 A5

MP5SD

The A5 model features a standard MP5 forend and a faux suppressor. The MP5SD foreend is modeled on the original SD forend although the suppressor is also just for the look and is non-funcationing. Standard fixed stocks will be able for purchase.

Both these guns will be able to be purchased with either a 10 round or 25 round magazine.

Hat Tip: On Point Supply

Posted by Steve on Dec 5th 2009 | Filed in machine guns, rifles, rimfire | Comments (17)

H&K / Umarex HK416 D .22 Tactical Rimfire

Umarex is manufacturing this .22 LR rifle patterned on the HK4161 . It features ...

  • Metal receivers.
  • Functional dust cover.
  • Full length picatinny rail.
  • Adjustable stock.
  • H&K style diopter iron sights. Adjustable for elevation or windage.
  • 16" barrel.
  • Pistol grip with compartment (for spare batteries, tools, etc.)

The rifle will be sold with either a 10 or 20 round magazine but 30 round mags will be available for purchase.

picture 5 tfb H&K / Umarex HK416 D .22 Tactical Rimfire  photo

The previous Umarex .22 rifle, the Colt M4, had some serious problems. Justin Biddle, Umarex's Marketing Manager, assured me that they have been made changes to the Umarex action and sorted out the issues experienced by the M4 owners.

Hat Tip: On Point Supply


  1. Note that it is just patterned after the HK416. It is not a "real" Hk416 chambered in .22 and is not an AR-15. 

Posted by Steve on Dec 5th 2009 | Filed in rifles, rimfire | Comments (28)

More posts later today

One thing after another come up and I have not been able to blog for this morning. Check back in the afternoon when I should have some very interesting blog posts online.

Posted by Steve on Dec 5th 2009 | Filed in misc | Comments (0)

A “Working” Wooden Glock 19

wood glock 1 tfb A Working Wooden Glock 19 photo

Magazine drops via a working magazine release, trigger moves and resets via a spring, slide cycles, sights are “dotted”, grip is profiled, etc.

Trigger does move, and returns, on a spring.

I love these working wooden guns. The craftsmanship is amazing. More photos of it at Everyday, No Day Off

Posted by Steve on Dec 4th 2009 | Filed in handguns | Comments (21)

H&K wins USMC IAR competition [Big News!]

After a year of speculation and commentary from pundits, myself included, the Marine Times reports that the H&K has won the competition and that their entry will enter production next year ...

The Marine Corps has selected the infantry automatic rifle made by Heckler & Koch as the weapon that will replace the M249 Squad Automatic Weapon in infantry fire teams, a senior service official told Marine Corps Times on Wednesday.

The H&K IAR “was truly the best in the class on multiple levels and will finally allow the billet of automatic rifleman to be performed as intended without the disruption of the squad integrity that the M249 created,” Chief Warrant Officer 5 Jeffrey Eby, the Corps’ senior gunner, said in an e-mail.

Despite what is said in the above quotation, I do not think that the SAW is being replaced outright. The Marine Times has at times reported that the SAW would be replaced with the IAR, and at other times reported that it would augment the IAR, not replace it ...

The plan is to buy 4,100 IARs and reduce the number of SAWs in the Corps from 10,000 to 8,000, Cantwell said.

“We are still going to maintain SAWs in the company,” he said. “Only 2,000 SAWs will be replaced. The reminder will be kept as an organizational weapon for when commanders need them.”

The H&K entry was a modified version of their HK416 piston-operated AR-15 rifle. Unlike the Colt and FN entries, it is said to fire only from a closed bolt. Given the lack of an open-bolt fire mode I had presumed it was the least likely choice for an automatic rifle.

Presumably it is fitted with a heavy barrel, like H&K's previous, and commercially unsuccessful, attempt at the automatic rifle: the MG36. The Marine Corps has been reporting the weight of the 16.5" barreled H&K IAR as being 7.9 lbs. This is not possible as a standard 16.5" barreled Hk416 weights in at 7.84 lbs. I also think that the photo of the H&K IAR shown by the Military Times is that of a standard HK416.

HK416 standard rifle (not IAR)

I have contacted H&K to see if they are willing to publicly acknowledge if they have won. If they do, I will endeavor to get the specs of the new weapon.

UPDATE: The Marines Times has an updated article here.

Many thanks to Mark and Matt for sending me the news.

Posted by Steve on Dec 3rd 2009 | Filed in machine guns, military, News, rifles | Comments (71)