Rock Island auctions expect the bidding to start at $3,000.00. This is not the purchase price. This is the money Rock Island will pay you to take this weapon away.
Being a Brit and ex military, b4 the SA80 arrived, I've always wondered about the horror stories of the design. in one video you've answered so many questions. Thank you. So glad to be a patron, worth every penny/cent.
I remember the first time I saw the L85 in S.T.A.L.K.E.R. about 10 years ago. It was really interesting looking compared to all the AKs so I picked it up. Jammed after every mag. Never used it again in any of the games from the series till this day, unless I really had to. I thought it was just some game balance thing. Imagine my surprise when I found out that it was also so bad in real life.
Tbh the reason it jammed when you were playing S.T.A.L.K.E.R. it was because the durability was super low. That happened with every gun in STALKER when the durability was low. It's not like it was jamming because of internal issues with actual gun in a videogame.
@@e2rqey if you look in the game files though, the L85's durability (item condition loss per bullet fired) in particular was much worse than many other weapons, which after watching this, I can certainly believe to be fair😬 (Though the A2 was a thing by the time STALKER began development in the early 2000s, so it's a little unfair, maybe)
The lore perspective of the A1s in the Zone is that they're not merely surplus -- they found their way into the Zone because not even the black market wanted them! These particular examples are meant to be shot to within an inch of their lives and even the Zone's residents avoid them if they have the choice.
Lets take a squad of 10 soldiers with 30 round magazines. With critical MRBF in the 1000 range, after everyone has fired 3-4 full magazines the chances are good that one of them is out of the fight for good because his gun just broke. If you add the non-critical malfunctions then at any given time someone is also out because they are field stripping their guns to fix something. All this while a firefight is going on.
Stick and a knife? That's closer to reality than you think. During WWII, there was a shortage of rifles in the UK. They made a quarter of a million "pikes" by welding obsolete bayonets to metal rods and started to issue them to the Home Guard before everyone realized that it was dumb as fuck.
Paul Alexander why waste money on sticks and knives? The L85 would make a great club. When it shattered, it would cause additional damage from shrapnel.
This actually made me feel ill when I thought of the pols and bureaucrats responsible for sending British soldiers into combat with this. Paying a huge design committee with zero experience then cutting cost on materials. I actually hate them!
@@lanceluthor6660 welcome to British politics my friend the army's been on a pay freeze for like the past 15 years which means there pay hasn't been adjusted for inflation so a lot them are having to live in army accommodation now because they cant afford to rent a house plus thanks to the twats in charge our army is slowly falling to the way side a good example is the fact the keep reducing the number of troops we have and reducing the number of vehicles we have for the armed forces
@@adanzavala4801 You have no idea of the incomprehensible hardship we have to endure, deciding which car to take for a drive on one of the small number of weekends with nice weather is just hell.
Loving the mental gymnastics required to make these things pass spec. "Oh absolutely, the dispersion at 300 yards is well within spec (when measured at the muzzle)"
As a former British Soldier- You speak the 100% truth....they knew it was crap...but still made us use it, but blamed us for not cleaning our weapons correctly......the team that authorised the A1 want shooting with a A2 or A3! as the A1 would jam twice during every mag
Great episode and an excellent look at how a design program can go horribly wrong. This should be required viewing in courses on design and engineering failure.
"Redefine the meaning of failure" It must be said, these weapons did manage to define a whole new level of failure where service weapons are concerned.
Thank you, Ian, for putting so much effort into your videos. Your channel is a treasure trove of information. In my eyes, you're preserving history, and in such a way that it never loses entertainment value. Also, the occasional quips and humor are awesome. Keep up the great work!
great video, with a thorough, and balanced, explanation of where it all went wrong. your SA80 videos would make an excellent "cautionary" case study for any engineering student.
I think I am starting to appreciate why specialist engineers exist. The knowledge of guys like Jim Sullivan is what makes a design work. I wish there was a resource like this channel in my field of engineering :P.
Gems like the description of the problems with a badly-designed feedpath are the reasons I'm subscribed to this channel. This was extremely interesting.
Ian, I just wanna say I'm loving this video serious. I love following the story of a rifle through development and hope you do more serious like this in the future.
I hope Ian spend some time on the 21st century versions of this gun. The version in service today (made almost entirely of re-designed parts made by different companies) actually works really well. In typical British fashion it only took 30 years to get it to work as it should.
This series of videos are fascinating because of the access Ian has got to the development weapons. It is excellent tail on how NOT to develop a weapon. I have shot both the army SLR (FAL) and SA80. I ran 400 rounds through the SA80, the last few hundred on full auto, which was fun
Growing up in England in the 80's the propaganda was the Britain had the best army in the world. I'm sure I boys were the best (I mean it's our army moto) but this "gun" is an absolute shameful example of British red tape. Truly, truly shameful to go from the likes of the Brown Bess, Baker Rifle, Matrini-Henry, Lee-Metford and the Lee Enfield et al in to this shower of shit
This video in particular brought me close to tears (of rage or frustration, or something), because I know three gentlemen, commissioned officers of my Regiment, who were complicit in the process of preventing a potentially decent weapon meeting even the lowest possible standards of reliability in combat. Time - Cost - Quality. Good-Fast-Cheap Pick your two. You can't have all three. We didn't even aim for two out of three. Just wanted it cheap - 'cuz that's how you make the leap from front-line officer, to 1-Star and above.
British procurement incompetence writ large. Underpinned by the paucity of knowledge of firearms in UK military circles. Superbly good work Ian. Any chance of doing a similarly penetrating talking head segment on the 2 new Queen Elizabeth class carriers, drilling into the choice of conventional propulsion over nuclear, no catapults on an angled deck carrier, the choice of the stymied, expensive and complicated VTOL F35A over cats and traps F35C Naval variant.
This is a compelling series of videos on British bullpup design rifles. Thank you Ian. I visited RSAF Enfield in the early 1970s and as a teenager thought it highly technologically advanced. Thinking back now though, I realize that the technology was not that far advanced from Victorian gunsmithing. It was definitely run(ning) down by 71 or 72
I don't mean to kiss ass here but I am pleased your channels doing so well, you do a lot of research and put a lot of substance in to your videos unlike many popular channels. It gives me hope!
The Minor, Serious, and Critical malfunctions/failures is actually quite a reasonable idea, and would allow greater nuance in analysis of the data/determining the viability of the weapon. Of course when you mess it all up with bureaucracy, it becomes a nightmare.
This story of the development of the SA80 has been like an out of control IT project that had incredible promise but was doomed from the get go. Then, management just kept piling money into it hoping it'll eventually work itself out. Except, people die of course.
Ahhh Britain... the land of quick fixes and doing a half-ass job in the name of saving money, even though it will inevitably lead to more problems and higher costs in the long run than if you'd invested in a little bit of quality at the start. The sad thing is, this is how we build our roads, railways, schools, hospitals and houses. Great vid as usual Ian :-)
I've really been enjoying this series. I grew up in Manchester UK which is a fairly short drive from Leeds. I used to love visiting the Armouries. Keep up the good work Ian.
This is quintessential British bureaucratic organisation at its _finest._ Even during WW2 when we had no money and no time and a shortage of every important material we eventually get the Sten, the Besal, the Stirling etc.
It's frankly impressive how far they went in order to make a completely unacceptable gun be accepted, did they really not forsee that doing that would lose them much more money in the long run?
TheGoldenCaulk, hey, I wouldn't want my (hypothetical) kids looking at *those* things, either - they're so goddamn ugly and shoddy that their sensitive, uncrystallised tastes could be harmed irreparably!
This is a very interesting series Ian. Do you know why an arms company(Enfield) had people designing and building(and for that matter even working for them full stop) who didn't have fire arms experience? Thanks for putting these videos up.
You can see the original bipod version LSW (sans 'girder') in some Army training films from the early 80's (on TH-cam). It looks flimsy and awkward with the bipod to start with; I never knew about the accuracy problem it also created!
And is exactly how not to design a rifle. Or anything for that matter. I was told the firing pin on my LSW kept breaking because they made then cheap and light, then spot welded a hard steel tip to it. Looking at the rest of the rifle at the time, it made sense. Tis explanation makes sense when looking at how the dam thing was made from scratch.
When i was younger these guns used to look so futuristic and advanced. This series of videos has wrecked that mystique, they appear so old fashioned and clumsy now. They remind me of the Sten gun or a grease gun, cheap stamped sheet metal and rough "it'll do" interiors.
I remember being told a story about the fastest issue to scrap ever with one of these. The unfortunate guy who was given one was stripping it for the first time and pulled one of the "captive" pins to hard and it came all the way out. He wedged it back in as far as he could then decided to hammer it on a concrete step to try and knock it back in again. Yeah,,,,,that's broke lol
Classic case of a Camel being a Horse designed by a committee? The original British Bullpup (which was built from solid steel) seems to have worked very nicely!
This is why it’s referable to hold open trials for expert gun designers to offer heir wares. To use just an in-house design team is bound to result in making excuses and massaging numbers to to make your stats fit your design rather than the other way round.
I know the LA series of weapons had problems, they still look awesome, I think the Bullpups look more futuristic than conventional looking assault rifles, and I'm glad that now finally the British Army has the gun it needs with the SA80-LA85-A3, (SA80-LA85-A2+), so from disaster to reliable, accurate and although the series may not lose its bad reputation, it's actually a very good rifle now, and about time too.
jeez what a shitshow.. people don't realize how lucky we are to have the AR-15. looking at other trials from other counties, the damn things are honestly kinda miraculous
That's true to a certain point, but kind of deceptive as well. While the SA80 had its actual design compromised by the bureaucrats, the M-16's problems at adoption and in Vietnam were almost exclusively related to logistics. The two main issues were the failure to issue cleaning kits and making the troops believe it didn't need to be cleaned, plus the fact that the DoD changed the spec on the powder used in the ammunition from what Stoner recommended.These obviously affected the gun's reliability but were easy fixes after the fact, neither had anything to do with the basic design of the gun. The SA80 on the other hand was almost a perfect storm of one screwed up component after another, to the point that even today after multiple revisions including HK's final improvements, the gun is just barely acceptable.
joh joh to be fair the AR-15 was designed well, the Vietnam era issues were with ammunition & lack of/misinformation about cleaning kits. Which was, in my understanding, caused by governmental mismanagement & penny pinching. Stoner designed a fine gun, the government was/is run by morons. Edit: zerosignal made my point much more eloquently. Must've been typing at the same time.
Another issue was quality control on things IIRC as they were ramping up production of the guns and ammo. Even well-designed firearms can be let down some if the QC isn't quite up to snuff at first. Of course the lack of cleaning kits and stupid claims given to troops about it being "self-cleaning" have no good excuses and contributed to the problem far more.
people, the challenger disaster and the SA80. I personally always felt that the space shuttle was 'an accident waiting to happen' and it is a great compliment to those launching it that only one broke up on launch, I thought this because any space launch vehicle is subject to enormous loads and stresses and one look at the shuttle and you know it is asymmetrical and there have to be major problems from that. Challenger broke up because human decisions caused it to be launched under weather conditions which made it highly unsafe. The SA80 evolved through fudges and comprises together with a determination to hide failures. The EM1 rifle developed in parrelel to the EM2 was a similar pressed steel box design and was rejected really because of that 'cheap and nasty' construction which was then revived for the SA80; in the long run a high quality design like the EM2 would have been cheaper, CNC machine tools would be able to make such a rifle where skilled craftsmanship would have been required in the past and many of the problems and pitfalls eliminated really the issues relate to who is in charge of such a project, experienced experts like Kenneth Jason who built the EM2 or the politics which destroyed it?
Ian, the Bushmaster M17S might be worth of a review also as it is also an AR180 based bullpup and not to common. I understand this have been out of production and Bushmaster just never seemed to push them like they did their AR line.......sigh.
i always wonder why when it comes to LMGs, LSW or mahine guns in general it's always a major difficulty to have quick change barrels on a weapon that isn't allowed to be very heavy, weapons like the AUG can change the barrel in like 5 seconds and the MG-42 had like 7 seconds and LSWs almost never have a quick change barrel and it's always a complaint that they have limited sustained fire
Somehow, more than the function problems, I feel like the mag well with the crazy welding scar across it's middle should have made everyone involved rethink the whole project.
I knew some people who were closely associated with the pre-issue development. They had been working on the disposable plastic mag where the number of rounds left was visible. They did not complete their work before the rifle was prematurely issued. And told me it was general knowledge that rifle was certainly not ready and with too many issues to still fix. Problems found in field test unresolved. Final decisions, such as mag type yet to be made. But Maggie Thatcher and her government needed money and they saw Enfield as another state enterprise that could be sold off. This time to BAE. But BAE would not produce the cash unless they has a revenue stream. Solution for Maggie? Issue the SA80 to the British army! Problems? Not interested! And so the SA80 was born, prematurely. British troops suffered but the politicians came through without a scratch. The design engineers may not have been familiar with firearms but the politicians couldn't have fixed a bicycle puncture.
I've been really enjoying this series - I followed the progress of the SA80 in service and having the background to the design and introduction covered this was has been fascinating. Depressing but fascinating. Will you be able to cover the changes on the A2 to fix many of the issues?
The Soviet military intelligence service (GRU) had an internal-circulation weekly magazine. To the extent possible they tried to keep it secret from the rival KGB, but the KGB folks would always find a way to steal the latest issue.. The reason for that was that in the back pages, in the Humour and Jokes section, there would be news from the L85/L86 program.
Rock Island auctions expect the bidding to start at $3,000.00. This is not the purchase price. This is the money Rock Island will pay you to take this weapon away.
=))
"redefine the meaning of failure and squiggle with the numbers until you hit the goal"
- classic British government maneuver there.
-classic American and british military move
@@peanutbutter5402 Like father, like son
Thank you Ian for debunking all of the crap we were told over the years by the MOD and Army about how we ended up with this crappy weapon.
What were the official excuses?
@@pete3767 official policy was to deny there were any issues
Make you want to slap pretty hard those were responsible for those craps, right?
Being a Brit and ex military, b4 the SA80 arrived, I've always wondered about the horror stories of the design. in one video you've answered so many questions. Thank you. So glad to be a patron, worth every penny/cent.
I remember the first time I saw the L85 in S.T.A.L.K.E.R. about 10 years ago. It was really interesting looking compared to all the AKs so I picked it up. Jammed after every mag. Never used it again in any of the games from the series till this day, unless I really had to. I thought it was just some game balance thing. Imagine my surprise when I found out that it was also so bad in real life.
You actually picked it up? I just looked at the weight and decided it wasn't worth the effort!
Tbh the reason it jammed when you were playing S.T.A.L.K.E.R. it was because the durability was super low. That happened with every gun in STALKER when the durability was low. It's not like it was jamming because of internal issues with actual gun in a videogame.
@@e2rqey if you look in the game files though, the L85's durability (item condition loss per bullet fired) in particular was much worse than many other weapons, which after watching this, I can certainly believe to be fair😬
(Though the A2 was a thing by the time STALKER began development in the early 2000s, so it's a little unfair, maybe)
The lore perspective of the A1s in the Zone is that they're not merely surplus -- they found their way into the Zone because not even the black market wanted them! These particular examples are meant to be shot to within an inch of their lives and even the Zone's residents avoid them if they have the choice.
Turns out it jams LESS if you just use it in semi auto.
"It's dangerous to go alone. Here, take this L85."
"Um... ya got anything from the Khyber Pass?"
Lets take a squad of 10 soldiers with 30 round magazines. With critical MRBF in the 1000 range, after everyone has fired 3-4 full magazines the chances are good that one of them is out of the fight for good because his gun just broke. If you add the non-critical malfunctions then at any given time someone is also out because they are field stripping their guns to fix something. All this while a firefight is going on.
Stick and a knife? That's closer to reality than you think. During WWII, there was a shortage of rifles in the UK. They made a quarter of a million "pikes" by welding obsolete bayonets to metal rods and started to issue them to the Home Guard before everyone realized that it was dumb as fuck.
Paul Alexander why waste money on sticks and knives? The L85 would make a great club. When it shattered, it would cause additional damage from shrapnel.
Yeah. I could completely understand fudging the minor malfunctions out. The serious ones? Insanity.
Stories like this make you proud to be British
I detect British Sarcasm™.
This actually made me feel ill when I thought of the pols and bureaucrats responsible for sending British soldiers into combat with this. Paying a huge design committee with zero experience then cutting cost on materials. I actually hate them!
@@lanceluthor6660 welcome to British politics my friend the army's been on a pay freeze for like the past 15 years which means there pay hasn't been adjusted for inflation so a lot them are having to live in army accommodation now because they cant afford to rent a house plus thanks to the twats in charge our army is slowly falling to the way side a good example is the fact the keep reducing the number of troops we have and reducing the number of vehicles we have for the armed forces
"behind schedule and over budget" thats pretty much a British motto at this point lol.
Add to that "and not as good as what was originally proposed" and you'd get the Australian one.
That and the phrase
"That'll do"
Look at these first worlders fuckers complaining from the first world lmao
@@adanzavala4801 You have no idea of the incomprehensible hardship we have to endure, deciding which car to take for a drive on one of the small number of weekends with nice weather is just hell.
Loving the mental gymnastics required to make these things pass spec. "Oh absolutely, the dispersion at 300 yards is well within spec (when measured at the muzzle)"
As a former British Soldier- You speak the 100% truth....they knew it was crap...but still made us use it, but blamed us for not cleaning our weapons correctly......the team that authorised the A1 want shooting with a A2 or A3!
as the A1 would jam twice during every mag
The L85 is an astonishing tale of "penny-wise, pound-foolish". It could have been a truly excellent firearm.
Great episode and an excellent look at how a design program can go horribly wrong. This should be required viewing in courses on design and engineering failure.
''The rifle isn't firing enough rounds between failures, someone call a statistical analyst, now!''
So this is really the Triple-A video game of the firearms world then.
amazingly fitting comparison XD
"Redefine the meaning of failure"
It must be said, these weapons did manage to define a whole new level of failure where service weapons are concerned.
Thank you, Ian, for putting so much effort into your videos. Your channel is a treasure trove of information. In my eyes, you're preserving history, and in such a way that it never loses entertainment value. Also, the occasional quips and humor are awesome. Keep up the great work!
great video, with a thorough, and balanced, explanation of where it all went wrong.
your SA80 videos would make an excellent "cautionary" case study for any engineering student.
I think I am starting to appreciate why specialist engineers exist. The knowledge of guys like Jim Sullivan is what makes a design work. I wish there was a resource like this channel in my field of engineering :P.
Jim Sullivan chambering a round and just inspecting it to find the problems is just amazing. I would of never thought of that!
Gems like the description of the problems with a badly-designed feedpath are the reasons I'm subscribed to this channel. This was extremely interesting.
brings back memories.
loving the series.
Ian, I just wanna say I'm loving this video serious. I love following the story of a rifle through development and hope you do more serious like this in the future.
I hope Ian spend some time on the 21st century versions of this gun. The version in service today (made almost entirely of re-designed parts made by different companies) actually works really well. In typical British fashion it only took 30 years to get it to work as it should.
A great case study in how NOT to develop small arms.
Great video. I had rhe misfortune to have to use them when they were introduced. You have answered a lot of questions
I just love these videos where you can get to travel to different places and not only look at weapons, but teach us about them!
This series of videos are fascinating because of the access Ian has got to the development weapons. It is excellent tail on how NOT to develop a weapon. I have shot both the army SLR (FAL) and SA80. I ran 400 rounds through the SA80, the last few hundred on full auto, which was fun
Lots of love for British weapons lately. I appreciate that.
No, no, no, Ian, you don't use the expression "to cut costs" in corporate parlance, you should say "to optimize".
TotalRookie_LV nah it's called 'efficiency savings' these days!
Do not mock synergy, Lemon!
@@Falcon-15 'Restructuring' is another one I hear a lot (usually a nicer word for making hundreds of people redundant).
Great insight into the SA80 series, Ian really knows his stuff.
Growing up in England in the 80's the propaganda was the Britain had the best army in the world. I'm sure I boys were the best (I mean it's our army moto) but this "gun" is an absolute shameful example of British red tape. Truly, truly shameful to go from the likes of the Brown Bess, Baker Rifle, Matrini-Henry, Lee-Metford and the Lee Enfield et al in to this shower of shit
@Gary Dodgson that was a Enfield produced FN FAL in semi.
What a cluster fudge of a rifle system. Thanks for the great series!
Great vid Ian, keep them coming!
'behind schedule and over budget' - Yep, welcome to Britain...
Goes perfectly alongside hot cup of tea
cheap chinese tea that is only lukewarm does probably fit better.
This video in particular brought me close to tears (of rage or frustration, or something), because I know three gentlemen, commissioned officers of my Regiment, who were complicit in the process of preventing a potentially decent weapon meeting even the lowest possible standards of reliability in combat.
Time - Cost - Quality.
Good-Fast-Cheap
Pick your two. You can't have all three.
We didn't even aim for two out of three.
Just wanted it cheap - 'cuz that's how you make the leap from front-line officer, to 1-Star and above.
British procurement incompetence writ large. Underpinned by the paucity of knowledge of firearms in UK military circles.
Superbly good work Ian.
Any chance of doing a similarly penetrating talking head segment on the 2 new Queen Elizabeth class carriers, drilling into the choice of conventional propulsion over nuclear, no catapults on an angled deck carrier, the choice of the stymied, expensive and complicated VTOL F35A over cats and traps F35C Naval variant.
Christ, never seen a black furniture SA80. Looks bloody fantastic.
This is like watching the Canadian Ross rifle story backwards! and not even 100 years after.
Great story behind the development. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you, Ian - the engineering details were fascinating.
9 of 10 British civil servants say, "10/10 would waste taxpayer funds again."
Sera Makes me very angry.
b...b....b....b....but Brexit. They can hear their country calling lol :P
Joking aside I really do hope they keep good ties to H&K
This is a compelling series of videos on British bullpup design rifles. Thank you Ian. I visited RSAF Enfield in the early 1970s and as a teenager thought it highly technologically advanced. Thinking back now though, I realize that the technology was not that far advanced from Victorian gunsmithing. It was definitely run(ning) down by 71 or 72
I don't mean to kiss ass here but I am pleased your channels doing so well, you do a lot of research and put a lot of substance in to your videos unlike many popular channels. It gives me hope!
Long time no see Ian, been looking forward to this!
Lol
spef You legend, where have you been? So many of us were worried!
spef, i was worried!
spef hi Spef! I was filling in for you. Hope you are in good health
great comment spef, keep it up!
This story should be a case study in every business school.
The words 'good and grief' spring to mind. However not surprising really! Thanks for the video
Listening to this as a Brit, I feel truly embarrassed on so many different levels
The Minor, Serious, and Critical malfunctions/failures is actually quite a reasonable idea, and would allow greater nuance in analysis of the data/determining the viability of the weapon.
Of course when you mess it all up with bureaucracy, it becomes a nightmare.
This gun breaks easier than the toys in the recommendations tab.
Great videos!!! I have always loved the look of the L85. I wish I could get my hands on one.
welcome to england ian! sorry you had to go to leeds though xD
This story of the development of the SA80 has been like an out of control IT project that had incredible promise but was doomed from the get go. Then, management just kept piling money into it hoping it'll eventually work itself out. Except, people die of course.
Ahhh Britain... the land of quick fixes and doing a half-ass job in the name of saving money, even though it will inevitably lead to more problems and higher costs in the long run than if you'd invested in a little bit of quality at the start. The sad thing is, this is how we build our roads, railways, schools, hospitals and houses. Great vid as usual Ian :-)
Sam Brick that britain of post empire.
I never ever thought firing pin holes would be such a issue!
I've really been enjoying this series. I grew up in Manchester UK which is a fairly short drive from Leeds. I used to love visiting the Armouries. Keep up the good work Ian.
This is quintessential British bureaucratic organisation at its _finest._ Even during WW2 when we had no money and no time and a shortage of every important material we eventually get the Sten, the Besal, the Stirling etc.
It's frankly impressive how far they went in order to make a completely unacceptable gun be accepted, did they really not forsee that doing that would lose them much more money in the long run?
1:35 "There was a lot of political concern that the guns had to actually work." *snickers in American*
isn't that a mars bar?
@@nigeldork Marathon bar
@@bobstacey9311 I think in america the snickers and mars marketing is reverse of ours, I do remember when they were marathons though
"Little Timmy was just watching some kids videos on youtube, and next thing I know he's looking at BIG, BLACK ASSAULT RIFLES!!!"
TheGoldenCaulk, hey, I wouldn't want my (hypothetical) kids looking at *those* things, either - they're so goddamn ugly and shoddy that their sensitive, uncrystallised tastes could be harmed irreparably!
Learn colors with SBRs and destructive devices :D
worst guns ever --- too bad they are so rare and precious :D
That's racist ..
DrSid42 Well, they are black.
Will you be making a L85A2 video with ARES? :)
Lasyen he has. it's on their channel in the SA80 playlist. It's unlisted, but you can watch it
gotcha thanks
Rik Raptor go onto their channel. click on playlists, scroll through and you'll see one call "SA80 History". the videos are there
Nope, can't find 'their channel' .. can't you just link it bro ?
DrSid42 how can't you find their channel? just scroll up on this page and click on the Forgotten Weapons logo.
hearing Ian talk about those immediate action drills. i just need him to say cocking handle not fully forward. and see him forward assist.
This is a very interesting series Ian.
Do you know why an arms company(Enfield) had people designing and building(and for that matter even working for them full stop) who didn't have fire arms experience?
Thanks for putting these videos up.
You can see the original bipod version LSW (sans 'girder') in some Army training films from the early 80's (on TH-cam). It looks flimsy and awkward with the bipod to start with; I never knew about the accuracy problem it also created!
And is exactly how not to design a rifle. Or anything for that matter. I was told the firing pin on my LSW kept breaking because they made then cheap and light, then spot welded a hard steel tip to it. Looking at the rest of the rifle at the time, it made sense. Tis explanation makes sense when looking at how the dam thing was made from scratch.
When i was younger these guns used to look so futuristic and advanced. This series of videos has wrecked that mystique, they appear so old fashioned and clumsy now. They remind me of the Sten gun or a grease gun, cheap stamped sheet metal and rough "it'll do" interiors.
Have you youswd one?
Old army mate has one on his toilet wall it always did seem a strange place to keep it but i think you've just explained it.
I remember being told a story about the fastest issue to scrap ever with one of these.
The unfortunate guy who was given one was stripping it for the first time and pulled one of the "captive" pins to hard and it came all the way out. He wedged it back in as far as he could then decided to hammer it on a concrete step to try and knock it back in again.
Yeah,,,,,that's broke lol
The amount of rifles I've seen declared U/S because someone has ripped out a lower TMH pin
Classic case of a Camel being a Horse designed by a committee?
The original British Bullpup (which was built from solid steel) seems to have worked very nicely!
This is why it’s referable to hold open trials for expert gun designers to offer heir wares. To use just an in-house design team is bound to result in making excuses and massaging numbers to to make your stats fit your design rather than the other way round.
I know the LA series of weapons had problems, they still look awesome, I think the Bullpups look more futuristic than conventional looking assault rifles, and I'm glad that now finally the British Army has the gun it needs with the SA80-LA85-A3, (SA80-LA85-A2+), so from disaster to reliable, accurate and although the series may not lose its bad reputation, it's actually a very good rifle now, and about time too.
jeez what a shitshow.. people don't realize how lucky we are to have the AR-15. looking at other trials from other counties, the damn things are honestly kinda miraculous
To be fair people weren't a big fan of the AR-15 back in Vietnam either. It had its own share of developmental problems.
That's true to a certain point, but kind of deceptive as well. While the SA80 had its actual design compromised by the bureaucrats, the M-16's problems at adoption and in Vietnam were almost exclusively related to logistics. The two main issues were the failure to issue cleaning kits and making the troops believe it didn't need to be cleaned, plus the fact that the DoD changed the spec on the powder used in the ammunition from what Stoner recommended.These obviously affected the gun's reliability but were easy fixes after the fact, neither had anything to do with the basic design of the gun. The SA80 on the other hand was almost a perfect storm of one screwed up component after another, to the point that even today after multiple revisions including HK's final improvements, the gun is just barely acceptable.
joh joh to be fair the AR-15 was designed well, the Vietnam era issues were with ammunition & lack of/misinformation about cleaning kits. Which was, in my understanding, caused by governmental mismanagement & penny pinching. Stoner designed a fine gun, the government was/is run by morons.
Edit: zerosignal made my point much more eloquently. Must've been typing at the same time.
A civil conversation? On MY TH-cam?
Now I've seen it all xD
Another issue was quality control on things IIRC as they were ramping up production of the guns and ammo. Even well-designed firearms can be let down some if the QC isn't quite up to snuff at first.
Of course the lack of cleaning kits and stupid claims given to troops about it being "self-cleaning" have no good excuses and contributed to the problem far more.
What a disaster. Great video as always. Kept me glued to the screen.
great series, the L85 is a somewhat sad tale but a very interesting one.
Hopefully you get time to cover the single shot model issued to cadets!!!
The Pentagon Wars needs to have a sequel.
i have been to royal armouries in Leeds many a time!!
people, the challenger disaster and the SA80. I personally always felt that the space shuttle was 'an accident waiting to happen' and it is a great compliment to those launching it that only one broke up on launch, I thought this because any space launch vehicle is subject to enormous loads and stresses and one look at the shuttle and you know it is asymmetrical and there have to be major problems from that. Challenger broke up because human decisions caused it to be launched under weather conditions which made it highly unsafe.
The SA80 evolved through fudges and comprises together with a determination to hide failures. The EM1 rifle developed in parrelel to the EM2 was a similar pressed steel box design and was rejected really because of that 'cheap and nasty' construction which was then revived for the SA80; in the long run a high quality design like the EM2 would have been cheaper, CNC machine tools would be able to make such a rifle where skilled craftsmanship would have been required in the past and many of the problems and pitfalls eliminated really the issues relate to who is in charge of such a project, experienced experts like Kenneth Jason who built the EM2 or the politics which destroyed it?
Ian, the Bushmaster M17S might be worth of a review also as it is also an AR180 based bullpup and not
to common. I understand this have been out of production and Bushmaster just never seemed to push
them like they did their AR line.......sigh.
Ares should sell that polo. Looks great.
kind of reminds me of the "Wiz kids" and the early problems with the M16.
what a shame this is how enfield ended
I can only imagine how the people at Enfield and the MOD were constantly saying "That'll do" while making this gun.
so... how do these fare compared to the Volkssturm weapons?
i always wonder why when it comes to LMGs, LSW or mahine guns in general it's always a major difficulty to have quick change barrels on a weapon that isn't allowed to be very heavy, weapons like the AUG can change the barrel in like 5 seconds and the MG-42 had like 7 seconds and LSWs almost never have a quick change barrel and it's always a complaint that they have limited sustained fire
Be good if you do a video on the A2 and some of the more recent developments, but I know a lot of that maybe unlikely.
You should make a video dedicated to the L86 variant.
so about one platoon of guys firing one mag will on average have a failure so critical the gun needs serious repair.
really nice history.
Somehow, more than the function problems, I feel like the mag well with the crazy welding scar across it's middle should have made everyone involved rethink the whole project.
They change the design of the magazine well in the L85.
I knew some people who were closely associated with the pre-issue development. They had been working on the disposable plastic mag where the number of rounds left was visible. They did not complete their work before the rifle was prematurely issued. And told me it was general knowledge that rifle was certainly not ready and with too many issues to still fix. Problems found in field test unresolved. Final decisions, such as mag type yet to be made. But Maggie Thatcher and her government needed money and they saw Enfield as another state enterprise that could be sold off. This time to BAE. But BAE would not produce the cash unless they has a revenue stream. Solution for Maggie? Issue the SA80 to the British army! Problems? Not interested! And so the SA80 was born, prematurely. British troops suffered but the politicians came through without a scratch. The design engineers may not have been familiar with firearms but the politicians couldn't have fixed a bicycle puncture.
Dude. I wished I'd known you were going to be at the royal armories.. I live 30 mins away.
This video brings to mind what I read about the back story of the 737Max.
why are some of the SA80 videos in your playlist unlisted?
I would guess they're uploaded already but not yet published.
They do look cool
Ian I love these videos but let's see more inrange!
I've been really enjoying this series - I followed the progress of the SA80 in service and having the background to the design and introduction covered this was has been fascinating. Depressing but fascinating. Will you be able to cover the changes on the A2 to fix many of the issues?
Ok, that number of rounds between critical failures is... absolutely shocking.
the curse of design by committee and design to a tight budget
The Soviet military intelligence service (GRU) had an internal-circulation weekly magazine. To the extent possible they tried to keep it secret from the rival KGB, but the KGB folks would always find a way to steal the latest issue.. The reason for that was that in the back pages, in the Humour and Jokes section, there would be news from the L85/L86 program.
While this is a rather late reply I just had to say it. That being having known a couple GRU guys I can actually see this being a thing lol.
you should do a podcast