The_Sidewinder
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I would like to see pics of Oman army using INSAS. Nepal used INSAS and they lost the civil war to maoists. Nepal was very vocal in their criticism of the INSAS rifle and called it junk. Bhutan is less of a country and more of a informal Indian state. They don't have the finance or the option of buying Tavors.
INSAS Rifles does not have issues, it has major issues. I don't know what your "friends in the army" told you but the scariest sound a soldier can hear in the battlefield is an empty click after pressing the trigger. It becomes even more scarier when the soldier realises his magazine is full but his gun won't fire. Unless you are a soldier in a battlefield whose gun got broken while the enemy keeps pumping bullets in your direction you will not understand why the INSAS is a piece of sh1t.
What exactly was the INSAS designed for, march-past parades?
Every crack unit in the army refuses the INSAS. From the special forces to the ghatak units to counter insurgency jawans. And yes, ghataks and special forces use 5.56 mm rounds as well. So why is INSAS being a 5.56 mm caliber rifle unsuitable for special ops? Because "it was never designed for it".
Whoever gave that retarded logic for the 5.56 mm round was joking and the other person took it seriously.
Armies opted for the 5.56 rounds because of simple reasons.
1. Combat occurred at ranges of 500 meters and less in modern warfare. A heavy caliber long-range bullet was unnecessary.
2. Rifles firing the 7.62x51 mm are too heavy, long and are an inconvenience for the infantry grunt.
3. It is difficult to control 7.62x51mm at full auto, the recoil is too heavy. A soldier can constantly keep shooting 5.56 mm rounds all day, but it is impossible to do so for a 7.62 round even in semi-auto.
4. Bullets are heavy, in fact very heavy. 10 kg of 7.62x51mm rounds may contain 90 bullets. 10 kg of 5.56x45 mm rounds will likely contain 200 bullets. 5.56mm caliber allows the infantry soldier to carry more rounds to the battlefield.
When you fire at the enemy you don't aim for his hand, leg or to injure him. Nobody does that. Every soldier will aim to kill the enemy else the enemy will kill you. And if injuring the enemy is the only goal then the same can be achieved with 7.62 mm rounds.
Whoever gave you the logic that 5.56 mm round is good because it injures the enemy rather than kill them never served in any armed force and is a troll.
About the first part,
Insas rifle with oman army
By the way, about the injury part, it was not me who proposed the Idea. It was DRDO & Indian army top brass who propossed it during developmental phase. Seems like except from declaring me a troll try to go through previous threads where these issues has been discussed till death.
About modern combat ranges within 500metres care to explain how the hell a soldier is supposed to shoot down his enemy at 50-100 metres at full auti mode. Have you fired a weapon yourself at such ranges. Due to the muzzle & thrust gun just swivles away from the target. But full auto mode does help in surpracing enemy fire by its intensity, also helpfull in laying down covering fire.
One thing more, INSAS has served even in siachen what does that tells you about reliability. About comparing with other imported guns, those countries has been developing guns since centuries. Do you know even M16 failed miserably during viatnam war where it used to jammed by mud, plastic mags used to break all the time. But that doesnt made it a bad weapon. Now its further developped cousin M4a1 is one of the best in the wrold.
IA needed something indegenious to replace FN-FAL, & it got INSAS which might not be best in the world but did its job well. We were not a superbly developped economy back in 1990s who can spend loads of cash importing expensive foreign guns for 1.2 million strong army. Period.
" Essentially. Many European countries continued to use 7.62 ammunition long after the US switched over. As a consequence most of the better assault rifles and assault pistols of the last 50 years have been Belgian and German, not American. There are other things, too, though. One can
carry much more 5.56 ammo because its lighter. But that reduced weight also means reduced lethality, and the bullet's greater speed doesn't come close to matching the hitting power of 7.62 bullets. Supposedly (meaning, while speaking to a Marine), the size of the bullet doesn't matter since a bullet to the head is a bullet to the
head...but who has time to do that outside of a shooting range? Most engagements happen <300 yards, and at that range what you
depend on is increased lethality, not accuracy. Also, supposedly, the 5.56 bullet is "more likely to bounce around inside the body, which does more damage." Except that they aren't proven to do so any more than a larger bullet will. They are, however, more likely to fragment upon entry, which leaves a much wider wound, but is less likely to cause
death unless taken to the gut. Which brings me to the third argument, which is that by
wounding rather than killing more strain is put on the enemy's force overall, as his support units and medics struggle to treat
and deal with wounded soldiers. A decent argument, but not particularly useful to a grunt with a dozen enemies bearing down on
him, who may not be entirely motivated to stop their assault just because of a single bullet. And you generally must hit each
soldier several times before you can stop him. Soldiers in Iraq, for example, have encountered insurgents so doped up that
they are completely unfazed by anything less than having a magazine emptied into them.
That's not exactly efficient, and not exactly comforting to the man holding the gun.
So in short, I think that small caliber ammunition is a waste of time and money, and does more harm than good."
Why did NATO adopt the 5.56 when it's hitting power was worse than the 7.62 ? [Archive] - Civilization Fanatics' Forums
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