Regargless of how you feel politically, this man was the Russian John Browning. A legend has passed.
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/worl...icle-1.1556419
Regargless of how you feel politically, this man was the Russian John Browning. A legend has passed.
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/worl...icle-1.1556419
Last edited by FISH4BUGS; 12-23-2013 at 03:21 PM.
Collector and shooter of guns and other items that require a tax stamp, Lead and brass scrounger. Never too much brass, lead or components in inventory! Always looking to win beauty contests with my reloads.
I met Kalasnikov when he came to the US as a guest of the US State Dept. and the Smithsonian Institution. Gene Stoner also attended the dinner along with Ed Ezell, Curator of Military History for the Smithsonian. He was a brilliant mechanical engineer, though a modest, regular guy. I was glad to be there and have he and Ezell both sign my copy of Ezell's book, The AK47 Story.
Well everyone has to go sometime, I hope i make it that long.
Rip
wp
NRA Life Member, NRA Instructor in Pistol, Advanced Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, PP In/Outside the Home, Metallic and Shotshell Reloading, Chief RSO
Hundred million (est) Kalashnikovs around the planet. He definitely made his mark.
RIP, Misha.
dale in Louisiana
The man was an absolute genius, even if he was on the other side of the fence! RIP Mr. Kalashnikov.
I saw a documentary where he felt that he Stoner, and Uzi all had the common experience of seeing guns they designed for the defense of their respective nations being used for criminal purposes.
Paper targets aren't your friends. They won't lie for you and they don't care if your feelings get hurt.
A strong arguement can be made that kalashnokov and browning had the most influence on warfare in the 20th century
I Am Descended From Men Who Would Not Be Ruled
Fiat Justitia, Ruat Caelum
There is enough fat in the federal government that if you rendered it you could wash the world
Ronald Reagan.
I had the dubious honor of being shot at by his invention. A talented man to be sure
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I look at this like I look at the craftsman that make Swords for the Japanese. What will you make in your lifetime that will perform as intended hundreds of years after you're gone. I don't know personally... I'd like to think in my entire life of designing things that something I thought of will last. Have you ever asked yourself, "What will I design and/or make today that will be around and function as intended for hundreds of years after I'm gone." I'd like to be that guy.
Last edited by rattletrap1970; 12-23-2013 at 11:49 PM.
Kalasnikov is known for the AK that was a vague copy of the German Sturmgewehr, he basically modified an existing design and by most accounts improved upon it to the point that it was as successful as it was. Browning has MANY complex and ingenious designs to his credit that have been in existence little changed from their original designs for far longer than the AK, the legendary 45 auto and Browning .50 machine guns for example. These he designed from scratch with little to look to in the way of existing design yet look where these are today and how many examples of both are still in use, I would venture to say the .50 machine gun has had some effect on conflicts over the years wouldn't you think? Yep the AK designed after WW11 has been around that's for sure but it is a mere youngster compared to the 1911 and the awesome .50! The .50 was developed in the early 1930s and after being used extensively in WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and many other places Uncle Sam has had to go it still performs admirably after all these years in Afghanistan today! Kalasnikov was a talented designer and he deserves to be honored for his design but John Browning he ain't!!!!
Last edited by oldred; 12-24-2013 at 07:14 AM.
An absolute genius??? The AK47 is notable for being cheap to manufacture which is the primary reason for the millions upon millions in existence not due to any ingenious designs, except from a manufacturing standpoint. And again it bears more than just a passing similarity to the German design from which it was obviously taken. Kalisnikov was a man in the right place at the right time with a needed idea but the AK owes most of it's fame to it's popularity and reliability, popular because it was so cheap to manufacture and reliable because of loose tolerances that also contributed to it's low cost. The bottom line is the AK is such a success due to it's low cost and ease of production far more so than being an ingenious design!
Making things cheap and easy to manufacture takes as much genius as making a new and novel design, and least in my mind.
I remember reading about him in a Rifleman article, I believe he said he would be just as happy to have invented a good tractor (or something similar, it's been a while since I read the article.)
Yes it does and he was definitely above the average designer but a firearms genius on a par with Browning and Colt?? Hardly and if he was where are his other designs? It's hard to look at an AK and think "Engineering marvel" especially when it shares features of earlier designs and again it owes it's fame more to it's vast numbers far more so than being a technological marvel. The bottom line is his genius is in being able to mass produce a reliable, albeit rather crude, firearm dirt cheap and a huge part of it being dirt cheap was due to lack of production costs in the communist industrial environment. I would think there would have been a heck of a lot more M16s in the world today if they had of been available for $100 each and offered by the Government by the millions to third world countries!
Can't argue with any of that...
Regardless of how you feel about his design or where he got his ideas, he was a man like the rest of us. He had the same characteristics all men share and he has passed. Left behind a family, many friends and a legacy. I'd say he lead a successful life and I wish him the best in the afterlife.
My Feedback thread:
http://castboolits.gunloads.com/showthread.php?249515-prsman23
Old red nailed it. I have much respect for Mr. Kalashnikov, but he was no John Browning.
I put him in the same category as Eugene Stoner, John Garrand, and William Ruger.
A truly great man, and I mourn his passing. We are diminished.
I see the AK as a symbol of freedom, and that is his legacy. If only I could achieve such heights in my life.
Precision in the wrong place is only a placebo.
Nothing very innovative about the AK. Pretty much a tough design based on a lot
of previous weapons. Well integrated, good choices on durability, poor choices on
accuracy, sights, trigger pull, sight adjustability, safety design, ergonomics in
general, etc. IMO it is pretty much a durable piece of cr**. I have owned a few, and
the DO jam upon occasion. Nothing magical about it. Roughly made, strong, overbuilt
but basically crude and not accurate. Reminds me of the Kamaz trucks in Russia.
Tough, pretty durable but really a crummy truck in the end. Durability ISN'T
everything.
Not much impressed other than they are cheap to build, generally will survive
poor maintenance and the commies flooded the world with them. Good design in
several ways, but seriously deficient in many others. Genius? Not remotely
on the level of John Browning. Remember, Browning designs came forth when
there was NOTHING to draw from. The AK is an extremely derivative design,
very little innovation.
Bill
If it was easy, anybody could do it.
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