emraphoto
Veteran
I hear that once ray guns are a consumer item, they will stop making bullets.
i love this place sometimes
I hear that once ray guns are a consumer item, they will stop making bullets.
I hear that once ray guns are a consumer item, they will stop making bullets.
30-06 was was WW-I and 308 was in use for Korea but I'm not sure when the switch took place. 'Nam was 5.56mm (.223 caliber) on "our" side while North Vietnam used AK-74's which also used 5.56mm bullets, but a different cartridge. Of course all the older weapons from both sides were sold or given to poorer countries. There's an unbelievable number of surplused weapons and ammo out there, and nobody really knows where it all is or how much of it there still is. And then there are millions of rounds of 9mm pistol and submachine gun ammo, along with 9mm pistols, plus the 45 cal. pistols and ammo...
30-06 was was WW-I and 308 was in use for Korea but I'm not sure when the switch took place. 'Nam was 5.56mm (.223 caliber) on "our" side while North Vietnam used AK-74's which also used 5.56mm bullets, but a different cartridge. Of course all the older weapons from both sides were sold or given to poorer countries. There's an unbelievable number of surplused weapons and ammo out there, and nobody really knows where it all is or how much of it there still is. And then there are millions of rounds of 9mm pistol and submachine gun ammo, along with 9mm pistols, plus the 45 cal. pistols and ammo...
Chris, the lack of bullets isn't a problem. It's trying to get a carry permit for concealed rays.
When they outlaw ray guns, only outlaws will have ray guns.
They can have my ray gun when they pry it from my cold dead levitation disks.
We may have the right to bear arms, but sadly, the right to be borne by levitation disks is not enshrined in the constitution.
I don't know why I keep thinking of Judge Dredd here. 😉
North Vietnam used the AK-47, which fired the larger 7.62x39mm round, similar in nature to the .308. The first US troops into Vietnam carried the M-14, and some even carried the M-1 (and fully-automatic M-2 variant) carbine. Both were later replaced with the M-16.
I have benefited greatly from the legal importation of non-automatic weapons from that era. My personal favorite is the CZ-52 pistol in 7.62x25mm. Quite the barn-burner.