Behind The Lines - FN FAL

preview_player
Показать описание
Known as the 'right arm of the free world', it's one of the most widely used rifles in history - and the west's post-war answer to the soviet AK-47.

The FAL - or, to give its full name, the 'Fusil Automatique Léger', which translates to 'Light Automatic Rifle' - is a battle rifle, characterised by its selective fire ability and chambering for a full-powered rifle cartridge.
Battle Rifles can trace their heritage to the bolt-action rifles wielded in both world wars, such as the Mosin Nagant, Lee-Enfield and M1903 rifles, all of which saw ample use at the start of the 20th century.
It was World War 2 that marked a turning point in firearms history, where the power and long-range accuracy of the bolt action was supplanted by the more versatile automatic rifles.
With the power of a full-sized cartridge, and the automatic capability of a sub-machine gun, by the middle of the 20th century the battle rifle was king.

By modern standards, the FAL is a hefty weapon - modern assault rifles fire smaller cartridges and make extensive use of polymers to reduce weight - while the FAL is a full-size rifle of an entirely steel construction.
With a barrel 21 inches long, the overall weapon length is 43 inches - a little over a metre - and some 20% longer than a typical modern assault rifle.
The FAL's length is accompanied with commensurate mass - weighing in at 4.3 kilograms unloaded, 50% heavier than the modern M4 carbine.
Despite its bulk compared to today's weapons, compared to its bolt-action predecessors, the FAL offered greater firepower with few downsides for the evolving face of infantry combat.

The weapon was developed by Belgium-based Fabrique Nationale d'Herstal, or FN.
FN were known for their work with American arms designer, John Browning - a man responsible for many key firearm designs of the early 20th century.
It was his successor as Head Designer at FN - Dieudonné Saive - who would later finish his Hi-Power handgun design, and go on to design the FN Model 1949.
The FN-49 was an able semi-automatic rifle, similar to the Soviet SVT-40 or later SKS - but would be one overshadowed by his later work.
Some aspects of its design would live on, however - as Saive went on to design the FAL.

It was the automatic weapons fielded by the Nazis that prompted such a shift in infantry weapons - the Sturmgewehr 44 paved the way for the development of post-war rifles, and can be considered the first modern assault rifle.
The FN FAL was, in fact, originally intended to fire the Sturmgewehr's 7.92x33mm Kurz ammunition - and in 1947 the first prototype was finished, firing that very same cartridge.
The Kurz round is an intermediate one, and as such the early FALs were true assault rifles, and not battle rifles.
The British took notice of FN's new rifle, and encouraged FN to build a prototype in the .280 British calibre, an experimental round designed in response to the German's Kurz cartridge.
It performed well - but met with opposition from the US, who insisted that anything sub-30-cal was ballistically insufficient, and instead proposed a new .30 Light Rifle cartridge.
With the dawn of NATO, and standardisation across member states looming, the choice of calibre was a politically charged one - and one which would shape the next half-century of small arms design.

A deal was struck between UK prime minister Churchill and US President Truman - the UK would agree to standardise on the US 30-cal round, if the US would adopt the FAL as their service rifle of choice.
Not everything transpired quite to plan - while the US .30 cal round would eventually become the standard NATO rifle round, the US would go their own way and instead adopt the M14 rifle.
Despite this, the FN FAL chambered in the US .30 Light Rifle calibre would be adopted by most other NATO members.
The final design was introduced in 1951, and production started in 1953.

The cartridge would be standardised as the 7.62 by 51 millimetre NATO round, and today remains the rifle cartridge of choice for modern western military forces.
The FAL's typical magazine size is 20 rounds, although variants between 5 and 30 rounds exist.
When fired full-auto, the FAL will put between 650 and 700 rounds per minute down-range - although with its powerful cartridge the heavy recoil will tend to make the rifle drift off target quickly.
With a muzzle velocity of around 840 metres-per-second, and a projectile weight of 150 grains - the FAL by no means lacks power, imparting nearly twice as much kinetic energy as most intermediate cartridges.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

This is the birth of Ahoy’s “Iconic weapons” series.

WPePeR
Автор

the quality here is haunting. this puts almost all of youtube channels to shame, with their incessant yapping and vapid and inane gameplay as background.
there is ahoy, and there is noise, a lot of it.

omnaysayer
Автор

Imagine how above and beyond this channel was back in 2011 in terms of quality.

lewisdavila
Автор

What a great synopsis of an old friend! I served as a troop leader in a Canadian light armoured reconnaissance regiment through the late 70s to mid 80s. Though the Sterling SMG was our primary personal weapon, the FN C1 (semi-automatic, 20 round mag) armed our assault troops, with one FN C3 (fully automatic, 30 round mag) per platoon. Following the doctrine of "every man first and foremost a rifleman", the FN was also issued to every officer cadet during officer training, regardless of branch or arm. That's where I came to love that weighty s.o.b.. Once you got over the mule-kick recoil, you began to appreciate its beauty and craftsmanship. Once you'd slogged it through the field, you REALLY appreciated its ruggedness and reliability. Great accuracy, range, and punch. When you hit something, it would go down and stay down. The C3 was a little more problematic. The longer 30 round magazine dug into the ground, making it difficult to elevate the barrel despite a folding bipod. A beefier barrel, added to deal with full auto issues, added even more to the weight. An ammo vest carried six spare 30 round mags across the chest. As the little guy in my training platoon I naturally was chosen as our C3 gunner, so I can attest to how bloody difficult it is to make a mag change when you're laying on the ammo and trying to wriggle as low as you go! I used to burn through mags just to get lighter! But nonetheless I always scrounged a C1 for my crew, regardless of the vehicle we were in. You never need one until you need it badly...

rickmitchell
Автор

Even all the way back then he was still sounding crazy good. I don’t think I’ve ever seen editing this good either from this era.

xX_thegetaway_Xx
Автор

*_Everything_* that Ahoy releases is of utmost quality.

KC-bgth
Автор

The weapon is so effective, the enemy fn fals

baker
Автор

in the late 50s, Batistas Cuba was starting to purchase FN FAL's to replace their US supplied M1 Garand's, and were used by Castros Cuba until they started replacing them with AK47s in the 60s, so its sort of accurate for Cubans to use FALs

alaskanbullworm
Автор

I know this vid is 7 years old, but man, you’ve never lost your quality. Netflix oughta give you a show or two.

gringostarr
Автор

Pity he never came back to this series. But then I mean, Iconic arms kinda replaces it.

delvik
Автор

The editing and pure quality combined with quantity is fucken amazing in your videos. Love them

leglocksandcrabrides
Автор

It's good to see someone doing the FAL justice... for how awesome a weapon it is, it's upsetting to see how "forgotten" it's become.

angrypredator
Автор

The FN FAL, the quintessential battle rifle. Great gun.

filipeamaral
Автор

Loved the FN FAL in both Black Ops and MW2, this video made my day. Cant wait to see more of these vids!

mjurdy
Автор

Such a cool way of presenting! Really reminds me of Call of Duty 2's pre-mission screens (which I don't think is coincidental)

sebastiaanvanwijk
Автор

This series goes so in depth. What a great youtuber.

astrobrad
Автор

I spend a year with the G3 (M 75 in Denmark) in my youth when conscripted. It's a good rifle and I remember it fondly. But the one time when I got to shoot the FAL it was just a in a different league. The feel of solidity and quality I got from the real steel FAL was just so different from the sheeth metal G3. Everything just worked more smoothly, and it was incredible accurate. Fantastic rifle.

They both kick like a mule, though. :D

LarS
Автор

Actually the Cuban's did use the FAL for a little while.

desertoasistx
Автор

I love how the us basically went “we ain’t takin nothing if it’s not atleast a 30cal. Any thing else is a pee shooter” then after they made a 308 they switched to 556

Bigjohnson-
Автор

So this is Iconic arms before Iconic arms?

Fritzadood