@@jmsgridiron5628the "Hauer" is a possible reference to Rutger Hauer, and the "77" is could be a reference to the Model 77E. However, the in-game model most definitely is an Ithaca 37, as evidenced with its lack of ejection port on either side, as the loading port on the bottom is also the ejection port. Source: IMFDB
I love the content and also i have a mosin due to the caliber being the oldest still actively used by a active army and i got it shortly after you made the video of weapons used during ww1 but mines a 1951 make but could be earlier but remade in 51 i dont know how to tell that though
Any shotgun can use dragon breath. Dragons breath would be a horrible round like yeah ur getting hit by molten metal but at the end of the day the guy u shot at is still alive and just more pissed off
Of course the military went “military grade” with a 12ga leaving it pump action when reliable semi auto designs had existed for decades. Still to this day the M26 MASS and other shotguns get used while semi auto gas operated shotguns which are superior in terms of felt recoil and rate of fire. But why go pump action? It’s not for reliability in adverse conditions or with a dirty gun, in fact with the right gas system and less exposure to the elements like an open pump action always is a QUALITY semi auto shotgun is actually less prone to jamming. However with 12ga shotguns even today a cheap pump action is more reliable than a cheap semi auto. But the military going “military grade” means the cheapest that’ll get the job done, so we still use pump and manual actions today over a semi auto. It’s absurd.
Pump shotguns are still used today because the only rounds you can shoot out of a shotgun in war are door breaching slugs. Door breaching slugs don’t have enough force to cycle a semi-auto bolt, so it would be useless to have a more expensive semi-auto that can’t even shoot semi-auto.
@@ryangeiger3274 We’ve put man in to outer space, I’m sure we could make a semi auto gas system work reliably with door breaching slugs by more attention to the gas system and the ammo itself. The reason it isn’t done is simply because the military is cheap and doesn’t care to invest too much in to a soldier, that’s all it is.
You physically cannot make a gas system that can work with door breaching slugs. The spring in the bolt that moves the bolt to cycle a round has to be of a certain tolerance to withstand the force of a 12 gauge but not too much so that it can't cycle. 12 ga door breaching slugs still have the recoil force of 12 gauge but not enough gas pressure to cycle the piston. Many other shotgun rounds have the same issue, same amount of force, less pressure. @@mattandrews8528
@@mattandrews8528 What about the Benelli M4? It's a rather expensive semi-auto shotgun that's been used by the US military as well as several police departments.
@@mattandrews8528shotguns are specialist weapons and buckshot shells won't penetrate body armor. I don't see the point of investing into semi-automativ shotguns if it's sole purpose is for breaching doors.