GatorFarmer
Member
It made the paper. The first several companies of recruits are already training with A4s rather than A2s. Starting in October, the new fiscal year's opening, all recruits will train with the A4s. For those that don't know, the M16A2 is a largely retired weapon these days, the Army issues M4 carbines and the Marines issue a limited number of carbines and larger numbers of M16A4 rifles.
The A4 is, long story short, an M16 with a flat top upper to assist in mounting optics and railed handguards. The recruits have to learn a few new movements in their manual of arms, since it is more difficult to get a good slap noise on the handguards of the A4 apparently.
Marksmanship training with the A4s will still be with iron sights, so they'll have carry handles on them during training.
It's strange to see the last of the A2s go. They'd gotten to be a familiar sight, seeing them being carried in parade formations and listening to the pop pop pop of them on the range each morning. I've one of the earliest Colt commercial (semi auto only) rifles that had A2 features mixed with A1 features that left the factory during the transition.
It's now a historic weapon I suppose, just like the Garand, the M1 carbine, and other past military small arms. It probably never got as much fan fare, and M4 style carbines likely sell in much great numbers, but untold thousands of shooters probably fired a rifle for the first time in military training with an A2 in the past quarter century and thousands of the commercial variants of the rifle are used in rifle matches and for sport and recreation.
Seems like only yesterday that I was a boy and the gun magazines had long articles about the "new" M16 variant, which was the A2. Now it is being retired from one of its last duties, that of training new shooters.
The A4 is, long story short, an M16 with a flat top upper to assist in mounting optics and railed handguards. The recruits have to learn a few new movements in their manual of arms, since it is more difficult to get a good slap noise on the handguards of the A4 apparently.
Marksmanship training with the A4s will still be with iron sights, so they'll have carry handles on them during training.
It's strange to see the last of the A2s go. They'd gotten to be a familiar sight, seeing them being carried in parade formations and listening to the pop pop pop of them on the range each morning. I've one of the earliest Colt commercial (semi auto only) rifles that had A2 features mixed with A1 features that left the factory during the transition.
It's now a historic weapon I suppose, just like the Garand, the M1 carbine, and other past military small arms. It probably never got as much fan fare, and M4 style carbines likely sell in much great numbers, but untold thousands of shooters probably fired a rifle for the first time in military training with an A2 in the past quarter century and thousands of the commercial variants of the rifle are used in rifle matches and for sport and recreation.
Seems like only yesterday that I was a boy and the gun magazines had long articles about the "new" M16 variant, which was the A2. Now it is being retired from one of its last duties, that of training new shooters.