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Mack

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Everything posted by Mack

  1. The other defences aren't loopholes. How do you know UKARA is the safest compared to say a film producer? It's never been tested in court and tbh probably never will. Edit: and no one is being smart asses either, just sick to shit of people who haven't a clue what they are talking about stating Facts that are simply not true
  2. Still wrong. You don't need to be anything to own a RIF!!!!!! There are no laws on owning, only selling, manufacturing and importing
  3. That retailer is from Hong Kong, using a UK domain.
  4. Army Armamament R17 (G17) - http://www.taiwangun.com/en/r17-black-army?from=listing&campaign-id=14 Spare Mag - http://www.taiwangun.com/en/magazine-for-r17-army-2?from=related&campaign-id=6 Clone Crye Gun clip - http://www.taiwangun.com/en/holster-clip-for-replicas-of-glock-coyote-acm?from=listing&campaign-id=14 Total - £81.54 posted 1st impressions of this pistol are good. For £43 I wasnt expecting TM or even WE standards but have been pleasently surprised. Blowback is crisp and snappy. Its pretty loud too and has decent enough trades. It could probably be doing with an upgraded recoil spring as the standard one feels a bit "meh". Gas wise im getting about 1 and a half mags per fill of propane. The gunclip itself was a little tight at first but after a few holsters and draws it loosened up a bit. Hold the gun securely with very little movement on the belt. Will take a little getting used to drawing to the side rather than up.
  5. Mack

    HQ Arma 3 Photos

    Some from our TR Clan
  6. I carry 5 Tm standard 80 round mags, an 2 pistol mags.
  7. AS the post above you and JC aleady said. They are 120 rounders switchable to 30 The PMAG TM SOPMOD is a 120-round compatible magazine. It features an advanced impact resistant polymer construction, a pop-off Impact/Dust Cover for storage, and an easy to disassemble design with a flared floor-plate for positive magazine extraction from pouches. The PMAG TM SOPMOD features configurable 30 round magazine lock on the internal case, makes this a very realistic gun perfect even for law enforcement training purposes.
  8. http://www.blackdragonairsoft.co.uk/index.php?route=product/product&path=24_57&product_id=96
  9. Seen this posted by JC on another forum, looks pretty good

  10. Your supposed to pay vat, doesn't mean that you will, I got the MODI JPC from shooter cb a while back and never paid any duty. Would recommend it over the emerson Never used the fapc but you can't really go wrong with flyye stuff as it's usually ask ways decent quality
  11. Another one lol, Thread title best video of 2014, Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up Uploaded on Oct 24, 2009
  12. http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Visionking-1-25-5x26-Dual-Illuminated-Rifle-Scope-3-Pin-Waterproof-Fogproof-/141153841420?pt=UK_SportingGoods_Hunting_ShootingSports_ET&hash=item20dd6cb10c
  13. This is probably the best budget one around, £43 shipped, The emerson ones are crap compared to the FMA. http://www.toysoldier.com.hk/product_details.php?pid=866
  14. Finished with the Block II, only changes now will be the sling
  15. Can still get Curved blades mate as I had to get one myself for TSKSR, although it is a bit like airsoft in that there are exemtions Members of historical re-enactment groups which hold a Public Liability Certificate. •Members of a Martial Arts club which hold a Public Liability Certificate. •Use for authorized Theatrical / film use. •All Swords over 100 years old. •Samurai Swords made before 1954. •Samurai Swords made in Japan at any time using the traditional forging technique.
  16. Seems to be a lot of sand in vaginas latley, mine included :0

    1. Monty

      Monty

      I love it.

    2. Bottledtorment

      Bottledtorment

      There's tools for that

    3. Mack

      Mack

      is there an app for that? badum tiss! *tumbleweed*

  17. Cover is wrong "The Marine Battalion--3rd Battalion of the 3rd Regiment--that initially planned the mission used sports teams to name their missions. Previous missions were called Spurs, Mavericks and Celtics, and after all the Texan and Boston team names were used up, the 3/3 Marines decided to switch to hockey names. Luttrell’s Operation Redwing doesn’t exist; the mission was called Operation Red Wings, like the Detroit hockey team" "I understand that little details and facts will be lost in such a crazy attack, but getting the mission name wrong is bizarre, especially getting it wrong in the first draft, second draft, manuscript, galley proof and paperback edition. For the rest of our posts we will refer to the mission as Operation Red Wings, to be factually accurate" http://onviolence.com/?e=234
  18. Just being Pedantic but its Operation Red Wings, Two different Ops http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Redwing
  19. If you liked the Pacific I would recommend these first 2 and Ive just finished the last one which was good too. Helmet for my pillow by Robert Leckie Beginning with boot camp in MCRD Parris Island, South Carolina, the story follows Leckie through basic training and then to New River, North Carolina where he is briefly stationed, and follows him to the Pacific. Leckie is assigned to the 1st Marine Division and is deployed to Guadalcanal, Melbourne Australia, New Guinea, Cape Gloucester, before being evacuated with wounds from the island of Peleliu. Helmet for My Pillow is told from an enlisted man's point of view; a reprint edition stated the book was about "the booze, the brawling, the loving on 72-hour liberty, the courageous fighting and dying in combat as the U.S. Marines slugged it out, inch by inch, across the Pacific."[3] With The Old breed by Eugene Sledge Sledge's memoir gives a perspective on the Pacific Theater of World War II. His memoir is a front-line account of infantry combat in the Pacific War. It brings the reader into the island hopping, the jungle heat and rain, the "banzai attack" or full frontal assault used by his enemies. Sledge wrote starkly of the brutality displayed by American and Japanese soldiers during the battles, and of the hatred that both sides harbored for each other. In Sledge's words, "This was a brutish, primitive hatred, as characteristic of the horror of war in the Pacific as the palm trees and the islands." Sledge describes one instance in which he and a comrade came across the mutilated bodies of three Marines, including one Marine whose genitals had been cut off and stuffed into the corpse's mouth. He also describes the behavior of some Marines towards dead Japanese, including the removal of gold teeth from Japanese corpses (and, in one case, a severely wounded but still living Japanese soldier), as well as other disturbing trophy-taking. Sledge describes in detail the sheer physical struggle of living in a combat zone and the debilitating effects of constant fear, fatigue, and filth. "Fear and filth went hand-in-hand," he wrote. "It has always puzzled me that this important factor in our daily lives has received so little attention from historians and is often omitted from otherwise excellent personal memoirs by infantrymen." Marines had trouble staying dry, finding time to eat their rations, practicing basic field sanitation (it was impossible to dig latrines or catholes in the coral rock on Peleliu), and simply moving around on the pulverized coral of Peleliu and in the mud of Okinawa. Service: A Navy Seal at war by Marcus Luttrell In Service, we follow Marcus Luttrell to Iraq, where he returns to the battlefield as a member of SEAL Team 5 to help take on the most dangerous city in the world: Ramadi, the capital of war-torn Al Anbar Province. There, in six months of high-intensity urban combat, he would be part of what has been called the greatest victory in the history of U.S. Special Operations forces. We also return to Afghanistan and Operation Redwing, where Luttrell offers powerful new details about his miraculous rescue. Throughout, he reflects on what it really means to take on a higher calling, about the men he's seen lose their lives for their country, and the legacy of those who came and bled before.
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