March 30th, 2006, 01:19 | #16 |
Captain Awesome
|
i would say the g36 for its compact and sturdy body. the lack of snap points. sigs are agood choice the have a robust structure.
|
March 30th, 2006, 01:29 | #17 |
The full metal CA M15A4 has been my trusty weapon. Haven't dropped it, but certainly been with me through my lil trip in the forest making my own trail.
|
|
March 30th, 2006, 01:36 | #18 | |
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Waterloo, kitchener, guelph, mississauga, north east toronto
|
have to agree with Harley about the P90..For a plastic gun
in the past year I've -landed on my p90 from a drop of about 5 ft into a trench (FR hill 3322 trench). During that fall it also was smashed quite hard into the wood posts of the trench. -Dropped in onto a concrete floor and watched it bounce not once but twice (the butt plate popped off on the second bounce but was not damaged and was quickly put back into place). -Smashed it into numerous buildings/structures at FR/DOps/SgtSplatters/renegades/PBnation in the past 12 months -played with it in a thunderstorm where every component went from dry to soaking wet (Including me) and was still fully operational. only issue I've had was a BB getting stuck next to the nozzle one time killing my FPS ...(Banged the side of gun several times to release said BB)
__________________
Quote:
|
|
March 30th, 2006, 07:15 | #19 |
Delete.
|
|
March 30th, 2006, 07:20 | #20 |
So he likes the chunky stuff eh? M249 Maybe?
|
|
March 30th, 2006, 07:44 | #21 |
G36c, solid backbone and the stalk will not crack if it bumps into a tree...mine has bumped from the car roof to the road on several occassions only to suffer a little grazing TM's G36c is a no wiggle, no shack simple but tough replica of the real deal which, by the way, is considered the same in the real life application of this weapon...nuff said!
__________________
D.O.W. -Haggis- MEDIC !!! bring the preperation H !! Give a man a fish, he can feed his family for a day. Give a man a fishing rod, he can feed his family for a year. Give a man a gun, he can execute his family, fish when he wants, and eat all he catches. "guide to being a bastard" HAGGIS 1998 |
|
March 30th, 2006, 08:17 | #22 |
TM AK-47 all the way...ran into trees, walls,etc,etc.
Worth every single penny of my investment to install a CA metal body and a Guarder wood kit on it. Still my 'go to' gun after two years and fried over 20 thousand rounds of BBs later. |
|
March 30th, 2006, 08:45 | #23 |
Guarder AK steel kits! I have one AKS-74 and I'm positive that If I fell on it I would hurt myself and the AK would be fine. Yes its expensive but its STEEL!! Somethings are worth the extra dough.
|
|
March 30th, 2006, 08:57 | #24 |
Guest
|
obiously, full metal is the way to go.
as usual, Ill recommend the ICS AK74m not full metal, G36 |
March 30th, 2006, 09:37 | #25 |
A Total Bastard
|
RK-104
I have yet to do a review on my new RK104 from G&G. It will be forthcoming.
As anyone who was at the Wasaga season opener can attest, I am a pretty hard driver, and that day was my first day out with the RK. I don't buy guns to resell. I consider them tools and treat them as such, with high expectations. I don't coddle them, and scratches are abundant on all my gear. A partial list of what I did to it follows: - I fell on it from kneeling - I jammed the barrel in the dirt several times - I smacked the foregrip/barrel off a tree as I was crawling with it cradled in my arms - I dropped it from waist hight onto a concrete floor. Landed flat on it's left side. - I rolled on it when I fell on approach to cover. - I went through 1800 rounds total that day, 99% all of it on full auto. - It got rained on fairly well at the end of the day I weigh 240. If I didn't break it during that day, it aint gonna break. Shoots 320 out of the box with 8.4V battery. Anderson and Anderson has em in stock I believe for $535 plus shipping and tax.
__________________
VINCITE OMNIMODO
|
March 30th, 2006, 10:53 | #26 |
Weakness in the ICS or any MP5 ver2 mechbox related design is that the fore-assembly (i.e. cocking tube forward) can break off relatively easily in the right circumstances at the arms that join the front end to the upper receiver. Both Vee and I have suffered this on our ICS bodies and I had to hunt down replacements from butcher sales.
|
|
March 30th, 2006, 13:19 | #27 |
Almost anything Classic Army is a great choice. The local indoor arena, Xtreme Tactics, rents out M15A4s and MP5A2s and have been running the same guns for over two years. Low serial numbers, EARLY models. They take more abuse in one week than most people put on their gun in a year. Sure stuff's broken on them like stocks and triggers, internals wear out, but all of them are using the same receivers they started with.
It's little surprise that my entire current arsenal, save my gas weapons, are ALL Classic Army. 8) |
|
March 30th, 2006, 13:39 | #28 |
Delete.
|
|
March 30th, 2006, 14:19 | #29 |
Try the G&P M4. Good gun. And Greylocks, use the search button :lol: j/k
sorry, had to say it
__________________
Waiting responsibly since early 2005. Of course I've got all my ducks in a line, it's easier to shoot 'em that way! - me |
|
March 30th, 2006, 19:01 | #30 |
Delete.
|
|
|
Bookmarks |
Thread Tools | |
|
|