Message from @Paladin308

Discord ID: 527386128483876885


2018-12-26 07:21:26 UTC  

no pressure system, not neccesarily a need for the primer in cartridges

2018-12-26 07:21:31 UTC  

Realistically, inconsistent ammunition is not a significant problem

2018-12-26 07:21:34 UTC  

well because ammo costs money

2018-12-26 07:21:37 UTC  

a fair bit these days as well

2018-12-26 07:22:04 UTC  

Inconsistent ammo introduces a whole lot more problems than just reliability

2018-12-26 07:22:18 UTC  

I've been thinking about buying a .22 rifle just so I can afford to go target shooting without spending a fortune

2018-12-26 07:22:18 UTC  

i dont personally see that much use in the inconsistent ammo thing im just pointing out it could do that way better than a gas system

2018-12-26 07:22:40 UTC  

It might be able to, but it doesn't matter

2018-12-26 07:22:53 UTC  

sure, so moving on it does away with the gas system and requires less fiddling

2018-12-26 07:23:03 UTC  

ammo is consistent so it takes the exact same time more or less every time to go from ignition to extraction

2018-12-26 07:23:18 UTC  

and you just unlock it at the right time

2018-12-26 07:23:20 UTC  

I've built my own guns, the gas system didn't need any fiddling

2018-12-26 07:23:29 UTC  

you mean like

2018-12-26 07:23:32 UTC  

from scratch?

2018-12-26 07:23:34 UTC  

machine the parts

2018-12-26 07:23:36 UTC  

heat treat

2018-12-26 07:23:38 UTC  

et cetera

2018-12-26 07:23:41 UTC  

most likely they bought a kit

2018-12-26 07:23:46 UTC  

Haven't machined my own, yet

2018-12-26 07:23:51 UTC  

because my understanding is there is generally years of work going into a new design

2018-12-26 07:24:11 UTC  

There's years of work going into a new design regardless

2018-12-26 07:24:38 UTC  

Shaving a bit off of the development timeline isn't that big of a deal

2018-12-26 07:25:10 UTC  

It's more important that the end product adequately meets the requirements

2018-12-26 07:25:31 UTC  

Which typically means some significant benefit over existing standards

2018-12-26 07:25:53 UTC  

It doesn't matter how quickly you can develop something if it isn't any better than what's already on the market

2018-12-26 07:26:38 UTC  

well, you could offer a system that in principle is able to be re-engineered relatively quickly to fire new kinds of ammo

2018-12-26 07:26:56 UTC  

And who has such a requirement?

2018-12-26 07:27:02 UTC  

it wouldnt remove all of the difficulty, but in terms of getting it to time extraction properly it would be easy

2018-12-26 07:27:07 UTC  

what types of ammo are you talking about

2018-12-26 07:27:10 UTC  

like rail gun shit?

2018-12-26 07:27:10 UTC  

potentially a lot of people, things are starting to move a lot faster

2018-12-26 07:27:17 UTC  

no i mean more like

2018-12-26 07:27:22 UTC  

just any change in the ammo characteristics whatsoever

2018-12-26 07:27:30 UTC  

which is currently not so well supported

2018-12-26 07:27:37 UTC  

such as what? aerodynamics?

2018-12-26 07:27:50 UTC  

Because changing the buffer weight on an AR is a massively complex procedure

2018-12-26 07:27:52 UTC  

just different pressure curves is what im referencing, whatever might cause that

2018-12-26 07:28:15 UTC  

hey i want a new gun from you guys that shoots this new bullet

2018-12-26 07:28:33 UTC  

ok we will start making the new barrels which is now the only hard part

2018-12-26 07:28:57 UTC  

like how the army wants to go to a 6.8mm gpmg

2018-12-26 07:28:59 UTC  

what do you believe bringing electronic guns to the market would improve upon exactly? guns today are pretty straightforward. I feel like adding electricity to the mix would make things way too complicated and allow for more faults