7.62 nato or 7.62x39?Ishapore Assault Rifle 7.62mm has successfully cleared the evaluation trials with flying colours. Trials conducted by Ministry of Home Affairs for its Armed Forces. Accuracy: 9 out of 10 on bulls eye! Reliability: more than 15000 rounds without stopage! Unbeatable! Salaam OFB.
this carbine is one of the most refined ofb designs i have ever seen. The only thing i would like to see is an adjustable stock and prails on the handguard.View attachment 48082
OFB 7.62X51 Rifle with a different stock design, .338 rifle on the right side.
View attachment 48084
OFB 7.62X51 LMG
View attachment 48085
OFB Carbine 5.56x45mm
Eh. It's such shame what a product like that will become from their bad quality control. But maybe if this corporatisaton makes any difference... HAL made crap too, now look at Tejas fit & finish! These aint bad either.Ishapore Assault Rifle 7.62mm has successfully cleared the evaluation trials with flying colours. Trials conducted by Ministry of Home Affairs for its Armed Forces. Accuracy: 9 out of 10 on bulls eye! Reliability: more than 15000 rounds without stopage! Unbeatable! Salaam OFB.
NATO. Ghatak passed it years ago. This is the 7.62×51 on the right.7.62 nato or 7.62x39?
what does 9 out of 10 bullseye mean? what minute of angle does it signify?
15000 rounds without stoppages! thats almost unheard of. If true good job.
Ishapore assault rifle is 7.62 nato. The bull's-eye is the small circular area at the centre of a target. The bullseye sits in the centre of the middle and it is 7″ in diameter; what he meant to say is nine bullets out of ten bullets fire from this rifle had hit the bull's-eye. Stoppage is a condition which prevents a rifle from being fired, usually in automatic weapons as the result of a cartridge not feeding properly from the magazine to the breech of the rifle. Rifles stoppages are counted per thousand rounds but 15000 rounds shooting without the rifle being jammed is an achievement in itself or may be a typo and meant to say 1500 rounds fired without jamming. Excalibur experiences two stoppages in 1000 rounds fired when it was trialed by the army.7.62 nato or 7.62x39?
what does 9 out of 10 bullseye mean? what minute of angle does it signify?
15000 rounds without stoppages! thats almost unheard of. If true good job.
...Fired from what distance? Are there different diameter of bullseye for different ranges, or are all 7"?The bullseye sits in the centre of the middle and it is 7″ in diameter; what he meant to say is nine bullets out of ten bullets fire from this rifle had hit the bull's-eye.
That is the question we should ask to the original poster or an OFB official. But they did mention that the trial was conducted by mha but they didnt mention where the trial was conducted? Or, either MHA's shooting range or ofb own backyard. However, a rifle accuracy is generally measured by looking at the dispersion of a number of shots fired at the same point of aim. An ideal group would be one where all shots land in a hole no larger than the diameter of a single bullet; this would indicate zero dispersion. The most common way of measuring groups then is to measure the edge to edge distance of the farthest holes, and subtract the bullet diameter, which gives the center to center or c-c measurement of the group. This can be expressed in linear measures (a 30 mm group at 100 m, or a one inch group at 100 yards) or in angular measures (a milliradian or MOA group). Groups for rifles are traditionally shot at either 100 meters or 100 yards (91 m). At 100 yd a minute of arc equals 1.047 inches (26.6 mm), and the one MOA group (approximately 1/3 or 0.3 mil) is a traditional benchmark of accuracy....Fired from what distance? Are there different diameter of bullseye for different ranges, or are all 7"?
Yes, I have a decent concept of the procedure. But to determine anything about the MOA based on the known bullseye diameter, you have to know the distance it is being fired from.That is the question we should ask to the original poster or an OFB official. But they did mention that the trial was conducted by mha but they didnt mention where the trial was conducted? Or, either MHA's shooting range or ofb own backyard. However, a rifle accuracy is generally measured by looking at the dispersion of a number of shots fired at the same point of aim. An ideal group would be one where all shots land in a hole no larger than the diameter of a single bullet; this would indicate zero dispersion. The most common way of measuring groups then is to measure the edge to edge distance of the farthest holes, and subtract the bullet diameter, which gives the center to center or c-c measurement of the group. This can be expressed in linear measures (a 30 mm group at 100 m, or a one inch group at 100 yards) or in angular measures (a milliradian or MOA group). Groups for rifles are traditionally shot at either 100 meters or 100 yards (91 m). At 100 yd a minute of arc equals 1.047 inches (26.6 mm), and the one MOA group (approximately 1/3 or 0.3 mil) is a traditional benchmark of accuracy.
Here is a stamped steel and milled AK side by side.Eh. It's such shame what a product like that will become from their bad quality control. But maybe if this corporatisaton makes any difference... HAL made crap too, now look at Tejas fit & finish! These aint bad either.
View attachment 48105
NATO. Ghatak passed it years ago. This is the 7.62×51 on the right.
View attachment 48103
I think I read their bullseye is of 3 inch, to be shot from 50 m away. Someone else may confirm.
Ishapore Assault Rifle 7.62mm has successfully cleared the evaluation trials with flying colours. Trials conducted by Ministry of Home Affairs for its Armed Forces. Accuracy: 9 out of 10 on bulls eye! Reliability: more than 15000 rounds without stopage! Unbeatable! Salaam OFB.
do the israelis use corner shot? looks like a gimmick to me, havent seen them in use with any teir one units.Made in India 'Corner Shot Rifle' undergoes user trials by Army
Armament Research & Development Establishment (ARDE), Pune developed ” Trikaal ” Corner Shot Weapon System (CSWS) has in the recent past undergone user trials by by Rashtriya Rifles at the Pashan Range.
The lightweight rifle is made of composite materials and is multi-caliber, capable of firing both 5.56 and 7.62 rounds.
Two different versions of CSWS are being developed—one to mount and fire 9 mm pistol and the other as a platform for 40 mm Under Barrel Grenade Launcher developed by ARDE.
Once the evaluation trials are over, the rifle design would be offered to a public or private sector industry for manufacture as per the Government’s decision, and then made available to special forces like the National Security Guard (NSG), Army and police units.
The corner shot rifle, which enables a soldier to fire at 90 degrees or at an angle from behind a wall without facing a terrorist or a target was first developed in Israel . India is reported to have bought some rifles for anti-terror operations.
I know you have sone issues against Ghatak in favour of Trichy, but its foregrip may look bulky, but is made of plastic & actually has p-rails. The pistol grip is more ergonomic too.OFB put a heavy, unwieldy foregrip on the GHAATAK, fixed butt stock, an awful pistol grip and way too many rivets on the rifle to hold it in place.
This tells me two things :
1) Quality of steel used by OFB is not upto the mark and thus they had to resort to these shenanigans (too many rivets).
2) Lack of a proper finish on the rifle.
3) No cleaning rod provided but a cleaning rod holder is present on the barrel.
yeah the army didnt ask for a adjustable buttstock.I know you have sone issues against Ghatak in favour of Trichy, but its foregrip may look bulky, but is made of plastic & actually has p-rails. The pistol grip is more ergonomic too.
JVPC & 7.62×51 both has machined bodies. No idea why not used on Ghatak. Same for buttstock... Possibly requirment related reason.
We saw it at Defexpo. Nobody knows anything else.Guys, any chance if MCIWS (called AAR now I think) might be resurrected in light of the new AATMANIRBHAR announcement ? I really wish it is and atleast makes it to the para military (like jvpc). I have lost hope of IA ever supporting such things. And we must not blame IA alone for their lack of confidence in OFB after the bad quality of INSAS ! Atleast the AAR design should be given free to SSS or other pvt industry so that they can produce a quality rifle.
All foregrips are made of polymer today regardless of the rifle in question, this includes the INSAS.I know you have sone issues against Ghatak in favour of Trichy, but its foregrip may look bulky, but is made of plastic & actually has p-rails. The pistol grip is more ergonomic too.
JVPC & 7.62×51 both has machined bodies. No idea why not used on Ghatak. Same for buttstock... Possibly requirment related reason.
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