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A U.S. Marine firing an M1014 shotgun as part of training in December 2006 U.S. Marines firing their M1014s and Mossberg 500s Marine Corps diagram of a field-stripped M1014. The M4 was the first gas-operated shotgun produced by Benelli. Its function is designed around an entirely new design called the "auto-regulating gas-operated" (ARGO) system.
The M4 high-speed tractor used M4 Sherman tracks, roadwheels, and drive sprocket. However, the suspension was of the HVSS type, first introduced on a light tank T6 project in 1938. One variant was designed to tow the 90 mm anti-aircraft gun , and another was for the 155 mm gun or 8-inch howitzer . [ 1 ]
M4 machine shop, COE, van, 1 1 ⁄ 2 to 3-ton, 4 × 4 (G57) M5 unknown; M6 1 1 ⁄ 2-ton, bomb service truck (G85) M7 small arms repair, GMC CCKW 2½-ton 6×6 truck; M8 automotive repair, GMC CCKW 2½-ton 6×6 truck; M9 artillery repair, GMC CCKW 2½-ton 6×6 truck; M10 instrument repair, GMC CCKW 2½-ton 6×6 truck; M11 not used
M1014: 12-gauge: Semi-automatic shotgun Italy: In use [17] [18] [19] Machine guns; XM250: 6.8x51mm: Light machine gun United States: Future light machine gun, winner of the NGSW program in April 2022. [8] M249: 5.56×45mm NATO: Light machine gun, Squad automatic weapon Belgium United States: Belt-fed, but can be used with STANAG magazines.
The original idea was based on the Knight's Armament Company Masterkey system, which dates back to the 1980s and originally comprised a shortened, tube-fed Remington 870 shotgun mounted under an M16 rifle or M4 carbine. The M26-MASS improved upon the original Masterkey concept with a detachable magazine option and more comfortable handling ...
Truck Tractor w/o Crane, 10-ton, 8X8, M1014 (NSN 2320-12-191-5425) The M1001 was used by the US Army as the prime mover for the Pershing II nuclear missile. The tractor was configured with a fifth wheel to tow the erector launcher, an Atlas Maschinen GmbH 8-ton crane for handling missile components and a 30 kW generator to power the erector ...
The buttstock is collapsible on the M4 Model (designated 11707) but will not collapse on the M1014. This is because the M1014 was manufactured before the U.S. 1994 assault weapon ban expired, whereas the M11707 has been manufactured since the ban expired therefore not subject to the terms under the ban. This doesn't make sense.
M4 (5.56×45mm NATO) (the U.S. Army was upgrading and retrofitting their existing stock of M4 carbines to the specifications of the M4A1, starting in 2014 and was predicted to be completed by 2020) [needs update] Mk 18 Mod 0 CQBR (Close Quarters Battle Receiver) (5.56×45mm NATO) (USMC Recon, USCG DSF, USN SEALs, USSOCOM, and USASOC)