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Negev 7: Israeli Scales up to a 7.62 NATO Machine Gun
The Israeli Negev machine gun had a rather long development cycle, beginning in 1985 but not seeing final completion and issue until 1997. Once on the market, it proved to be a pretty successful weapon, used by the Israeli military and also a number of export client around the world. In 2012, IMI...
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Sterling vs Uzi: An On The Range Comparison
Sterling Mk.4 / L2A3: the ultimate angry toob. Uzi: the ultimate angry box.
Mike owns a Sterling and Eric @neutral_af owns an Uzi. Both open bolt, both blocked at semi. What do they think of each other's gats? What if we throw a closed bolt Sterling Mk.6 into the mix? And for a final compariso...
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Development of the Uzi Family: Standard, Mini, and Micro
The Uzi was originally designed in the 1950s, and it was on the technological cutting edge at the time. The stamped receiver, telescoping bolt, and compact magazine-in-grip layout made it an inexpensive and effective weapon. Its sedate 600 round/minute rate of fire helped as well, making it easy ...
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MAGAL: A Galil in .30 Carbine for the Israeli Police
In the early 1990s, Israeli Military Industries (IMI) developed the Galil MAR (Micro Assault Rifle) and the MAGAL at the same time. Both were intended to be very compact rifles, with the MAR in 5.56mm and the MAGAL specifically for police in .30 Carbine. The MAGAL offered the same handling and er...
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Gilboa Snake: Is the Double-AR Really so Dumb?
The Gilboa Snake is an Israeli rifle (from the same designer behind the Cornershot) that essentially combines two standard ARs into a single unit. In its civilian configuration it has two of every part - barrels, bolts (mirrored, so one ejects left and the other right), triggers, buffers, etc. In...
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Hammerli FK-31: Diopter Competition Rifles for the Haganah
In 1949, Israel was still fighting its war of independence, and purchasing arms internationally was difficult to do. The recently-formalized IDF wanted sniper rifles, and looked to Hammerli in Switzerland for a variant of the K-31 straight-pull bolt action action. Two different models were purcha...
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Micro UZI
In this episode Vic examines an Israeli Micro UZI submachine gun, chambered in 9x19mm, made by Israel Weapon Industries (IWI). The Micro UZI was the first of the family of Weapons to be developed from a semi auto, not full auto gun. Check out our website https://armourersbench.com/2018/04/23/the-...
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Cutaway IWI Tavor TAR-21
Last week Matt attended SHOT Show 2020 and spotted a pair of Tavor cutaway demonstration guns at the IWI booth. Here's a quick video, put together on the fly, looking at the cutaway guns and showing how they illustrate the Tavor's working parts and operation. Check out the accompanying blog for s...
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Uzis in Ukraine
The iconic submachine gun has been seen with Ukrainian forces on a number of occasions over the last few months. In this video we look at some sightings of the Uzi in Ukraine. Be sure to check out our accompanying article for this video here - http://armourersbench.com/2023/05/14/uzi-in-ukraine/ ...
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Ukraine’s Tavors [Fort-221 / Fort-224]
In 2008 Ukrainian state enterprise RPC Fort entered into a partnership with Israel's IWI to offer Tavor rifles - the Fort-221 and Fort-224 have since been seen during the fighting. Usual caveat that I'm terrible at pronouncing things applies! Be sure to check out our accompanying article for this...
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The Galil & its Inventor Yisrael Galili
In this episode Vic takes a look at an Israeli Galil ARM and tells us about the time he met its inventor, Yisrael Galili. This episode also features a section from one of the original media demonstrations of the Galil when it was first unveiled back in the early 70s. Check out Vic's accompanying ...
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Galil ARM to 500yds: Practical Accuracy
Watch latest videos, sometimes even early releases! Sign up for the newsletter: http://eepurl.com/hkbJYn [or] slateblackindustries (dot) com 👉 Newsletter The Galil ARM 5.56 is perhaps one of the most iconic rifles to come out of the 60's. Rugged, dependable, but heavy. Despite only being equipped...
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IWI Tavor TAR21 to 500yds: Practical Accuracy
Watch latest videos, sometimes even early releases! Sign up for the newsletter: http://eepurl.com/hkbJYn [or] slateblackindustries (dot) com 👉 Newsletter The Tavor was introduced into the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) in 2001 as their next generation service rifle to phase out aging M16 and Galil r...
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Galil Ace 32 (7.62x39) + Primary Arms 2x ACSS to 500yds: Practical Accuracy
Watch latest videos, sometimes even early releases! Sign up for the newsletter 🗞️https://tinyurl.com/9HoleReviews or https://tinyurl.com/SlateBlack In 2008, IWI released the Galil ACE. A complete overhaul of the old Galil family of rifles to bring the series into the millennium... this was 3 year...
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Israeli Spy/Assassination Pistol - Beretta Model 71/ [ Mad Lads ] Mossad stories
Watch latest videos, sometimes even early releases! Sign up for the newsletter 🗞️https://tinyurl.com/9HoleReviews or https://tinyurl.com/SlateBlack In the 60's and 70's, Israeli intelligence services, the Mossad, El Al sky marshals, and the Tier 1 counter-terror unit Sayeret Matkal had one thing ...
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Book Review: The Uzi Submachine Gun Examined, by David Gaboury
"The UZI Submachine Gun: Examined" is a newly published book this year by David Gaboury - long time owner and operator of the uzitalk.com forum. Until now there has not really been any substantive written reference material on the Uzi, but Gaboury has certainly changed that!
The Uzi has not r...
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Shooting the Negev LMG
After yesterday's look at the history and mechanical details of the Israeli Negev LMG, today we are taking it out the the range.
It certainly is a very pleasant experience to shoot! The recoil is very light, although not as light as in a true constant-recoil system like the new Knight's LAMG. ...
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Hadar II: A Ban-Era Commercial Galil
The Hadar II is an Israeli commercial market version of the Galil, chambered for the 7.62 NATO cartridge. Specifically, it is a copy of the Israeli military Galatz marksman’s rifle, which was semiautomatic only and in 7.62mm caliber (as opposed to the standard issue Galil rifles, which were 5.56m...
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Israeli Light-Barrel FAL (from DS Arms)
Israel was one of the very First Nations to adopt the FN FAL rifle - after Canada but before many actual NATO nations. Israel made its first purchases of the rifles in 1955, and delayed them almost immediately in the 1956 Suez Crisis. The first rifles were wholly made by FN in Belgium, but over t...
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Israeli SP66: A Modern Mauser Sniper
Around 1980, Israeli purchased a batch of modern Mauser SP66 precision rifles to supplement or replace their stocks of M14 and Mauser K98k sniper rifles. This new rifle was based on the Mauser 66 sporting rifle action, and had been developed by Mauser in the 1970s to meet the new demand for serio...
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The Uzi Submachine Gun: Excellent or Overrated?
The Israeli Uzi has become a truly iconic submachine gun through both its military use and its Hollywood stunts - but how effective is it really?
I found this fully automatic Uzi Model A to be actually rather better than I had expected. Despite the uncomfortable sharp metal stock, the rate of ...
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The Israeli Galil
The Galil was the result of a program to replace the FAL in Israeli service after its somewhat disappointing performance in the Six-Day War of 1967. Israel found that while the FAL had shown reliability problems in the desert, AK rifles ran just fine despite often being badly neglected. In an ini...
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Action Arms Semiauto Uzi Carbines (Model A and Model B)
Although it was adopted by the Israeli military in the 1950s, the Uzi submachine gun did not generate much interest in the United States until the 1980s. The guns were used in limited numbers by the CIA covertly in Vietnam (and elsewhere), and also by various security elements of the US governmen...
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An Israeli LMG, Part II: The 8mm Dror
Today we continue the story of the Dror. Shortly after production of the .303 pattern guns began, the directive came down that the gun was to be redesigned for 8mm Mauser ammunition. Israeli supplies of British munitions were quickly being replaced by material from Czechoslovakia, and the Dror pr...