Details, Explanation and Meaning About Galil

Galil Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Galil is one of the standard assault rifles used by the Israel Defense Forces. It was designed by Israel Galili, and bears his name. It uses 5.56 mm NATO ammunition, like an M-16, but uses the more reliable and easier to manufacture action of the Russian AK-47. The Galil was fielded as a replacement to the aging M-16 rifle, which often performed poorly in the dusty Middle Eastern conditions.

Table of contents
1 History
2 Usage
3 Variants
4 See also
5 External links

History

The Galil project began after the Six-Day War, and the design was selected by the IDF from two competing designs. The winner was based on the Finnish Rk 62 (a variant of the AK-47). The first rifles began to arrive in 1974, after the Yom Kippur War. One of its aims was to replace the first M-16 (Vietnam surplus) which had been rushed to Israel during that war. The surplus M-16s had severe reliability problems, and were regarded solely as provisional weapons until the Galil could be issued. The Galil was used by infantry during the Lebanon War in 1982; but towards the mid-1980s, it was determined to be less than optimal.

Usage

The Galil's main problem is weight; it is heavier than the M-16, at around 3.9 kg (8.6 lb) empty vs the M-16's 2.9 kg (6.4 lb), and therefore often considered to be a greater burden as a personal weapon for infantrymen, although its short length due to the folding stock made it very popular with the troops (Galil 840/614 mm vs M-16 986 mm). Fighting infantry units therefore were reissued M-16s (new or upgraded to improve reliability and reduce weight), although the Galil's compactness resulted in it remaining a personal weapon for soldiers in armor and artillery units.

Although designed as a serious infantry weapon, one could also claim the Galil boasts many unusual features to make it more amenable to a citizen-militia. The Galil includes a folding stock, tritium illuminated night sights, a bipod that can cut barbed wire, and an integrated bottle-opener to avoid damage to the rifle through a previously common misuse of weapons to open beverage bottles.

Variants

A derivative has been produced, the Galil Micro, which retains the internal features with a completely new frame and a much shorter barrel. It has been reported that this weapon is subject to severe overheating, becoming too hot to touch after sustained automatic fire. A redesigned version is now in service with Israeli special forces in undercover operations, small enough to conceal under a jacket, yet extremely powerful.

Another version, the Galil AR, has a significantly longer barrel and fires heavier 7.62 mm ammunition and is intended to be used in a stationary light machine gun role.

The South African R4, developed in 1982, is partly based on the Galil. This version was the base for some further variants, the R5, the R6 and a light machine gun.

See also

External links


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