Type 95 Assault Rifle II

Insignius

Junior Member
Re: Type 95 assault rifle

The QBZ95-1 fixed this issue with the selector switch. But yeah, before that, as the as chief designer of the QBZ95 complained, its development was very time-contrained due to political reasons. But having the selector switch at the left side on rear isnt exclusively Chinese, as the OC-14 Groza is even worse: Its selector switch is placed at the butt on the right side, making quick manipulation impossible.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Re: Type 95 assault rifle

but the OC14 was and is a special issue weapon never meant for regular issue to regular troops well type95 is
 

MwRYum

Major
Re: Type 95 assault rifle

as the OC-14 Groza is even worse: Its selector switch is placed at the butt on the right side, making quick manipulation impossible.

That's a different thing, OC-14 Groza built from the AKS-74U with over 75% commonality between the two, QBZ-95 is a radical departure from the things Chinese have ever made.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Well mace it is nice. A aimpoint micro H1 gunsight with a 3x power magnifier behind it. The fore grip is a surefire m900 series combination grip weapon light and possibly laser to. However now I have to take the wind from your sails. You see the magazines at the bottom of the pictures and loaded in the receiver? Magpul Emags only available in 5.56x45mm Nato. Its a Qbz97 not a 95.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
And No name gets a cookie! Lots of magazine over the years have tried to allow easy estimates of how many rounds are left, this has occasionally lead to disasters the French Shoshana of world war one for example had openings in the magazine so the shooter could see his rounds. On the battle field however these openings only caused problems as debris found easy access to the sensitive parts of the gun. Some world war two era weapons used mechanically operated round counters. Even today a few magazine makers do the same. The Styer AUG and Sig 550 both introduced a almost transparent polymer magazine.and today a number of makers around the world make those to. But it not only lets you know it lets everyone else know to. Its also not as strong as a non transparent polymer. So some makers make windows to see at a glance just what they have left.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
And No name gets a cookie! Lots of magazine over the years have tried to allow easy estimates of how many rounds are left, this has occasionally lead to disasters the French Shoshana of world war one for example had openings in the magazine so the shooter could see his rounds. On the battle field however these openings only caused problems as debris found easy access to the sensitive parts of the gun. Some world war two era weapons used mechanically operated round counters. Even today a few magazine makers do the same. The Styer AUG and Sig 550 both introduced a almost transparent polymer magazine.and today a number of makers around the world make those to. But it not only lets you know it lets everyone else know to. Its also not as strong as a non transparent polymer. So some makers make windows to see at a glance just what they have left.

What I found would be easier is to add two or three tracer rounds towards the end of your magazine to let you know either you ran out of rounds or have a few left in the magazine (depending on how you load them).
 
Top