Why you're wrong about M16 and AR-15 nomenclature, with firearms expert Jonathan Ferguson

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Royal Armouries

Royal Armouries

Күн бұрын

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@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
I should clarify further regarding the designation 'M16' (no E1 or A1). When I said the M16A1 (and later XM16E1) was the 'fixed version of the M16' I was thinking of the US Army rifles and using 'M16' as the generic base designator. However, as I then noted, 'M16' specifically refers to the USAF's equivalent of the XM16E1/M16A1, so we should avoid using 'M16' generically. We already have a generic term for the type - AR-15 ;) To be extra clear: AR-15 - generic type M16 - USAF designation for the Colt AR-15 Model 602 and 604 XM16E1/M16A1 - US Army designation for the Colt AR-15 Model 603
@donwyoming1936
@donwyoming1936 23 күн бұрын
In my entire time in the USAF, which includes the upgrade of the 604s to M16A2 standard & adoption of the M4, I NEVER saw an A1 upper receiver on our guns. Not even on the GAU-5s I carried. By the mid 90s, A1 bolt carriers were in about 50% of our rifles. There were still plenty of 3 prong flash hiders, rubber butt pads, and chrome plated carriers still in use when the 604s were upgraded.
@RVered
@RVered 23 күн бұрын
Didn't you get them backward? According to Wikipedia, the XM16E1 (as the XM suggests) was an experimental model that, indeed, only added the forward assist. However, the A1 had many more changes, such as chrome-lined barrels, improved flash hiders, updated buffer assemblies, narrower gas ports, etc.
@TheSundayShooter
@TheSundayShooter 23 күн бұрын
@@RVered Those were all updates to the XM16E1 (early Colt 603) before it was adopted as the M16A1 (late Colt 603)
@classified9583
@classified9583 23 күн бұрын
I would listen to a 3 hour TED talk from jonathan about why the term assault rifle is increasingly useless and other firearm nomenclature discussions
@igorpuschner786
@igorpuschner786 23 күн бұрын
Isn't it basically the same as the HK416, and then the Bundeswehr adopts them as G95 or G38? The AR-15 is just the Model designation, the M16 is the Military designation?!
@franklynotyourbussiness9401
@franklynotyourbussiness9401 23 күн бұрын
The closeup on the stock when Jonathan says "but" is prime british humour
@JoshuaC923
@JoshuaC923 23 күн бұрын
Insert minions laughing at Butt gif
@SaturnianDragon
@SaturnianDragon 23 күн бұрын
timestamp?
@Bunnywithagun
@Bunnywithagun 23 күн бұрын
@@SaturnianDragon 6:56
@ShadowWulfGaming
@ShadowWulfGaming 23 күн бұрын
that got a good chuckle out of me
@fragchef477
@fragchef477 23 күн бұрын
I was instantly reminded of UpIsNotJump by that joke, if anyone has also seen his content.
@mog398
@mog398 23 күн бұрын
It must be difficult to argue with someone on Twitter, what with the character limit and the fact that you're legally required to start each reply with "Hi, I'm Jonathan Ferguson, Keeper of Firearms and Artillery at the Royal Armouries museum in the UK"
@peterclarke7240
@peterclarke7240 23 күн бұрын
And that's just his forename. His surname is "Which houses a collection of thousands of iconic weapons from throughout the ages."
@clumsygarage1578
@clumsygarage1578 23 күн бұрын
@@peterclarke7240from throughout *history*, pretty sure Mr Ferguson who houses a collection of thousands of iconic weapons from throughout the ages is his father’s name.
@peterclarke7240
@peterclarke7240 23 күн бұрын
@@clumsygarage1578 You're quite right, I stand corrected. I hear their family require a custom-built letterbox in order to accommodate all the extra-large envelopes they get sent.
@pghgb5572
@pghgb5572 22 күн бұрын
Plus they are convinced that their ignorance trumps Jonathan’s knowledge……
@silverjohn6037
@silverjohn6037 22 күн бұрын
@@clumsygarage1578 That is the popular misconception but it's one of those British double names. "Which houses a collection" is from his mothers side and "thousands of iconic weapons from throughout history." is from his father's side.
@Temujin1206
@Temujin1206 23 күн бұрын
Okay whoever was responsible for that little but/butt visual gag, your work is appreciated!!
@RoyalArmouries
@RoyalArmouries 23 күн бұрын
Editor here, it was actually Jonathan's idea... not that I didn't immediately approve ;)
@Getpojke
@Getpojke 23 күн бұрын
What a flex in an online/Twitter war. Okay I'll prove the point by making a video, in the museum where I'm the "Keeper of Firearms" in-front of racks of the weapons that will prove my point. Well done sir! I salute you. 😆"Talk softly & carry a big rack of period weapons"
@jonathanbardunias1889
@jonathanbardunias1889 19 күн бұрын
OK, you’re right, but you have to remember that all the people making the opposing argument are referring to the civilian variant of the AR-15 that is legally available in the United States of America. There is a big disconnect between the average American and a historian. They are kinda right bc select fire AR-15 rifles haven’t been available to the American public since 1986
@polerin
@polerin 11 күн бұрын
​@@jonathanbardunias1889to be fair that is a distinction without a difference in the usual context the argument comes up in, which is usually an attempt to distinguish the civilian weapon as a non-combat weapon.
@Ibnfunk
@Ibnfunk 7 күн бұрын
​@jonathanbardunias1889 they're only kind of right if they specify select fire. The civilian variants sold today are still AR15s. If they say AR15s aren't available, they're not kind of right, they're kind of wrong. Which in most contexts wouldn't be a big deal since it's just semantics. But is a bit self defeating when the usual backdrop to these arguments are complaints that someone else is getting the terminology wrong.
@defnotthekgb8362
@defnotthekgb8362 6 күн бұрын
@@jonathanbardunias1889 i mean they arent "kind of right", that's like claiming the M14M isnt an M14 because it is not select fire(and was made for the civilian market), it would just still be wrong. and if the point of the argument is to say they aren't military weapons, its still just wrong because both semi-only AR-15s(specifically CAR-15 by colt), and the M14M were adopted into active service.
@Paladin1873
@Paladin1873 23 күн бұрын
“Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience.” - Mark Twain
@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
This is *normally* my MO but I thought this one worth having a brief skirmish over and then providing some info for those who don't know or just assumed it was the case without looking into it. It's never about convincing the entrenched, it's for the benefit of the onlookers.
@Chris_Garman
@Chris_Garman 23 күн бұрын
"Always confront stupid. To let it flourish further degenerates humanity." - Chris Garman
@Paladin1873
@Paladin1873 23 күн бұрын
@@jonathanferguson1211 While conducting an inspection visit to the USAF Gunsmith Shop at Lackland AFB (Medina Annex) in the 1980s I examined several early model M-16s (the USAF received the first major batch around 1963). The rifles had recently been refurbished by the shop and looked new, but what caught my eye was the marking on one of the receivers. I regret I did not have a camera with me so I could maintain a permanent record and proof of what was handed to me. Unfortunately, the years have clouded my memory a bit, but I am certain it was marked either XM-16 or AR-15, and yes, it was select fire.
@yvonvoyer5812
@yvonvoyer5812 23 күн бұрын
Wisdom has been chasing you for so very long, but you have always been faster
@MayaPosch
@MayaPosch 23 күн бұрын
@@jonathanferguson1211 Since it resulted in this video and it cleared up this point of confusion for me, I think you may say that your gambit has succeeded :)
@ferdinand12390
@ferdinand12390 23 күн бұрын
Jonathan is the type of bloke that goes to the back of the warehouse of the Royal Armouries to get a rifle to prove a point, i respect that since i would do the same
@Maulzy23
@Maulzy23 23 күн бұрын
'A' rifle? He goes and gets about 14 variants of the rifle to prove a point. Which is so cool.
@andrewallason4530
@andrewallason4530 23 күн бұрын
And gets rifles which are both supporting and opposing his argument. He is not biased, but acts with integrity, and doesn’t actually ridicule the opposing party, because there is usually some possible kernel of truth in their argument.
@brucecook502
@brucecook502 21 күн бұрын
And here in the US we only have to go as far as our closets and gun cabinets to pull these weapons out to make a video LOL
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine 23 күн бұрын
Oh my, that original 601 with the green painted furniture, and it's in _absolutely mint_ condition, it's breathtaking.
@tomliemohn624
@tomliemohn624 23 күн бұрын
Agreed! I have only ever seen one other in person. That one the museum has is spotless!
@rogerwennstrom6677
@rogerwennstrom6677 21 күн бұрын
Fully agree! Oh man, that thing must've looked like something straight out of a sci-fi movie in the late 50's! Christ, compare the design of that rifle with for example a '59 Cadillac... The AR15 was literally several decades ahead of its time. (in design, materials and functionality)
@rollinbaker9469
@rollinbaker9469 16 күн бұрын
Did you SEE that serial #?!? 266!
@TheFlutecart
@TheFlutecart 15 күн бұрын
I know, my eyes bugged out. Paused the video for a better look. Wow. Pristine. There it is, the Holy Grail of AR-15's. he should have edited in some angelic music when he grabbed it.
@CMINCOGNITO
@CMINCOGNITO 6 күн бұрын
stunning, and so vastly ahead of its time nearly 70 years later and they still hold their own as a modern design
@reinvanitaz4834
@reinvanitaz4834 23 күн бұрын
Now we’re talking, a Weekly Firearms History Class with one & only, Mr. Jonathan Ferguson, keep up the good work👍
@RoyalArmouries
@RoyalArmouries 23 күн бұрын
Class is in session 👨‍🏫
@BackPackBadger
@BackPackBadger 23 күн бұрын
AR-15 is the thing, M16 is the US military designation
@Thicc_Boyo
@Thicc_Boyo 23 күн бұрын
It's a pretty basic lesson on supersets and subsets. AR-15 is the superset. M-16's, M4's, etcetera are subsets of AR-15.
@atomicsmith
@atomicsmith 23 күн бұрын
AR-15 is the design, pattern or platform. M16 is the model.
@iskenuz
@iskenuz 23 күн бұрын
@@atomicsmith To be clear to people about to argue with this guy, he is referring to the US Army's M designation system. From a purely technical perspective, the M4, M16, MK18 CQB, MK 12 SPR, the SDMR, the Recce, they're all AR-15s.
@Hiddenus1
@Hiddenus1 23 күн бұрын
@@iskenuz In short. All M16s are AR-15s, but not all AR-15s are M16s. Like squares and rectangles.
@TheRealMinotaur667
@TheRealMinotaur667 23 күн бұрын
​​@@iskenuz All those models are AR15's, but not all AR-15's are those models. Note: I am agreeing. Remember people, the M designation is just what the US military uses to define a military spec of a weapon. Both the M4 and M16 and all their A's are all AR-15's. A good example of this is what the US military call the M1014, which is actually a Benelli M4 shotgun. Both are the same platform. But all M1014's are the same spec, while not all Benelli M4's are the same spec.(In the case of Benelli, they also use an M naming nomenclature, but it is entirely seperate from the US system. Another example here is the M14, which came before the M16. Both are drastically different platforms, but the nomenclature is the same because that's what the US military uses. You can absolutely acquire a Springfield Armory M1A and even an M14, but rest assured that they are the same platform. An M1A can be made to fire automatic, but that doesn't make it an M14.
@Appalachia_Ape
@Appalachia_Ape 23 күн бұрын
Fuckin finally dude. The irony of a brit having to make a dedicated video to explain this is not lost on me either. Nobody online seems to understand that theyre all variants of the AR-15 platform. Every M16, M4, mk12, mk18, car15 IS an AR-15 but not every AR-15 is an M16, M4, mk12, mk18, car15.
@armorers_wrench
@armorers_wrench 23 күн бұрын
Most gun guys get this. It is not a difficult concept to grasp. The people who engage in these arguments do not own guns anyway. The person was probably making a political argument that the AR15 isn't used by the military blah blah blah.
@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
Two Brits, in fact :D Bloke on the Range was doing sterling service before I got involved.
@Chris_Garman
@Chris_Garman 23 күн бұрын
AR-18s are not AR-15s btw.
@Appalachia_Ape
@Appalachia_Ape 23 күн бұрын
@@Chris_Garman never said they were. I said the mk18. Maybe read before you try to be snarky and make yourself look dumb in the process.
@Extremely_Nigh
@Extremely_Nigh 22 күн бұрын
I had a dude arguing with me years ago that the 'AR-15' was semi-auto only civilian 'modern sporting rifle' so I showed him a picture of a M16A1 rollmarked "Colt AR-15 Property of U.S. Government M16A1" to make your point and he just ignored it. 😄 To one side the AR-15 is a 'assault weapon', to the other it's a semi auto 'MSR'...both will ignore the facts. Oh well
@Meton2526
@Meton2526 23 күн бұрын
Didn't hear it called out, but also note that the AR in AR-15 does NOT stand for "Armalite Rifle", it just stands for Armalite. There were many other AR-## firearms, some of which are shotguns, some of which are pistols.
@Pzkpfw18
@Pzkpfw18 23 күн бұрын
According to the media is stands for “Assault Rifle” 💩
@wilsonj4705
@wilsonj4705 23 күн бұрын
Yep, AR-9 & AR-17 were shotguns. Had an AR--24 which was a 9mm handgun
@688attacksub8
@688attacksub8 23 күн бұрын
​@@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballzprove it
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz 23 күн бұрын
@@688attacksub8 do your research for you, got it. ArmaLite (thats how ArmaLite writes it in their own material. Kinda strange to turn ArmaLite into ARmaLite....) themselves state in their "about": "As a pioneering force in the firearms industry, ArmaLite is best known for the development of the “AR” or “ArmaLite Rifle” platform, and the original AR-10® and AR-15 models that not only redefined modern firearms, but set a standard for ArmaLite’s commitment to producing innovative, reliable, and versatile firearms for home defense, military, special forces, law enforcement, and enthusiasts alike."
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 23 күн бұрын
@@688attacksub8 Some folk are just ignorant, some are just stupid. If you come into this argument, which probably pre-dates porn on the Web ffs, you are a prat at the least.
@Mjdeben
@Mjdeben 23 күн бұрын
This is how you win an online argument 🤣
@TheArmourersBench
@TheArmourersBench 23 күн бұрын
Rampant Horse enjoyers will rejoice at this vid.
@gifthorse3675
@gifthorse3675 23 күн бұрын
Neigh
@tileux
@tileux 23 күн бұрын
I was first trained on the m16 with the Australian army in the early 1980s. It wasnt a weapon that was universally issued - we used it for scouts and for section leaders and above, plus guys with specific tasks who were carrying specialised heavy gear. Everyone else kept their SLRs until the steyr augs replaced everything in the RAR infantry battalions in the second half of the 80s. But the M16 was a replacement for the Owen submachine gun, which had done great service in ww2 in the jungles but which I have always understood, being a 9mm, simply didnt have sufficient hitting power. Back then we also had the F1 submachine gun which was carried by transport and other support units but was widely regarded as a bit of a joke by everyone else. The Australian version of the F1 had a spring loaded bayonet (which was a b.stard to get back in, once deployed). My introduction to the F1 was an SAS corporal instructor who promptly informed us that the best feature of the F1 was the spring bayonet and that, if we were ever unfortunate enough to have to use it in action, we should just use the bayonet and only fire it in order to clear the enemy's body from the blade. Forty years later Im still not sure if he was serious. I never handled an F1 after basic.
@PaladinStem
@PaladinStem 23 күн бұрын
He’s poking the AR-15 are not M16 bear. Glad to see another with the “they are all AR-15s” stick
@samuelgarrod8327
@samuelgarrod8327 23 күн бұрын
It's spelled schtick.
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz 23 күн бұрын
​@@samuelgarrod8327you poke a bear with a stick, not a schtick.
@gifthorse3675
@gifthorse3675 23 күн бұрын
They technically are minus an auto sear
@armynurseboy
@armynurseboy 23 күн бұрын
All M16s are AR-15s. Not all AR-15s are M16s.
@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
The bear poked me first.
@Kasian02
@Kasian02 23 күн бұрын
Every M16 is AR15 but not every AR15 is M16.
@armynurseboy
@armynurseboy 23 күн бұрын
Exactly. And they cannot be marketed as an "AR-15" unless you pay Colt a royalty, as Colt has trademarked the name "AR-15." That is why other companies selling AR pattern rifles market it under a different designation.
@brucecamparmament3728
@brucecamparmament3728 23 күн бұрын
Actually, this is not true, as there are M16 helmets, and other things that are "model 16" which have no relation to the AR15.
@Kasian02
@Kasian02 23 күн бұрын
@@brucecamparmament3728 bruh...
@comhydro6391
@comhydro6391 23 күн бұрын
If your talking rifles its true. There are M2 machine guns .50 cal There's also an M2 tank and I thinke​@brucecamparmament3728
@comhydro6391
@comhydro6391 23 күн бұрын
Oh I forgot To mention that I have an Armalite M15a2 ex Leo firearm. It seems to be built as well as the Colt M16a1. I just realized it probably was made by colt since Armalite is not a mfg.
@Quaker521
@Quaker521 23 күн бұрын
Whilst current weapons (and other equipment) does have a QR code on them, it is mainly used for accounting and tracking purposes. In the armoury, you will still see a butt (rack) number on them for quick and easy identification. Thanks for the video.
@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
Ah, interesting. That's not done on British military firearms as far as I'm aware.
@naethanc764
@naethanc764 23 күн бұрын
@@jonathanferguson1211 With British military kit, every single accountable item that is held in an armoury such as weapons, night vision devices and sight units have small unique QR codes on them for accountability and tracking and most also have butt numbers on them for quicker identification, though this is down to the individual armoury to decide. I've seen many different methods of numbering rifles, some better than others.
@LiveDonkeyDeadLion
@LiveDonkeyDeadLion 23 күн бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="417">6:57</a> well played editor, well played. Sir Mix-a-Lot would be proud
@operator1192
@operator1192 19 күн бұрын
I carried an Colt 604 in Afghanistan 2011-12 it’s roll mark was Colt AR-15 from the 64-65 timeframe and in small lettering by the serial it said M 16. It had Safe-Semi-Auto but at some point it was upgraded to an M16A2 with a Capco upper and glossy black furniture and the trigger was swapped to a Burst group and the armorer crudely has placed an “A2” next to the M 16 and written “Burst” under Auto. I loved the uniqueness of the XM Grey lower coupled with the darker upper and jet black furniture.
@julenissn
@julenissn 23 күн бұрын
Dear editor, Thank you.
@dessicator
@dessicator 23 күн бұрын
Who seriously tries to argue nomenclature of such a ubiquitous weapon with a knowledgeable keeper at the Royal Armouries who literally can walk into the racks to check on stuff like that....
@jacehackworth6413
@jacehackworth6413 23 күн бұрын
The narrative that the gun is completely separated from being a military weapon is more important to them than any facts.
@jonathanwhite7966
@jonathanwhite7966 20 күн бұрын
I mean it’s not a “military weapon.” The civilian AR lacks the internal components & mechanical weight to sustain combat burst fire. It’s not an “assault weapon.” If you ever worked with power tool lines you can have the same parent companies and tool lines but the variants of power tool do in fact make them individual tools
@CrowBarActual
@CrowBarActual 15 күн бұрын
@@jacehackworth6413 It doesn't matter, the US is trying to ban anything and everything they can, so facts don't matter to either side.
@jacehackworth6413
@jacehackworth6413 10 күн бұрын
@@jonathanwhite7966 You can get it however you want but the only real difference is the fire control group. Militaries have issued semi auto ar15’s, and often they get used in semi auto despite being capable of full auto. For almost all practical purposes it IS a military weapon. What else would it be? An ice cream maker? If I take the bed/box off of a truck, it’s still a truck.
@jonathanwhite7966
@jonathanwhite7966 10 күн бұрын
@@jacehackworth6413 and the internal coimponents, and the weight***
@poupoupidoum
@poupoupidoum 23 күн бұрын
it's exactly the same reason why people get confused at tomatoes being fruits and vegetables. "vegetable" is an arbitrary category, it exists only to categorize things we eat, a pear could be a vegetable too if you cook it with bacon . while "fruit" is a specifically designated by science part of a plant, growing from the flowers. A tomato is a vegetable because we designate it this way in the kitchen, but it doesn't make it any less of a fruit. Similarly, a beretta 92fs is a beretta 92fs, even if the us army call the ones that got made for them "m9" So, "m16" is just a designation, that's how the us army call their ar-15s. since they have a specific pattern that differentiate them from other ar-15s, it makes sense to call them m16s when encountered in the wild, but they are still also ar-15s
@RealCadde
@RealCadde 23 күн бұрын
Vegetable are actually a conjunction of two words. Veget and Able Veget is the Latin word Vegetus, meaning to "enliven", "animate", "vigorous", "spritely". Basically anything that is living or growing. Able is just that. It's able to Vegetus. It's able to vegetate. It can grow. It is able to be alive. Vegetables are therefore anything living and growing. All humans are by that definition vegetables. The fact we've narrowed our definition down simply has to do with where we most commonly used the word. If you are planting vegetables, you are putting stuff in the ground that is able to grow in said ground. Along came stuff that wasn't in the ground. Like fruits. And all of a sudden, any fruit is now not a vegetable.... That's why the use case broke down completely. Because vegetable was never about a single type of growth. It was all growth.
@kyotra
@kyotra 16 күн бұрын
Well no, not exactly. Yes, 'vegetable' is indeed a purely culinary term. However, you have two different definitions for 'fruit' here: you have the _culinary_ term, which is a counterpart to 'vegetable'; then you have the _botanical_ term, which is used in reference to the 'fruiting bodies' of plants. The confusion arises from the fact that many fruiting bodies of plants are arbitrarily classified as culinary vegetables. Also, this is not a very good comparison to the "AR-15/M16" nomenclature issue because the relationship isn't quite the same.
@Squeezer999
@Squeezer999 23 күн бұрын
i own a full auto civillian transferrable ar-15. it was form 1'd in 1983 into a machine gun and had the 3rd hole drilled and the full auto sear installed. completely legal to do at the time.
@Chris_Garman
@Chris_Garman 23 күн бұрын
Not factory therefore a really bad example.
@TheSundayShooter
@TheSundayShooter 23 күн бұрын
@@Chris_Garman It's still very much an AR-15
@alltat
@alltat 22 күн бұрын
@@TheSundayShooter It was an AR-15. Now it's a modified AR-15. You could have a modified AR-15 that shoots rockets if you wanted to. It says absolutely nothing about the unmodified gun.
@TheSundayShooter
@TheSundayShooter 22 күн бұрын
@alltat _Colt_ modified the AR-15 to disable select fire; this man's example has the modification reversed
@kseel6453
@kseel6453 20 күн бұрын
The BATFE registers the full auto sear serial # which required the $200 Tax and background check. As an American citizen you could legally own a factory select fire AR-15 (as shown in this video) with the same BATFE application. The 1986 NFA law prohibited the new manufacturing of full auto firearms for civilian transfer. This created a rush for American arms manufacturers to register serial numbers of full auto receivers and sears for civilians before the law took effect.
@marcush4741
@marcush4741 23 күн бұрын
THANK YOU. Ive been having this discussion with people for almost 8 years. Despite being a combat veteran, despite owning AR-15s, despite being a firearms rights absolutist... bringing this up genuinely has people shouting that Im a gun grabber. No. I just care about firearms history. And the fact of the matter is... the m16 is an ar-15.
@morganb6717
@morganb6717 22 күн бұрын
yar, the right to bare forearms. suck it, dress codes!
@Thomas-yw9eo
@Thomas-yw9eo 23 күн бұрын
I bought my first AR15 in 1978 two years after discharge from the Marines. A Colt modeled after the A1 with birdcage flashhider, trapdoor buttstock but no forward assist. I regretfully sold it in 1984 to help pay college tuition but fired over 2000 rounds with never a malfunction.
@CrowBarActual
@CrowBarActual 15 күн бұрын
to think, you could have nearly paid for college with one today...
@davidcox4436
@davidcox4436 23 күн бұрын
Nice Deadpool shirt!
@kbjerke
@kbjerke 23 күн бұрын
Semantics can be confusing. Thank you for the clarification, Jonathan!! 👍
@drawnbydaniel5398
@drawnbydaniel5398 23 күн бұрын
For a few years a long time ago, when I was in the Australian Army. I was variously issued a number of M16A1 rifles, including a couple with the M203 Grenade launcher. And as best as I can recall they all had AR-15 stamped on the left side of the lower receiver. Also, for what it's worth, I preferred them over the F88 and F88AS1's that I was later issued with.
@SnoopReddogg
@SnoopReddogg 22 күн бұрын
The ADF should've just issued the M16/M203 instead of plugging away for a decade or more of making diggers carry the F88 and a M79 grenade launcher. I'd even go one better and say the M16/M203 was a better option than the F88/GLA. That thing just ruined a perfectly good F88.
@survivaloptions4999
@survivaloptions4999 23 күн бұрын
Thank you, Johnathan. The way I explain it is that "AR15" is Colt's internal nomenclature for a specific design family. "M16" is the military's nomenclature for a specific family of weapons platform. All M16s are gentically AR15s, but not all AR15s become M16s. Also, landing in Belize in the late 80s and seeing SAS sunning themselves next to a Hawk missile battery was quite comforting. 🍺
@Matt-md5yt
@Matt-md5yt 23 күн бұрын
that is how I also seen it
@cliffracer_
@cliffracer_ 23 күн бұрын
I see Jonathan Ferguson got a taste of the twitter war that BoTR has found himself stuck in for months now xD
@ianfox6106
@ianfox6106 23 күн бұрын
Also, if I understand it correctly the Australian army would often issue its soldiers with a mixture of SLRs and M16s for use in the Vietnam jungle, with some soldiers in a company carrying M16s and the others carrying SLRs. The Australian PTSD song "I Was Only 19" references both rifles.
@williestyle35
@williestyle35 20 күн бұрын
I was wondering if anyone else did a song about service members in Vietnam like Paul Hardcastle's _"19"_ . Thanks for the info. (Useless) "Fun Fact" - The move to draft soldiers of a younger age was a purposeful move by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and President Nixon to get young protesters off the streets, and to also draft "low I.Q." soldiers into the system.
@AllAboutSurvival
@AllAboutSurvival 23 күн бұрын
It’s fascinating to see how historical context and technical details shape these terms.
@CutlassOutdoors
@CutlassOutdoors 23 күн бұрын
M16 is just the military designation for the contract for a service rifle, which in this case was won by Colt for the AR15 (in a special configuration). Similarly, M17 is just the military designation for the contract for a service pistol that was won by Sig for the P320 (in a special configuration).
@BHuang92
@BHuang92 23 күн бұрын
What about British gun nomenclature? Add another star?
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz 23 күн бұрын
M16A3? No, M16 Mk3*. 😂
@jamesmatthews291
@jamesmatthews291 23 күн бұрын
​@@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz Rifle, 5.56mm, Black, Sneaky-Beaky-Types, for the use of, mk1.
@dickybird6916
@dickybird6916 23 күн бұрын
@@BHuang92 the asterisks (stars) designated which features were removed to reduce cost during manufacture. Couple of examples. The no1 mk III * has the magazine cutoff windage adjustment on the rear sight and volley sights removed along with a few design simplifications to the cocking piece. The MLE mk I* has the mount for the cleaning rod removed.
@thedysfunctionalbiographer3314
@thedysfunctionalbiographer3314 20 күн бұрын
Much as I adore the M4 MWS/Sopmod and M16A-4, there's always gonna be mad love for the Vietnam era M16/M16A-1 with nary an over dressed rail mounting or fancy red dot optics.
@USAFraimius
@USAFraimius 23 күн бұрын
The US politics makes it very frustrating, as one side is trying to ban semi-auto AR-15s while claiming they are the same as full-auto M-16/M-4/AR-15s. That is why many Americans insist on differentiating "AR-15" (semi-auto and currently legal in most states) and "M-16" (full auto, and banned for new civilian sales since the 1980s).
@thekaxmax
@thekaxmax 23 күн бұрын
seeing how hard it is to get national 'bump-stock' bans in place, they may as well be the same as the full-auto version. So it's really a valid position right now.
@redtra236
@redtra236 23 күн бұрын
@@thekaxmax Bump stock is not even close to as effective as full auto, but full auto is also bad compared to semi auto in most cases so I agree
@thekaxmax
@thekaxmax 23 күн бұрын
@@redtra236 Not talking 'effective', I'm talking 'not semi-auto any more'.
@redtra236
@redtra236 23 күн бұрын
@@thekaxmax Well the fact that it is still semi auto just using a sliding action to quickly hit the trigger means that it's a lot more awkward to use and also still semi auto the wrong amount of pressure will make it stop shooting. Not saying they should be legal or anything but they are still semi auto even with a slide stock.
@Wayzor_
@Wayzor_ 20 күн бұрын
Meanwhile I have a binary trigger on my AR-15.
@actionjksn
@actionjksn 22 күн бұрын
He's right, the original name for the select fire rifle invented by Eugene Stoner was AR-15 and the US army attached the name M16, because that's what they do with any weapon system that they procure. The name AR-15 was used before they ever made semi-automatic versions.
@johnmc8785
@johnmc8785 23 күн бұрын
I met a British officer in Balad, Iraq, who had served in Belize. Over several rounds of fine 21-year-old Lagavulin whiskey, he regaled us with a rather funny take on the situation in Belize. There was (is?) an ongoing border dispute with their neighbor, Honduras. Every once-in-a-while, the Hondurans would cross the border, set up a camp, and raise their flag. In response, a British patrol would be sent to the area, by which time the Hondurans had "declared victory", and retreated back over the border. All very well choreographed so that no one on either side would get hurt. However, there was an incident where an overzealous / nervous Honduran soldier fired at the Brits, when either the Brits arrived early, or the Hondurans retreated late. The Hondurans commander allegedly sent a communique to the British commander, apologizing for the young soldier's "breech of etiquette"! 😂
@Georgewilliamherbert
@Georgewilliamherbert 23 күн бұрын
Minor detail: it’s a dispute between Belize and Guatemala. There are only land borders in Belize with Guatemala and Mexico. Honduras is across a small gulf. Guatemala claimed Belize as its own territory, and that it was promised a Caribbean port (in Belize, they said). Eventually Guatemala built their own, as they did have their own ~75 km seacoast on the Caribbean. Never clear why they didn’t do that earlier…
@cabnbeeschurgr6440
@cabnbeeschurgr6440 18 күн бұрын
A very polite war
@williamsharp5973
@williamsharp5973 22 күн бұрын
The M-16 I was issued when I arrived at the 101st Airborne Division in April '68 had the three-prong flash hider and forwars assist. That was at Ft. Campbell, KY, USA. The M-16 I was issued in March '67 when I arrived in Viet Nam, assigned to the 1st BDE 101st ABN, also had the three-prong and forward assist. I don't recall seeing an M-16 with a different flash hider while in Viet Nam, except on the then very new CAR-15. I had been trained in Basic Training and then Light Weapons Infantry training with the M-14 in 1965, and did not see an M-16 until I was assigned to the 101st. At that time, they were just M-16's. I loved the range and accuracy of the M-14, but the M-16 was so much lighter and we could carry a -lot- more ammo - seemed to be the right tool for the job in that place.
@Echo_Mike
@Echo_Mike 23 күн бұрын
Got your sa80 book for a project. Absolutely amazing mate well done
@Matt-md5yt
@Matt-md5yt 23 күн бұрын
thanks, John, for this opportunity to take the nomenclature thing like you did with an AK.
@dawudmc
@dawudmc 23 күн бұрын
"Sir, we have a problem with the Rifle, should we slightly re-desing?" "No, let´s put a fix on it.. Slam it, here" "We have another Problem Sir.." "There´s room for another fix in the buttstock"
@atomicsmith
@atomicsmith 23 күн бұрын
The forward assist didn’t really solve a “problem”. It addressed a fear of some of the military brass. Cleaning kits stowed on rifles are as old as rifles, so again not really a problem.
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine 23 күн бұрын
The recoil buffer was made heavier to correct dwell time, the chamber and bore was plated with chrome to dramatically improve lifespan and extraction, the birdcage flash hider wouldn't get stuck on vegetation and break as easily, the fencing around the magazine release prevents accidentally dropped mags. These are all key changes from the M16 to the M16A1. @@atomicsmith It does solve a problem, more than one. Besides the fact that there are countless ways where the travel of the bolt carrier can be slowed down enough to stop (ambient dust, magazine damage, extreme cold weather, etc), without there being any actual physical obstruction in the chamber or in the bolt carrier's path, the extractor on the the AR15 does not engage the groove on the cartridge until the action is about an inch away from being closed. Without using the forward assist to force the bolt carrier to go forward so the extractor can grab the groove on the cartridge case, there are some malfunctions which can not be readily addressed with any real ease. This can also be used for removing a partial spent case after having a case head separation, by jamming another empty case up into the remains of the first one so it 'grabs' onto it, letting you pull it out.
@dawudmc
@dawudmc 23 күн бұрын
@@atomicsmith you´re right.. then again i am from germany :D
@FrankStallone42
@FrankStallone42 22 күн бұрын
​​@@atomicsmiththe forward assist absolutely addresses problems with the bolt not making it fully into battery. Even if it were only ever used in blank fire training exercises, then it was worth the investment/addition. Kyle Rittenhouse wouldnt be alive, if not for the forward assist. Eugene Stoner was an engineer first and foremost, he wasnt a grunt and has no understanding of the rigors and dynamics of combat. The forward assist was one of the very few things the military brass were absolutely correct about. When used properly, it only solves problems. It isnt a jam enhancer as you stoner blowhards like to call it.
@GrantLF223
@GrantLF223 23 күн бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="416">6:56</a> Round of applause for the editor. Keep up the excellent work.
@JonathanRossRogers
@JonathanRossRogers 23 күн бұрын
I just had the same argument on Quora. It's amazing how pervasive misconceptions about the AR-15 are from both pro- and anti-gun rights people. The most common one I've come across is the idea that the AR-15 was originally meant for the civilian market. I suspect this idea is popular among those trying to push back against the idea that the AR-15 is an especially deadly "weapon of war."
@MisterWonka
@MisterWonka 23 күн бұрын
There are perhaps two sources of that misconception: 1. Stoner originally loaded .222 Remington (a common sporting cartridge at the time) before chamber pressure concerns lead to the introduction .223 Remington (adopted by the military as Ball M193) 2. The AR-15 was first publicized in the May-June, 1959 edition of Guns & Ammo (popular with hobbyists) years prior to the Colt Sporter becoming available at retail
@fairhall001
@fairhall001 23 күн бұрын
I got to read a once classified document detailing the procurement of the AR-15 and the subsequent changes needed after it entered service in Vietnam. It stated that the army had been looking for a new firearm for the army after Korea and has sent the specifications to all the arms manufacturers for their next firearm. The AR-15 was built from ground up to conform to those standards, winning the contract and receiving the M-16 moniker from the US military.
@MexicanBagpiper96
@MexicanBagpiper96 23 күн бұрын
I was always told that the AR15 was a platform or "design pattern," not necessarily a rifle.
@fairhall001
@fairhall001 23 күн бұрын
The AR-14 was made to specifications set out in a document supplied to small arms manufacturers by the US military procurement division after the Korean war. The specifications never explicitly told the manufacturers they had to make a rifle, but set out how much it weighed, how long or short it had to be and a dozen other criteria that had to be conformed to.
@faeembrugh
@faeembrugh 23 күн бұрын
One huge advantage of the AR/M16 family compared to the SLR is that the zeroing was not affected if you broke down the weapon for cleaning as the rear and front sights are on the same barrel/upper receiver assembly.
@davidqbs
@davidqbs 23 күн бұрын
NZ and Australia split the difference in Vietnam and had both, where the M16 replaced the SMG in squads. (commander, RTO, etc)
@DavidChong
@DavidChong 23 күн бұрын
re: the SLR vs M16, I've read the (probably wholly apocryphal but maybe someone knows better) story that some considered a smaller round desirable because if you hit someone and wounded but didn't kill them you could tie up enemy personnel trying to give them medical attention etc. effectively taking more than one person out of the fight with a single round whereas 7.62 was more likely to take someone completely out with one round.
@danwehmeier9717
@danwehmeier9717 23 күн бұрын
@@DavidChongit’s true. It was a bleeding edge theory at the time that velocity increases would make up for the smaller round, and ensure the round fragmented once it hit its target.
@88porpoise
@88porpoise 22 күн бұрын
​@@DavidChongIt may be a minor advantage in some cases, but I doubt it was very deliberate. It certainly isn't why 5.56 (and other intermediate cartridges) were adopted. They were adopted for three main reasons (well, maybe 2.5 as two are closely related). First is simply the ability to carry more ammunition. A single 7.62mm NATO cartridge weighs about two and a half times as much as a 5.56mm NATO cartridge. They are also physically much smaller making 30 round 5.56 magazine is only a bit longer than a 20 round 7.62mm magazine. This is a big advantage over a round like 8mm Kurz or 7.62x39). A corollary to this is it allowed for smaller guns when getting in and out of vehicles. Second, follow up shots are much more rapid and accurate. This is the fundamental benefit of intermediate cartridges. All else being equal, the first shot isn't going to be much better, but the second shot can be much faster, more accurate, or both. Third (which could just be considered an extension of the second), controllability in automatic fire. While everyone looked to adopt a select-fire FAL, M-14, G3, etc enabling the regular soldier to provide automatic fire in a pinch, it was always determined that they were not controllable enough to be used that way and most has their automatic setting removed or blocked.
@0ldcr0w5
@0ldcr0w5 13 күн бұрын
Long story short: Every M16 is an AR15, but not every AR15 is an M16. An M16 is just a very specific version of the AR15 platform. Same for the M4.
@Skusty
@Skusty 23 күн бұрын
The M16 with it's M203 is a timeless look, still looks great.
@fluggerisaffle973
@fluggerisaffle973 23 күн бұрын
As a Swede I own an AR15 for hunting, mine is a Stag Arms retro with 20 inch barrel. Looks like an A2 from a little distance but has the removable carry handle of later models. I removed the carry handle and put an illuminated 1-6x20 on it. Used it to take a six point roe buck so far. Fun rifle
@stephen2429
@stephen2429 23 күн бұрын
We had these when I was in Singapore/ Malaysa. AR-15 with Colt markings. Single or full auto, no forward assist, twenty round magazines and three prong flash hider. Light and ideal for the Malay jungle. Got a few phtos in interested Jonathan. Talking of Belize independence, we were dug in near the Guatemalan/ Belize border as they had threatened to invade .
@jadenephrite
@jadenephrite 19 күн бұрын
For comparison to the M16A1 rifle which has an overall length of 38.81 inches, a barrel length of 20 inches and weight of 8.81 pounds with a loaded 30 round magazine for 5.56×45mm cartridges, the M4A1 carbine instead has an overall length of 33 inches when its butt stock is fully extended, a barrel length of 14.5 inches and a weight of 7.75 pounds with a loaded 30 round magazine for 5.56×45mm cartridges. Compared to the M16A1 rifle, the M4A1 carbine has a collapsed length of 29.75 inches when its butt stock is fully retracted.
@chriswerb7482
@chriswerb7482 17 күн бұрын
The M16A1 magazine was not intended for the NATO cartridge and the rifle is not intended to fire it, except in emergencies.
@Grasyl
@Grasyl 23 күн бұрын
The very very first semi-auto only model of the AR-15 was the GX-4968 from 1963 a test example for the ATF very shortly before the XM16E1 was adapted by the army.
@ES90344
@ES90344 23 күн бұрын
I don't think the ATF existed in 1963?
@ForeignShyguy
@ForeignShyguy 18 күн бұрын
​@@ES90344The ATF was originally formed as a division of the IRS in 1952 as the IRS ATFD (Internal Revenue Service: Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms Division) and existed that way until 1972 when it was split away from the IRS and reorganized into its own federal agency now known as the BATFE (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives). So yes, the ATF did exist in 1963, it was just still a part of the IRS at the time.
@alanlawson4180
@alanlawson4180 23 күн бұрын
Rack numbers (more commonly known as Butt Numbers) are very much still used on SA80! Makes Armoury checking a lot easier.
@ZeeMid
@ZeeMid 23 күн бұрын
Finally a video I can pester my friends and server with
@ianfox6106
@ianfox6106 23 күн бұрын
You said the AR-15 was issued to British troops in Malaya (Malaysia) and Borneo. That answers a question I have had in the back of my mind for a while. When I visited the Australian War Memorial Museum a few years ago I saw a picture of Aussie troops in Malay around 1965 and one was carrying an M-16. I wondered how he could have had an M-16 when the US Army was only just starting to issue them to their troops in Vietnam at the time.
@688attacksub8
@688attacksub8 23 күн бұрын
Australia bought a few hundred AR-15s from Colt in the early 1960s, a couple years before the XM16E1. I'm not sure about their procurement after that.
@ianfox6106
@ianfox6106 23 күн бұрын
@@688attacksub8 Thanks that helps explain that picture at the Australian War Memorial
@tomjoseph1444
@tomjoseph1444 23 күн бұрын
I carried an M16A1 for many years. Mine was made by the Hydra Matic Div. of General Motors. Later I carried an M203 and an M60. If you had to carry it on patrol, you would definitely be in favor of a lighter weapon.
@SergeWallace
@SergeWallace 16 күн бұрын
As an American from the 50's the M16 was military and the AR-15 was at my local gun dealer. I was hoping to see the select fire options off the various rifles shown here. thanks!
@OhBoy235
@OhBoy235 23 күн бұрын
arguing the Ar15 is not a millitary weapon is arguing the wrong point, it shouldnt matter that the millitary allso uses it. legislation should concentrate on what the object actually is not who uses it, the SKS was a millitary weapon does that make it inherintly more dangerous to own? Laws trying to ban "military weapons" are inherintly stupid because all it leads to is new guns and calibers being created that emulate the millitary weapons just like in canada for example.
@Meton2526
@Meton2526 23 күн бұрын
And in the USA, it's irrelevant anyway since the 2A covers military weapons just the same as ones designed specifically for civilian purposes.
@joetheclown1
@joetheclown1 23 күн бұрын
And if you think about it revolvers were even military haha
@NouveauView
@NouveauView 23 күн бұрын
I mean if we're being technical here most weapons can be and were military weapons at some point, Axes, bows and arrows, hammers and shovels even, glass bottles and rice cookers can be made into fire bottles and IEDs
@HALLish-jl5mo
@HALLish-jl5mo 23 күн бұрын
A gun being a military weapon would mean it was considered good for use on humans. (My unusual wording is because of the KZbin algorithm being aggressive in deleting comments). Now there are plenty of other guns that aren't military but are equally capable in this regard, but any gun useless against humans will not have been adopted by a military. If you want an easy, enforceable way to restrict weapons that are good against people without restricting ones that aren't, well it's a crude instrument, but it's not the worst metric ever. Every gun you ban will be one you wanted to ban, you'll just have some you fail to ban. Underreach rather than overreach. Of course this logic only works if you don't consider self defense from humans a valid reason to own a firearm. If you consider that a valid reason well suddenly military equipment actually looks like something you'd want to encourage.
@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
This is what drives me crazy with folk arguing that all auto ARs are M16s - they're arguing the wrong thing and in bad faith.
@ninjabiatch101
@ninjabiatch101 19 күн бұрын
I am so glad you went over this. Modern nomenclature is that the AR15 is the civillian version. But they are the same thing, just with different designations.
@ls7196
@ls7196 17 күн бұрын
No, One, is select fire, full-auto and semi-auto, the other is semi-auto only.
@itsapittie
@itsapittie 23 күн бұрын
I joined the Air Force in 1975. It's been a long time, and it's possible my memory is faulty, but I'm pretty sure that ours were marked AR-15. As noted, they also lacked the jam enhancer, an utterly useless feature which i despise and have never needed. 😆
@rreedy788
@rreedy788 19 күн бұрын
The jam enhancer... good one. However, the forward assist is essential in "quiet" operations, where one needs to drop the bolt slowly, to avoid the noise of letting fly home. Since the charging handle does not reciprocate, like on the original AR-10, or M1 Garand or M14, a means was needed to ensure the bolt was in battery, in those instances.
@itsapittie
@itsapittie 18 күн бұрын
@@rreedy788 Everyone says that, but I've never been unable to seat the bolt with my thumb. I've done it just out of curiosity, but in practice, if you didn't put one in the chamber as soon as you thought things might get tactical, you already messed up.
@rreedy788
@rreedy788 18 күн бұрын
@@itsapittie Yeah. well... more than a few Vietnam Vets and Spec Ops will say different. Also... as I mentioned, the M1, M14 had a reciprocating handle... which I have had to use numerous times, as it is the same on the M1A1 and Mini 14s I own, not to mention the AR-15 pattern rifles I own... One can't always just let to bolt slam home... and you are a Mo Ron, with a small mind to think you can.
@immikeurnot
@immikeurnot 18 күн бұрын
The letters stand for: M - Model. A - Alteration. E - Enhancement. X - Experimental. It's possible to have a piece of gear that's an M-1A1E1.
@PitFriend1
@PitFriend1 23 күн бұрын
Talk about not knowing who you’re talking to, arguing with Jonathan Ferguson the keeper of firearms and artillery at the Royal Museum about a firearm designation.
@geraldscott4302
@geraldscott4302 12 күн бұрын
I first fired, trained with, and qualified rifle expert with the M16A1, with forward assist, in the USMC starting in 1977. These rifles were in pretty rough condition cosmetically, but functioned fine. I'm sure they were used in Vietnam. They were full auto, not the 3 round burst that the M16A2 had. They had the triangular barrel shroud, not the round "corncob" shroud that the M16A2 had. The AR-15 is the original version, before it was adopted by the military. All of the original rifles, the AR-15, and both versions of the M16, had full, non adjustable stocks, carry handles cast as part of the upper receiver, and 20" barrels. Now, most AR-15s have 16" barrels, adjustable stocks, no carry handle, and totally different barrel shrouds. The current M4 carbine has a 14.5" barrel, adjustable stock, no carry handle (although one can be fitted to the Pic rail) and still have the forward assist. I have zero experience with the M4, but with such a short barrel, I don't see it being accurate beyond a very short range. A little over a year ago, I acquired a semi auto H&R copy of the M16A1, which is considered an AR-15 platform rifle. Despite all the changes and different variations over the past 60+ years, the basic design of this rifle has not changed.
@F1ghteR41
@F1ghteR41 23 күн бұрын
I've always wondered why the A1 flash hider wasn't replaced with the A2 style earlier. It seems to be such an obvious idea, yet the same mistake had occured with different firearms multiple times.
@ParanoidWarpig1
@ParanoidWarpig1 23 күн бұрын
Open tine has better flash reduction than closed tine.
@redtra236
@redtra236 23 күн бұрын
@@ParanoidWarpig1 The M16A1 is closed as well but has slots all the way around unlike the M16A2
@SlavicCelery
@SlavicCelery 22 күн бұрын
The fully open birdcage cannot be installed incorrectly. The partially occluded flashhider potentially can be.
@redtra236
@redtra236 22 күн бұрын
@@SlavicCelery It definitely can be if you don't torque it down enough. And personally I'd prefer to have the slots even right to left even on an A1 flash hider. The main reason they went to the A2 I believe is because when prone the bird cage kicks up a lot of dust. The A2 also somewhat acts as a compensator.
@reddevilparatrooper
@reddevilparatrooper 23 күн бұрын
I went into the US Army in 1986 at Ft. Benning Infantry School for Basic and Infantry School. I was issued a General Motors Hydramatic Division M16A1, another guy in my platoon had a Harrington Richardson. When I got to my first duty station in Germany all the M16A1s were all marked Colt AR-15 M16A1 Property of US Government on them. From my second duty station through my 23 years all of them had been made by Colt. The GM and Harrington Richardsons were built during the Vietnam Era as military contracts for the massive troop influx. GM manufactured M16A1s till about 1975 along with Colt when the US Military contract stopped manufacture. Some countries had obtained licenses to manufacture the M16A1 for their armed forces like Singapore, South Korea, and the Philippines. Later in the late 70s Canada built them through Kitchner Industries which I think became Diemaco later.
@brosefmalkovitch3121
@brosefmalkovitch3121 23 күн бұрын
In short, the source of the M16's early reputation for being unreliable came down to two main factors, the first being the change in the type of gunpowder used in the M16's M193 5.56mm ammo and the second being the lack of cleaning kits being issued thanks to the gun being advertised as 'self-cleaning'. Originally the ammo was going to use a more relatively modern powder but due to budgetary reasons they decided to use up the remaining stock of WWII powder which had a higher pressure, greatly increasing the gun's firerate beyond what it was originally designed for and massively increasing fouling in the chamber.
@armynurseboy
@armynurseboy 23 күн бұрын
Non chromed chambers also caused corrosion and made spent cases harder to extract.
@teabulls
@teabulls 23 күн бұрын
Most reliability issues went away after the swap from the edgewater buffer. The powder wasn't an issue clearly, since we still use that powder today for M855.
@ricedbroccoli
@ricedbroccoli 23 күн бұрын
​@@teabullsIt was a contributor because it has more fouling, and they weren't cleaning it. Either way it would have jammed, but using cheaper powder made it worse
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine
@0neDoomedSpaceMarine 23 күн бұрын
@@teabulls The issue with the powder is that it changed the dwell time from what the rifle was designed around, the new buffer in the M16A1 fixes that problem. The chrome was also really critical, as it dramatically improved the ability to extract under all circumstances, in addition to its other benefits. One of the recognized problems with the pre-A1 M16 was that leaving a round chambered could make the case stick really badly (referred to as the cartridge "swelling" by some, though it had more to do with corrosion), therefore everyone started patrolling with a loaded mag and an empty chamber, where you'd rack the bolt when it was go-time. The M16A1 didn't have to do that anymore.
@teabulls
@teabulls 23 күн бұрын
@@0neDoomedSpaceMarine the edgewater buffer was also stupidly fragile.
@yoochoob1858
@yoochoob1858 23 күн бұрын
Very pleased with myself for immediately spotting the wrong pistol grip, immediately corrected that by thinking the forward assist is the wrong type (shouldn't it be the smaller round type?) Enjoyed the twitter exchanges, gave me a giggle when this topic show3ed up in my feed.
@geodkyt
@geodkyt 23 күн бұрын
The source of the semantic confusion is the US *ATF* ☆. In about 1972, there was an *internal* ATF memo to start using the terms "AR-15" for semiautomatic rifles, and "M16" for selective fire rifles, just as shorthand. The very memo states the author realized it was inaccurate for the same reasons you state - all M16s are AR15s, and M16 is just a US DOD logistics nomenclature for the adopted selective fire rifles. From that point forward, ATF started comsistently using this false terminology to distinguish between semiautomatic only and selective fire AR15s. . ☆ ATF is the common name of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives - the weirdness is because they were started as a excise rax collection department within the Internal Revenue Service. When Prohibition was overturned in 1933, all the agents who previously had been chasing bootleggers were transferred to collecting alcohol taxes, with tobacco and (with the 1934 National Firearms Act to regulate machineguns and such) firearms tacked on to add enough work to employ most of the Booze Cops who were now mostly not needed (it taking a lot fewer revenue agents to collect taxes from publicly licensed alcohol manufactures than to chase moonshiners and bootleggers).
@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
Thank you - that's really interesting! I'd love to track down the memo. I suspect Colt marketing/marking would have been enough for customers to start the confusion all on their own but I don't think we'd be getting this level of pushback/denial without this political underpinning.
@688attacksub8
@688attacksub8 23 күн бұрын
Hey I asked you in that other video where tou mentioned this. Do you happen to recall any more details about that memo? I'd like to track it down.
@terrywalkos4693
@terrywalkos4693 19 күн бұрын
One other thing the barrel rate of twist on pre A-1 had a one in 14 inch rate of rifling where as the A-1 had one in 12 inch rate of twist
@popuptarget7386
@popuptarget7386 23 күн бұрын
The argument here in the US is caused by political nonsense. Pro 2nd amendment people have been unfortunately led into a silly and unimportant side argument because the other side likes to control language and uses that to control the debate. The anti 2a crowd raves about 'weapons of war should not be allowed' so the pro 2a argue 'it is not a weapon of war'. This misses the fact that the 2nd is designed for the populace to have weapons of war for defense of self and community.
@rreedy788
@rreedy788 19 күн бұрын
And the whole 2A argument misses the point reiterated in the 10th...The United States, aka the Federal Government, i.e. Congress was delegated no power to regulate, restrict, ban, or otherwise control arms in the first place: "In the final days of the Constitutional Convention, as delegates rushed to complete work on the final draft of the Constitution, George Mason of Virginia and Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts proposed that the Constitution be “prefaced with a bill of rights.” On September 12, 1787, after little debate, the proposal was unanimously rejected by the delegates as unnecessary to protect individual rights" - www.loc.gov/exhibits/creating-the-united-states/demand-for-a-bill-of-rights.html Or as Madison explained to the Virginia ratification convention, as to why they did this: “All Political Power is inherent in the People, therefore, a Constitution is necessary to specifically state what Powers the people are giving to their government. Thus, a Bill of Rights is not needed, as we have not given to this government the power to interfere with your rights.” James Madison
@jimjamauto
@jimjamauto 18 күн бұрын
What's even sillier is that the "anti" people legitimately do not care about details, especially technical jargon. They see an AR-15 and they see weapon of war, you can only destroy your own credibility to tell them they have lying eyes. I agree it's a military weapon and we should just point to 2A for justifying ownership.
@ecobasetech4558
@ecobasetech4558 17 күн бұрын
Yes, we need to "lean into" the anit 2a's argument that these are weapons of war, instead of arguing against. The same as knives, swords, bows and arrows, crossbows, clubs, sticks and stones. You know what they all have in common? They are tools. Nothing more, nothing less.
@jimjamauto
@jimjamauto 16 күн бұрын
@@popuptarget7386 When the "anti" people see an AR they see a weapon of war, it does nothing for our credibility to tell them they have lying eyes. They literally don't care about the technical details or jargon either. I agree that 2A is the most effective argument, it's the law of the land.
@ludgerwillgaster2095
@ludgerwillgaster2095 16 күн бұрын
Weapons of war...that's all but a lever action Winchester or a daranger...
@tougeep3
@tougeep3 23 күн бұрын
Fun fact. COLT actually sold semi-automatic AR15s to civilians 5 years before the military formally adopted the m16. Colt sent a pilot model rifle (serial no. GX4968) to the BATF for civilian sale approval on Oct. 23, 1963. It was approved on Dec. 10, 1963, and sales of the "Model R6000 Colt AR-15 SP1 Sporter Rifle" began on Jan 2, 1964. The M16 wasn't issued to infantry units until 1965 (as the XM16E1), wasn't standardized as the M16A1 until 1967, and didn't officially replace the M14 until 1969. Colt had been selling semi-automatic AR-15's to civilians for 5 years by the time the M16A1 replaced the M14. Going off of the serial number records for the SP1, Colt had sold at least 2,501 rifles to the civilian market by 1965, 8,250 rifles by 1967, and 14,653 rifles by 1969.
@fairhall001
@fairhall001 23 күн бұрын
Another fun fact is how the AR-15 wasn't dreamt up as a civilian firearm but was part of the US military procurement program and was made to conform with the specifications set down by them. If it hadn't had been accepted by the US military it likely would have been bought up by another country.
@IvanPrintsGuns
@IvanPrintsGuns 23 күн бұрын
The M16 is an AR15. One quibble - the A1 isn't really a "fixed" version of the M16 - the M16 got all the same improvements that the A1 did as the rifle was developed.
@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
I thought I'd caught that by immediately explaining that 'M16' was actually the USAF model, but looking back I didn't stick the landing as people might think the USAF M16 was the problem child and the US Army XM16E1/M16A1 was the "fixed" version. Sigh. Hazards of recording without a script.
@88porpoise
@88porpoise 22 күн бұрын
The Army thought the A1 was the "fixed" version as they thought the inability to force the action closed was a flaw.
@p_serdiuk
@p_serdiuk 22 күн бұрын
Regarding suitability for the jungle, MACV-SOG carried CAR-15s, they certainly weren't complaining about it much.
@user-ir6ll8jf9p
@user-ir6ll8jf9p 23 күн бұрын
if the title says AR-15, I 'll watch
@albertsnow8835
@albertsnow8835 16 күн бұрын
It is both! When I was in basic training I was issued a m16a1 rifle that was plainly marked on the receiver Colt AR 15!
@mycosys
@mycosys 23 күн бұрын
I do appreciate you keeping present-day political machinations out of the machine's history.
@j.robertsergertson4513
@j.robertsergertson4513 23 күн бұрын
Until it gets used by Gun grabbers in congressional hearings (As expert testimony) to ban AR-15's
@bobghengis
@bobghengis 20 күн бұрын
I have a Colt 614. It is a factory full-auto rifle marked AR-15, previously used by the West Virginia State Police before they sold it to buy much cheaper post 86 guns It doesn't say M16 anywhere on the rifle, and 614 is the Colt model number for what the US military called the M16A1
@travischapin886
@travischapin886 23 күн бұрын
AR's and lager beer, yes please? Thank you, Sir.
@tommccormick9290
@tommccormick9290 23 күн бұрын
My two favorite things in life.
@bojimbooth
@bojimbooth 13 күн бұрын
The first weapon I was issued in the U.S. Army was a Harrington and Richards AR-15 with select fire. That was in 1982
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz 23 күн бұрын
Square:rectangle::M16:AR15
@ilm-def8920
@ilm-def8920 20 күн бұрын
I used to own a Colt SP1 made on my birth year, 1966. It had a 3 prong flash hider, slab sides and it was an excellent shooter.
@MichaelScheele
@MichaelScheele 23 күн бұрын
The primary reason why many of us insist on the distinction, incorrectly or not, is that there is there is a decidedly important political difference. A selective fire AR-15 or M-16 is regulated by the National Firearms Act (1934) and if manufactured later than 1986, under the Firearms Owners Protection Act (1986). The former, can still be legally purchased by individuals that go through the paperwork and pay the transfer tax. The latter are restricted to military and law enforcement purchases. A semi-automatic only AR-15 is just another rifle. Functionally, it is the same as a Remington Model 8 (1908) hunting rifle, albeit chambered for a cartridge that didn't exist in 1908. Firearms prohibitions call it a weapon of war, even though it is not an assault rifle like the M-16/M-4. The two variations have different trigger groups. It would take some metalwork on the lower receiver to exchange the trigger groups. Most users are not going to risk messing up their AR-15 and violate federal law to convert their semi-automatic AR-15 to (fully) automatic. The confusion over nomenclature makes it more difficult for us to preserve our remaining rights. I grant that the confusion for the AK pattern guys is even worse.
@cquilty673
@cquilty673 19 күн бұрын
Let's not forget that the bolt carrier is a very different weight in the civil version. The civil market rifle has a much larger cutout in the bolt carrier making it lighter. If you were to do it right and hand the rifle to a certified master gunsmith for conversion to full automatic capability but kept the civil bolt carrier, the rifle would fire like a burp gun and probably sustain some internal damage. Coming out of the military with habits formed using M-16s, I can remember quite a few occasions, dropping the firing pin while reassembling the rifle because of the larger bolt carrier cutout in the civil version (always annoying because of all the dog fur around my floors, needed to clean the firing pin again). It's just another small distinction lost in the debate between fear and fact.
@james-andrew-adams
@james-andrew-adams 23 күн бұрын
I really love this channel & this series! I enjoy the examinations and deep dives on these weapons, even though I'm not terribly into firearms. It's great to hear Jonathan's expertise and knowledge, and that's plenty for me to be interested in. Also, love the higher quality footage the last couple months. As my wife says: wow, the video is so crispy.
@HicksPasha1883
@HicksPasha1883 23 күн бұрын
This might be contentious
@Stevarooni
@Stevarooni 23 күн бұрын
Not really. It's going to be ignored by some, but it isn't wildly difficult to understand.
@HicksPasha1883
@HicksPasha1883 23 күн бұрын
@@Stevarooni OK calm down dear.
@gooshy8312
@gooshy8312 14 күн бұрын
I've tried to tell people that there are selective fire rifles marked AR-15, but never convinced anybody, even fellow veterans. (But I've always been a bit of a gun nerd). Thanks for this!
@samholdsworth420
@samholdsworth420 23 күн бұрын
Im always wrong 😞
@busboy262
@busboy262 22 күн бұрын
When I was a teen, auto rifles were legal to manufacture for consumer purchase with NFA tax paid. The Colt AR-15 was marketed as either auto or semi-auto. But as I recall, both flavors were called an "AR-15". The auto wasn't commonly stocked, but was available for order. It was a big difference in price. As I recall, the semi was ~$500, which was kinda pricey at the time. But the auto was ~3x that price and required a $200 tax on top of that. You really had to want it. Of course today, the government has made the tax a mere pittance compared to the value of the weapon. But at the time that tax and hassle made it hard to sell or trade later. If I only knew then what I know now, I would have retired long ago.
@cardiffpicker1
@cardiffpicker1 23 күн бұрын
Ironically I am in the middle of a Facebook argument with some American "gun guys" about this very subject.
@dickybird6916
@dickybird6916 23 күн бұрын
Break their minds by asking if they think g3 and mp5 are anything other than military adoption codes for the variants of hk51 and hk54 sold to the German military. I would say bad example but much like colt with m16, hk trademarked g3 and mp5 after the adoption.
@VickyHong1879
@VickyHong1879 23 күн бұрын
31? as 51 would be the short barrel version
@dickybird6916
@dickybird6916 23 күн бұрын
@@VickyHong1879 hks cetme era based product codes. The first number is the firearms type, second is the calibre. Firearm type codes: 2 = machine gun 3 = rifle. 4 = sporterized/ civilian carbine 5 = smg. 7 = grenade launcher 9 = civilian rifle for American market. calibres codes 1 = 7.62×51. 2 is 7.62x39. 3 is 5.56x45 and 4 is 9x19 9 is 40mm grenade. So the hk33 is a 556 rifle. The hk53 is an smg in 5.56. then a k after that = kurtz (short) barrel version of the firearm type or zf or SG would be sharpshooter variant of the rifle. Then TGS designates grenade launcher equipped.
@ronnichols884
@ronnichols884 10 күн бұрын
I trained on the M16, The AR15 was designed as a semi-automatic rifle. It was the original model made for demonstration. The original M16 was a fully automatic with a selector that could be switched from safe to semi-automatic and full automatic. It was later changed to 3 shot bursts.
@mariorossi9300
@mariorossi9300 23 күн бұрын
stay safe!
@spd579
@spd579 23 күн бұрын
Greetings and thumbs up on the Deadpool shirt. Ok, the fun part here is my story regarding the commercial/civilian Colt AR-15 SP-1. The one I had, was bought in 1981. Yet, after the serial number check threw Colt, it was made in 1979. Yes, it had the grey parkerized finish, the cleaning kit hatch in the but stock, the large two piece pivot screw, the six slot bird cage flash hider, chrome lined, pencil thin, 1/12" twist rifling barrel, and the featureless 601 type upper and lower receivers. The funny thing was the serial number as I'm trying to remember, were in the 100,000 range. Between the US Govt contract rifles, the over seas sold, and the Civilian semi autos, Colt had some strange numbers going on. Plus, the early rifles that went to Veit Nam, in the hands of US troops had the "XM" designation on their lower receivers. At this point I am guessing, that is what the British troops had when deployed to Borneo and Maylasia. To my amazement, those rifles were used and kept in inventory, for years! Looking at what you displayed in this video, I'm sure those rifles, seem some use, and kept right working. Great video!
@jonathanferguson1211
@jonathanferguson1211 23 күн бұрын
Thank you! That's expected for an SP1 as Colt kept the slickside lower on those for a long time, after they upgraded the f/h to the birdcage. They had their own serial range too. The Brits had 100 Model (6)02s (slickside, lacking various other improvements) and (mainly) Model 604s which were identical to the USAF XM16/M16 i.e. without the forward assist of the XM16E1/M16A1.
@Lardman678
@Lardman678 23 күн бұрын
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I think it's easy to navigate the semantics of AR-15 vs M16 as a distinction of design vs designation. AR-15 is the design or "model" (like car model) of rifle, whereas M16 or M4 or KS-1, etc, is the specific military designation of a particular specification of AR-15. For example, the M4 is a designation of AR-15 for the US Military that is typically select fire, carbine length, chambered in 5.56, has a particular barrel profile, etc. They can be manufactured by different companies, such as Colt or FN Herstal. The same convention exists with other military designations as well, such as the M9 vs the Beretta 92, or M24 / M40 vs the Remington 700. These are all designations / adoptions of a design. For a non-firearm example, think of police cars in the United States. Most police departments use some form of Police Interceptor, but we can think of the classic Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor, which are still largely in use. This is a particular flavor and specification of the Ford model Crown Victoria created for use by police departments, but it is still a Crown Victoria car model in essence, just with some extra requirements. To put is simply, the requirements and the requirements source are the cause of the designation. An AR-15 created with very similar or even identical specifications to the M16 but without a contract or purpose of being used by the US Military as an M16 is not an M16. It would probably be called an M16 style AR15 or M16 clone. A hypothetical: The US Military wants a standard issue keyboard for its computers. It decides on the IBM Model M keyboard design, but wants a standardized and specific color, legend, layout, cable, etc. It receives a designation, let's call it M104 because it's a 104 key layout. Every M104 is an IBM Model M keyboard, but only keyboards created for use by the military with this specification and purpose are M104, likely with a marking to distinguish that. Other manufacturers or even IBM itself might create consumer versions of this keyboard that anyone can buy, but these would be M104 style keyboards, or M104 clones.
@688attacksub8
@688attacksub8 23 күн бұрын
KS-1 is KAC's trademark, not a military designation. The UK gave the KS-1 the designation "L403A1-AIW".
@Lardman678
@Lardman678 23 күн бұрын
@@688attacksub8 TIL, thanks!
@armynurseboy
@armynurseboy 23 күн бұрын
The M16 was the US military designation for the Colt model 601. To be an M16, it must meet the specifications of an M16. The Canadian C7 is also a variant of the AR-15, but cannot be called an M16 because it does not meet the specifications. The Canadian army put forth their own specs which were different.
@Lardman678
@Lardman678 23 күн бұрын
@@armynurseboy Thanks for the extra info!
@HBomb157
@HBomb157 18 күн бұрын
I thinks its sorta like the mauser. If I said a mauser you know its a mauser action bolt action rifle. The Kar98K is a popular miltary example of the mauser, but not the only or first model. The M16A1 is a configuration of the AR-15. So is the C7, C8, and L119A1.
@scottchamberlain3938
@scottchamberlain3938 23 күн бұрын
I've had the opportunity to handle a factory original Colt select fire Armalite AR-15 marked 601 manufactured hour 1 day 1 of 1959, it's in the arms room at the Lackland gunsmith shop, they exist but most fudds can't wrap their heads around it
@fairhall001
@fairhall001 23 күн бұрын
It makes sense that it wasn't made pre the Korean war as the US military hadn't set out the specifications that lead to the development of the AR-15 till after the Korean war was over.
@scottchamberlain3938
@scottchamberlain3938 23 күн бұрын
@@fairhall001 Stoners development and subsequent evolution post WW2 and moving from the USMC into the private sector took time, militaries and governments were not seeking anything new at the time or foreseeable future, however history shows us the technological and political advancements drive innovation as much as personal investment can. Post Korean hostilities and the west were seeing small arms advancements from the east, and as always you want to be parallel or advanced in respect to your perceived enemies issue equipment, Stoner and Sullivans development of the AR-10 and AR-16 lead to the AR-15 in the closing of the 1950's.
@vashts1985
@vashts1985 21 күн бұрын
best way to understand, the rifle is developed as a AR-15, the military comes in and says , yes i like that, i want to buy many of them, buuuuut i have a few additional comments and requirements that we need you to fulfill. the military then draws up a specification and when the AR15s are manufactured to one of these specification for the military, they are given a military designation, M16, M4, etc. the rifle is an AR-15. M16s are just a military purchased specification of it.
@biddinge8898
@biddinge8898 23 күн бұрын
The actual ar15 was definitely featured in full auto. Otherwise there would be no demonstration models to show the rifle off to the air force or the US military.
@fairhall001
@fairhall001 23 күн бұрын
I wish I had a copy of the document the US military sent to the small arms manufacturers that gave them the specifications the AR-15 had to conform to for it to be in the running to be supplied to the military. I can only remember so much of it.
@HannesLindbeck
@HannesLindbeck 9 күн бұрын
Excellent video, Jonathan, as always. Perfect balance between history and amusing facts. Perfect as always, don't change.
@kirkmooneyham
@kirkmooneyham 23 күн бұрын
AR-15 is the original Armalite designation, Armalite Rifle 15. M16, etc, indeed are the US military designations. However, the fact is that full auto or burst M16s and M4s have not been available for common sale on the civilian market in the USA, even if some few have made their way into civilian hands over the years. The overwhelming majority of that design of rifle (or carbine) sold to civilians in the USA have been AR-15 style semi-automatics. If anyone wants to blame anyone for the confusion, blame politicians and the mass news media outlets.
@JakeyBaby6
@JakeyBaby6 23 күн бұрын
AR can also be Automatic Rifle as that was what Colt have marketed it as at various points.
@Meton2526
@Meton2526 23 күн бұрын
AR does NOT stand for "Armalite Rifle", it's just "Armalite - 15". There were many AR-## firearms, some of which are pistols, some of which are shotguns.
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz
@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz 23 күн бұрын
Only for legal reasons, not mechanical reasons. Up until May of 1986 you could just call Colt order an automatic (or burst if you were brain damaged) AR15. It requires NFA paperwork but Colt would take you money and send it to your dealer in a jiffy.
@ljessecusterl
@ljessecusterl 23 күн бұрын
@@ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz And if you want one now, be prepared to pay ~$30k along with the stamp. I haven't kept up with transferable pricing since about 2019, but that was the pricing back then. $20k back then for a friggin' Lightning Link, too.
@stevewatson6839
@stevewatson6839 23 күн бұрын
FFS
@michaelernst3731
@michaelernst3731 23 күн бұрын
I carries an M-16A1 w/ M203 grenade launcher for my 10 years in the US Military. LOVED it.
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