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"Reliability above all else"
NRA Certified Pistol and Rifle Instructor, Life Member
Glock Certified Armorer
Beretta & Sig Sauer Certified Pistol Armorer
Colt Certified 1911 & AR-15/M16/M4 Law Enforcement Armorer
I expect it’s similar to my test of firing a rifle off the shoulder and held as lightly as possible. It’s a good proxy to cold, or fouled and unlubed.
Yeah, I live in the Southeast, so it rarely gets cold enough here for me to be able to test in the cold. Also, I don't have many opportunities to shoot straight down into the ground. So I've taken to testing with weak Russian ammo off the shoulder, as you describe. I figure if it locks back then, it should be fine in adverse conditions with full power defensive or milspec ammo.
“You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.” -Augustine
You can freeze your ammo to do cold testing, or a cooler with dry ice.
Crane (for USSOCOM) formally tested the feasibility of mid-lengths for SOF operational use -- as far as I know, the only formal, published-released feasibility (and later acceptance) evaluation run under EPVAT conditions.
Crane then contracted for, accepted, and passed to equip USSOCOM. Not necessarily a DOD-wide mil standard -- and SOCOM doesn't care. Call it whatever you want -- civ-spec, commercial off the shelf (COTS), Special Operations-Peculiar, whatever. The customer asked for it, they adopted it, it works for them.
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