QBZ,191, look up QBU191 big difference with the barrel and handguard.Alright, but I was asking if it was the QBZ or the QBU.
QBZ,191, look up QBU191 big difference with the barrel and handguard.Alright, but I was asking if it was the QBZ or the QBU.
That’s very high, but could be explained by a lack of a civilian market. Manufacturers are kept alive by these contracts. The us pays around 600 for an m4 from what I understand, based off a contract from 120000 costing 77 mil. It also requires re-tooling which is a massive cost.Do we have any idea on the cost of a QBZ-191? I saw a post on Chinese social media saying that a QBZ-191 was more than 5000USD equivalent, which seems a little high if its not including any kind of optics.
5000 USD equivalent would be pure graft, and an oversight committee would immediately purge whoever worked the procurement for that.That’s very high, but could be explained by a lack of a civilian market. Manufacturers are kept alive by these contracts. The us pays around 600 for an m4 from what I understand, based off a contract from 120000 costing 77 mil. It also requires re-tooling which is a massive cost.
Do we have any idea on the cost of a QBZ-191? I saw a post on Chinese social media saying that a QBZ-191 was more than 5000USD equivalent, which seems a little high if its not including any kind of optics.
Preach, brother. Where did you read about all this stuff?I would like to comment on the coating issue. DLC isn't feasible for mass production like nitriding(there are different kinds), anodizing or chroming (barrel). The process is expensive and would cost much more and would take more time per batch. Cerakote or other analogue is also time intensive. Rifle has a lot of nooks and crannies that need to be painted, so it's not like painting flat pieces. Robots can do it, but it's not fast as nitriding or anodizing.
You also have to take into account (especially today), how those paints look under night vision. Do they shine like crazy? One of the good things about the, "100 colors of FDE" rifles, is that they brake silhouette under nods.
All coatings will chip and scratch if you use your rifle in harsh conditions (one of examples would be, training in prone on gravelly terrain). I would say like the meme, "Nyet rifle is fine". Maybe improve the anodizing somewhat or use a better aluminum (I'm not sure what the body is made of, I'm guessing 7075), but generally don't see the issue with the patina of the rifle. If it works and is reliable, I think it's a good mix of compromises (like all rifles are).
This was false information by the way about 500 USD tops.Do we have any idea on the cost of a QBZ-191? I saw a post on Chinese social media saying that a QBZ-191 was more than 5000USD equivalent, which seems a little high if its not including any kind of optics.
I'm interested in military equipment manufacturing (and generally manufacturing). So I've read about these things all over.Preach, brother. Where did you read about all this stuff?
yea I figured, the number seemed way too high, maybe they wrote 38,000rmb instead of 3800 lol.This was false information by the way about 500 USD tops.