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  1. 1
    Name: Kevin Borrup on Jan 9, 2013
    Comments:
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  2. 2
    Name: Anonymous on Jan 11, 2013
    Comments: problems. Its occasion are so fantastic in addition to working fashion so fast. I think perhaps it is help almost everyone. Thanks. sacs lancel http://saclancel.weebly.com
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  3. 3
    Name: Eric on Jan 19, 2013
    Comments: @ docjim505:Honestly, given the time peroid when it was designed (between 1911 and 1918), I would give #2 more of an edge than #1. Bolt actions were fairly well established at that point.I can see a couple of potential flaws, though. The way the front and rear of the rifle are connected only by the bolt and chamber creates a structural weak point compared to a more conventional bolt action, which would be a significant negative in a combat weapon. Another is that the hole for the magazine indicator would allow dirt and debris into that mechanism, so it would have to be designed in such a way that if the indicator plunger jammed it wouldn't jam up the feed mechanism as well.I'm sure there are others, but those two are the first ones that popped into my head. Neither is unfixable, though the first one would probably require a significant re-design.
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  4. 4
    Name: Qgmonhhh on Jan 20, 2013
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  5. 5
    Name: Levonarmrhz on Jan 20, 2013
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    Name: Lgexpwkclrk on Jan 20, 2013
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  7. 7
    Name: Cijiztilg on Jan 21, 2013
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  8. 8
    Name: Dae on Jan 21, 2013
    Comments: Kristopher,"That magazine cut-off was added to make them happy. No one could pbilsosy need to shoot faster than a trapdoor .45-70, after all. That's just wasting ammo."When we adopted the '03, we'd been using the magazine-fed Krag for years. Of course, it was also equipped with a cutoff. So were the M1886 Lebel and the Mk.III Lee-Enfield. Mag cutoffs, with the magazine held in reserve for 'final protective fire', were popular among countries who had experience of relatively small detachments of troops fighting mobs of howling savages at the ends of long and tenuous supply lines. Incidentally, the British Webley Self-Loading Mk I autopistol can be operated as a single-shot with the magazine held in reserve...)
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