Friday, December 14, 2012

Clip


I was reading up on the aborted OICW rifle the army was looking at (and throwing buzzwords at) in the 90s.

Forgotten Weapons sent me there.

I noticed this:



I think that's an army document.  They have labelled the two magazines, 'clips.'   Do that today and everyone blows a gasket.  So here I am, blowing a gasket.  Well, there is leakage around my gasket, I'm too mellow to go all catastrophic failure over this. 

Some pencil pushing egghead did that labeling?  Some PR Army guy with a head full of Synergy and somehow was sick the day they went to the range at Basic where a drill instructor would have set him straight permanent?  They just didn't get wrapped around the axle over it all of 15 years ago?  Who knows...  I just thought it interesting.

If they had only gotten that part right they would have deployed that weapon...

KIDDING!


7 comments:

  1. This is a peeve of mine.

    I don't mean calling a round or cartridge a "bullet", or a magazine a "clip". I mean people who stumble all over themselves to sternly correct someone when they get a term wrong. You'd think they'd just witnessed a kitten killing or something.

    I try to use correct terminology myself. If I'm teaching someone about firearms I try to make sure they know the correct name and function of everything we talk about. But I don't have a stroke if someone calls a decocker a "safety". I just try to make sure they know the difference.

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  2. That's not an "Army" document, although that picture may well have been used IN a press release or PowerPoint put out by the Program Office.

    Most of those people are civilians, and a high percentage are contractors. Often times, desperate for good imagery for a particular dog & pony show, we'll lift stuff from Google Image searches. *

    That particular picture of OICW was in a news magazine (Newsweek, I believe), labelled by the journalists. I believe the raw photo came from the manufacturer -- it's a typical sales pitch layout photo. I remember getting pissed off by clueless journalists then.


    .


    * Of course, if my group had used this image, we'd have relabelled it to use the correct terminology. And this is the rather laid back group where I told a flag level briefing, "We can't fit anymore emitters on this platform -- if we squeeze this Twinkie any harder, the creamy filling will shoot out both ends." (Later in the same brief -- "What we have here is a failure to communicate. When USCG says 'Prosecute the target,' they mean, 'put him in handcuffs and stand him in front of a judge'. When WE say 'Prosecute the target,' we mean, 'Make a smouldering oil slick.' Thus, to the Navy, 'Disabling fire' is quite different from what USCG means -- under our ROE, a smouldering oil slick is a ship that has been 'disabled'." {LOL})

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  3. At a local gunstore this week, I saw a packaged Mossberg magazine where the packaging referred to itself as a clip.

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  4. The way an angry man in a funny hat explained it to me it that "Clips fill magazines. Magazines load pistols and rifles.

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  5. The font suggests a Popular Mechanics graphic.

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  6. I should have checked Google Books. It was in the September 1998 issue of Popular Mechanics.

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  7. You're right -- it was Popular Mechanics. I thought "Newsweek", probably because it was the "news" magazine I was most likely to read in a doctor's office. . .

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I reserve the right to delete patently offensive comments. Or, really, any comment I feel like. Or I might leave a really juicy comment up for private ridicule. Also spammers.

You can always offend hippies in the comment section. Chances are, those will be held up as a proper example...