By Delene Kvasnicka of Survivalebooks
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First tagged by sdm
Customer tags: adventure, military, army, marksmanship, hunting, rifle marksmanship, rifle, military history, action adventure, action, outdoors, guns
Review & Description
Rifle Marksmanship, Plus 500 free US military manuals and US Army field manuals when you sample this book
Take a look at the sample for this book and for details about downloading 500 free US military manuals as a thank you for taking the time to look at our book.
All Marines share a common warfighting belief: “Every Marine a rifleman.” This simple credo reinforces the belief that all Marines are forged from a common experience, share a common set of values, and are trained as members of an expeditionary force in readiness. As such, there are no “rear area” Marines, and no one is very far from the fighting during expeditionary operations. The Marine rifleman of the next conflict will be as in past conflicts: among the first to confront the enemy and the last to hang his weapon in the rack after the conflict is won.
Chapter 1. Introduction to Rifle Marksmanship
1001 Role of the Marine Rifleman . 1-1
1002 Conditions Affecting Marksmanship in Combat 1-1
1003 Combat Mindset . 1-1
Physical Preparation . 1-2
Mental Preparation . 1-2
Chapter 2. Introduction to the M16A2 Service Rifle
2001 Description . 2-1
2002 Operational Controls . 2-1
Selector Lever 2-1
Magazine Release Button . 2-2
Charging Handle 2-2
Bolt Catch . 2-3
2003 Cycle of Operation . 2-3
Firing . 2-3
Unlocking . 2-3
Extracting 2-4
Ejecting . 2-4
Cocking . 2-4
Feeding . 2-5
Chambering 2-5
Locking . 2-5
2004 Ammunition 2-5
M193 Ball . 2-6
M855 Ball . 2-6
M196 and M856 Tracer . 2-6
M199 Dummy 2-6
M200 Blank 2-6
2005 Preventive Maintenance . 2-6
Main Group Disassembly . 2-6
Magazine Disassembly . 2-7
Cleaning . 2-8
Inspection 2-9
Lubrication . 2-9
Reassembly 2-9
2006 Function Check 2-10
2007 User Serviceability Inspection . 2-10
2008 Field Maintenance 2-11
2009 Cleaning the Rifle in Various Conditions 2-11
Hot, Wet Tropical 2-11
Hot, Dry Desert 2-11
Arctic or Low Temperature . 2-11
Heavy Rain and Fording . 2-11
Chapter 3. Weapons Handling
3001 Safety Rules 3-1
3002 Weapons Condition 3-1
3003 Determining a Weapon’s Condition (Chamber Check) . 3-1
3004 Weapons Commands . 3-2
Loading the Rifle 3-3
Making the Rifle Ready . 3-3
Fire . 3-3
Cease-Fire . 3-3
Unloading the Rifle 3-3
Unloading and Showing the Rifle Clear 3-4
3005 Filling, Stowing, and Withdrawing Magazines . 3-5
Filling the Magazine with Loose Rounds . 3-5
Filling the Magazine Using a 10-round
Stripper Clip and Magazine Filler . 3-5
Stowing Magazines 3-5
Withdrawing Magazines 3-6
3006 Reloading the Rifle . 3-6
Principles of Reloading . 3-6
Condition 1 Reload 3-7
Dry Reload . 3-7
3007 Remedial Action . 3-7
Observe for Indicators 3-7
Rifle Marksmanship, Plus 500 free US military manuals and US Army field manuals when you sample this book
Take a look at the sample for this book and for details about downloading 500 free US military manuals as a thank you for taking the time to look at our book.
All Marines share a common warfighting belief: “Every Marine a rifleman.” This simple credo reinforces the belief that all Marines are forged from a common experience, share a common set of values, and are trained as members of an expeditionary force in readiness. As such, there are no “rear area” Marines, and no one is very far from the fighting during expeditionary operations. The Marine rifleman of the next conflict will be as in past conflicts: among the first to confront the enemy and the last to hang his weapon in the rack after the conflict is won.
Chapter 1. Introduction to Rifle Marksmanship
1001 Role of the Marine Rifleman . 1-1
1002 Conditions Affecting Marksmanship in Combat 1-1
1003 Combat Mindset . 1-1
Physical Preparation . 1-2
Mental Preparation . 1-2
Chapter 2. Introduction to the M16A2 Service Rifle
2001 Description . 2-1
2002 Operational Controls . 2-1
Selector Lever 2-1
Magazine Release Button . 2-2
Charging Handle 2-2
Bolt Catch . 2-3
2003 Cycle of Operation . 2-3
Firing . 2-3
Unlocking . 2-3
Extracting 2-4
Ejecting . 2-4
Cocking . 2-4
Feeding . 2-5
Chambering 2-5
Locking . 2-5
2004 Ammunition 2-5
M193 Ball . 2-6
M855 Ball . 2-6
M196 and M856 Tracer . 2-6
M199 Dummy 2-6
M200 Blank 2-6
2005 Preventive Maintenance . 2-6
Main Group Disassembly . 2-6
Magazine Disassembly . 2-7
Cleaning . 2-8
Inspection 2-9
Lubrication . 2-9
Reassembly 2-9
2006 Function Check 2-10
2007 User Serviceability Inspection . 2-10
2008 Field Maintenance 2-11
2009 Cleaning the Rifle in Various Conditions 2-11
Hot, Wet Tropical 2-11
Hot, Dry Desert 2-11
Arctic or Low Temperature . 2-11
Heavy Rain and Fording . 2-11
Chapter 3. Weapons Handling
3001 Safety Rules 3-1
3002 Weapons Condition 3-1
3003 Determining a Weapon’s Condition (Chamber Check) . 3-1
3004 Weapons Commands . 3-2
Loading the Rifle 3-3
Making the Rifle Ready . 3-3
Fire . 3-3
Cease-Fire . 3-3
Unloading the Rifle 3-3
Unloading and Showing the Rifle Clear 3-4
3005 Filling, Stowing, and Withdrawing Magazines . 3-5
Filling the Magazine with Loose Rounds . 3-5
Filling the Magazine Using a 10-round
Stripper Clip and Magazine Filler . 3-5
Stowing Magazines 3-5
Withdrawing Magazines 3-6
3006 Reloading the Rifle . 3-6
Principles of Reloading . 3-6
Condition 1 Reload 3-7
Dry Reload . 3-7
3007 Remedial Action . 3-7
Observe for Indicators 3-7
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