$200 in 1989 is approximately $480 in 2022 money. An insanely good deal. Wish I was around to buy truckloads of those Chinese arms but I was only 1 at the time lol.
My dad bought me a Chinese AK in the late 80's for 150$ used, I'd have been maybe 13 or 14, worked washing dishes to pay him back. I sold it when I was probably 17 or 18 for less than I paid. It's one of the many guns I wish I would have kept
Every time Henry mentions cousin Harry I am reminded of my friends back home and the shady deals they also tried to sell you on. He even does the exaggerrated accent which even sounds like one of my friends from HK (who now, coincidentally, owns a gun store).
Super interesting episode! Like you perhaps know, we in Finland also possess a ton of Type 56S's, which were imported in the early 90's. Our quality experience, however, varies. Even while the guns are sturdy and well machined and finished with good blueing, it is very common that the sights and their bases are misaligned by several degrees. For example in mine Factory 386 made example, the front and rear sight bases were both clocked to something like 11:30. The gas hole bore resembles number "8", having an initial hole in the 12 o'clock and another one partially besides it to match the misaligned sights. Somehow the piston slack is enough to compensate the offset, and gun works flawlessly. I did a brief query on my fellow 56 owners, and most of them do not have any kind of factory stamps in their guns. Just "NORINCO 7.62x39" and CIP marks. Back then, Finnish reservist associations ordered a batch of 56S's, which were stamped and marketed as "Norinco MPS", featuring a longer barrel and longer stock for extended lenght of pull. These have been quite predominant in Finnish market and sell pretty cheap nowadays.
Very informative and excellent video. Thank you for being able to bring this kind of content. Hearing that it only cost the Chinese Gov $5 to produce an AK was eye opening.
From what I understand Finland like China saw problems with accuracy in the AK system. The Finns mostly solved this problem by equipping the RK-62 with a single piece gas tube that made the movement of the piston smoother and helped barrel harmonics, which in turn improves accuracy. It's interesting that China decided to approach the same problem by switching to the smoother gas operating system of the Dragunov.
Remembering the P&A of the mil-surp ammo brings me to tears. I remember spam cans of 5.45x39 being 15 cent per round before the ban. Just paid over 60 cent per round for scarce Barnaul.
@@9HPodcast I only paid that much because I don't expect to see any more. Max in Russia has told me that Barnaul ceased commercial production with the war and sanctions. This stuff had a 2020 date code.
I was young at the time, but I got relatives who bought Norinco AKs and SKS(s) in the 90s along with various other guns. They described the sporting good stores having pallet crates of them just loosely tossed in there: $60-80 new for SKS and $150 for AKs. It was the same time in early/mid 90s when soviet arms were also flooding the market, so flats/crates of 7.62x39 was dirt cheap and often enough they'd be selling gun + 1k round 'bundles'. Interestingly enough nobody was describing anybody selling bulk used tokarev/makarev pistols, RPD/RPK variants etc...Yet they were selling Uzis/MACs dirt cheap as well (I think like 200-300). Which in all makes it sound like an interesting time to be shopping around for pews.
I find these latest vids. So interesting… just opening up topics I never would have thought about but now want to learn more about… keep up the great work guys!!
I always wondered why Americans are jealous of us here in Europe being able to get Chinese ak's. All the ones I've seen have been extremely crude with sharp edges and were very unreliable, often having a malfunction just after I ask the owner whether it's Chinese. You guys pointed out the drop in quality quite well.
I believe it because the ones that were imported before the 1989 ban (thanks to Bush senior) were in great quality, especially for the price. I own one that was imported right before the ban and it overall decent. But definitely not as good as the polish or Russian variants.
I have acquired both 56's. SKS and AKM. People talk shit about them but God Damn the go bang everytime you pull the trigger. They work. And work everytime.
The current Chinese drug labs have the same reputation as those gun factories. Some are better than pharmaceutical purity, some don't clean vats so your bulk packaged discount protein powder has enough steroid residue that when the creatine is used to cut cocaine a user tests positive and is suspended from the UFC.
Oh nice. Quite the timing of an episode for this particular weapon. I'm about to pick up a PolyTech Stamped Mak90 I found at a decent price in the morning. Can't wait try it out. It's a little bubba-ed up but nothing major.
Excellent Video Chan Sifu! I've learned So Much from you and Josh... Especially appreciate Chinese content ie. HK Police and NORINCO... First handgun I bought was a Norinco 1911A1 Circa 2001, US$275.00, Still NIB! Looking for a Chinese Warlord period Mauser .45 acp and a "Dai Dao" Big Ring Broadsword. Indeed, Chinese Metallurgy is first rate... even vintage Wilson Combat catalog specifies They'll ONLY Accept Colt, Springfield Armory and Norinco 1911's to Build On... still have the Catalog, but Not the Gun! (WC) Looking Forward to your Next "Anything..." San Francisco Chinatown, Gold Mountain
The comment about the rifle weighing more is 100% real, I was messing with a Kalashnikov USA 103 at a shop and it was definitely lighter then my parts kits gun made in combloc countries. Something about the steel is different.
This was a really interesting podcast! I do have a post-ban MAK-90, 1991 vintage, and although it shoots great and is very reliable, my blood pressure goes up every time I look at it and see the places where the bayonet lug and cleaning rod retainer were ground off. OK, I get the bayonet lug, but why the heck did we require them to get rid of the cleaning rod retainer? Anyway, back in those days, the "neutered" MAK-90 was just about the only game in town in regards to AKs. Really, even considering ARs, all there was that was readily available and reasonably priced were the Bushmasters. (Remember that bullpup AR that Bushmaster made that was sourced out of Australia, I think, that was built on an aluminum extrusion that was reminiscent of a rain gutter?)
I remember at Knob Creek back in the mid-90s that one dealer set up there had a stack of semi-auto Type 81 rifles in the boxes for sale. Didn't think much about it at the time but I've never seen another one in person since. Regret not buying one to this day.
I worked for a distributor in the mid-‘90s, and we sold SKS’ to retail shops for $60-80, and Chinese AKs for $170-180. While there was no doubt they were fantastically reliable guns, the machining, blueing and wood just looked cheap, as did packaging and literature. Ad yes, I encountered some virulent hate for Chinese guns from Vietnamese and Korean war veterans.
Hey Thanks for that input thats awesome! I for one didn't think the wood looked cheap, blueing was more even than a lot of guns at the time. esp compare to wood on Maadis. The box was a different story. lol
@@LP18888 In retrospect, I also felt that military-style weapons should have military finish and accessories, so a blued AK just looked wrong. I freely admit that I was on the 'Cheap Commie Trash' wagon. Now I wish I had grabbed one of those sub-$200 AKs...
We here in New Zealand in the 80s had brand new semi Type 56 double folders or a wood stock and folding spiker with sling ,cleaning kit ,mags and cheap ammo for maybe $399 nzd but no I brought a beaten Ex NZ Army L1A1 ,SLR,FNFAL and 6 mags but it shot every time i pulled the trigger and harvested many a red deer ,I had one when I was in the NZ Army,All our old M16A1s prob Vietnam war aid from US were given to the Fiji army when we got the AUG,funny see the Fijians on TV and the never have mags in their M16 weapons for some reason ,maybe in case they might lose them,no good as a club the ole A1
There has been a lot of debate of how the Chinese acquired the SVD Dragunov type rifles. So taking one off the body of a dead Viet sniper is interesting. That gives only the dimensions, but not the the processes of how to make make the parts and run the productions lines. For the polytech M14S there was story out there that it was built on TRW fixtures and related equipment obtained from Taiwan. I know that at least that one polytech bolt was rockwell 40 while the receiver was from 56 to 60 when we tested it. There were several things showing a lack of quality control on some areas of that gun. But for the money it was a good rifle. Part of another story is that the rifles were intended for guerillas in the Philippines and if true my guess is the bolts were made soft to limit the round count of the guns.
I think the factories located in northeast China made better steel because it's very cold there. They didn't have to make their own cold hammer forged parts because it was already cold.
The Type 56 Ak's from China used a 1.5 mm steel receiver, the same as a Warsaw Pact RPK... so they use 50% more steel in just the receiver then a Warsaw Pact AK.
The Polytech AK47 (Milled) is my grail gun, but unfortunately at 4k or more it would be a safe queen. My Polytech M14/s (5 digit, heel marked) accepted all usgi parts and a good shooter. I won't mention the factory 26 Sino SkS I let get away from me.
Interesting… I couldn’t afford ARs back then so I naturally fell in love with what I could afford and what I could shoot the most. AKs were where it was at for me. I did sell some and miss my double folder BUT they’re my favorite AKs in my collection.
What, Henry? I'm looking at you, I'm staring at you. You got a problem, huh? What you gonna do with that pissed off dailo look on your thumbnail? Tryna look all tough and shit. You gonna be dissing like that? Let's see what happens when I get Mrs. Chan! 🤣🤣🤣 Wonder what you'll pull out next time.
"Wei... Saw Loh...!" Neih Gong Mut Yeh!" No Respect... Dui Loh! DO NOT Disrespect and Talk About Sifu's Wife! Real Chinese DO NOT DO THAT! San Francisco Chinatown, Gum Sahn
Yihga... Neih Gong Keiuh ga Mah Ma... (Now... You Talk About His Mother!) Neih jeun ga! Neih Chi Seen! Gou La! Mow Cho! (You're Too Much, You're CRAZY! Enough! Shut Up!) (Translated for Non Cantonese Speakers!)
@@michaelr.l.militia8921 Dude, dudes in every culture bring out the women in their lives whenever they chat. "My boss have me a hard time today, M___F____" "Dillama, I stepped on poop today!" Plus, he's a DaiLo. It's nuclear option, or nothing. Unfortunately, I don't watch enough movies, HK or otherwise... so I don't know which movie he's going for... 陳小春in 古惑仔?
Thinking of the physics, a short stroke piston system should make no difference to accuracy when compared to a long stroke system. I watched many Chinese state produced documentary on their weapon systems, and there's a bizarre love for the SKS over the AK that was a common sentiment back then, commie Fudds?? Mainly around belief the SKS was more accurate, longer sight radius maybe? That's why they kept using SKS up to the late 70s. After they kept getting outgunned by Vietnamese with AKs (ironically most were Chinese made) they finally gave up on it and went to the Type 81. The Type 95 and the 191 also both use short stroke pistons.
@@LP18888 well, the QBZ95 original version was extremely unergonomic, had poor aiming system. But it still worked and he one of the most "know how guns work" person you can find in the Chinese state arms factory at least back then
@@Nathan-jh1ho There are people who were trained by the Soviet Union for years and there are people who didn't have any knowledge and he was the latter. He simply looked at a Famas and said this is the one I am going for. Sprinkle in some AK element and you have the Type95. People in charge loved the design because it looked "west" and not Russian. That is how Type 95 came about.
@@brandonalmeida5493 they have more then one , can get from other source (Arab or Afghan , African ) , beside the capture one,claiming they made it all base on 1 capture svd made it more bad ass sound
Am I the only one that noticed the Chinese make allot of type 56 designated firearms? My question is why type 56, and what is the significance of the designation type 56?
Might just be year of adoption and that year, 1956, probably is when the Soviets dumped a bunch of technical packets or weapons they've already developed onto their lap.
@@andreivaldez2929 yes that is it, like their Mosin is a Type 53 because the Soviets gave them the info for those first in 1953 and then a bunch more weapons in 1956
Really nothing special or unique about the naming convention employed: The gun's official name is "Assault Rifle, Model of 1956" with the word "Model" often being rendered as "Type" in western translation. It is a rather common trend in Western, especially Anglophone, traditions to call east-Asian things "type" instead of "model."
Thanks a lot you Gen X’ers that bought this crap! This is one reason I always try to avoid buying anything Chinese made if I can at all help it. Why help the economy of an enemy government?!
To be fair, it is not really the Gen-Xers who are to blame. It was the American diplomats that pushed to open relations with the People's Republic back in the 1960s who started it all. The temptation to "exploit" the apparent divide between the Communists of China and the Communists of the USSR allowed the Chinese Communists to really play the US diplomats like fiddles, using American money to prop up their regime and then build it into a power to rival the Soviet Union and now the USA. If you want to get mad, get mad at the politicians and civil servants who keep resisting checks on Communist Chinese trade with the USA today, not the kids who were just buying what the market was providing.
Same here. Even if a product says made in Bangladesh or Taiwan I will gladly pick that up just to avoid giving any extra money to a country that's out to get mine.
Download the audio version of this episode at www.9hpodcast.com
PRC exacted revenge on Vietnam in the 1988 naval clash.
I am of the firm opinion the the type 56 is probably one of the AK derivatives that were ever made
Agreed, it was definitely made
Proof reading is for gayfers!
Yep your 100% correct the type 56 was made
wow, that's quite the hot take "it probably existed"
Was there, it existed and thus was made.
$200 in 1989 is approximately $480 in 2022 money. An insanely good deal. Wish I was around to buy truckloads of those Chinese arms but I was only 1 at the time lol.
My dad bought me a Chinese AK in the late 80's for 150$ used, I'd have been maybe 13 or 14, worked washing dishes to pay him back. I sold it when I was probably 17 or 18 for less than I paid. It's one of the many guns I wish I would have kept
Every time Henry mentions cousin Harry I am reminded of my friends back home and the shady deals they also tried to sell you on. He even does the exaggerrated accent which even sounds like one of my friends from HK (who now, coincidentally, owns a gun store).
Super interesting episode! Like you perhaps know, we in Finland also possess a ton of Type 56S's, which were imported in the early 90's. Our quality experience, however, varies. Even while the guns are sturdy and well machined and finished with good blueing, it is very common that the sights and their bases are misaligned by several degrees. For example in mine Factory 386 made example, the front and rear sight bases were both clocked to something like 11:30. The gas hole bore resembles number "8", having an initial hole in the 12 o'clock and another one partially besides it to match the misaligned sights. Somehow the piston slack is enough to compensate the offset, and gun works flawlessly. I did a brief query on my fellow 56 owners, and most of them do not have any kind of factory stamps in their guns. Just "NORINCO 7.62x39" and CIP marks. Back then, Finnish reservist associations ordered a batch of 56S's, which were stamped and marketed as "Norinco MPS", featuring a longer barrel and longer stock for extended lenght of pull. These have been quite predominant in Finnish market and sell pretty cheap nowadays.
Very informative and excellent video. Thank you for being able to bring this kind of content. Hearing that it only cost the Chinese Gov $5 to produce an AK was eye opening.
From what I understand Finland like China saw problems with accuracy in the AK system. The Finns mostly solved this problem by equipping the RK-62 with a single piece gas tube that made the movement of the piston smoother and helped barrel harmonics, which in turn improves accuracy. It's interesting that China decided to approach the same problem by switching to the smoother gas operating system of the Dragunov.
Remembering the P&A of the mil-surp ammo brings me to tears. I remember spam cans of 5.45x39 being 15 cent per round before the ban. Just paid over 60 cent per round for scarce Barnaul.
that stuff is 60 CPR?!
@@9HPodcast I only paid that much because I don't expect to see any more. Max in Russia has told me that Barnaul ceased commercial production with the war and sanctions. This stuff had a 2020 date code.
I bought three Norico firearms in the 90's ... quality gear. Especaially for the money, $79 SKS, $180 1911, $225 AK...and 900 rounds of ammo for $40
Great video, surprise you didn't mention the US Norinco ban that occured after blackmart sales.
That will be a separate stand alone discussion later
And now we do it for the cartels! :D
I was young at the time, but I got relatives who bought Norinco AKs and SKS(s) in the 90s along with various other guns.
They described the sporting good stores having pallet crates of them just loosely tossed in there: $60-80 new for SKS and $150 for AKs.
It was the same time in early/mid 90s when soviet arms were also flooding the market, so flats/crates of 7.62x39 was dirt cheap and often enough they'd be selling gun + 1k round 'bundles'.
Interestingly enough nobody was describing anybody selling bulk used tokarev/makarev pistols, RPD/RPK variants etc...Yet they were selling Uzis/MACs dirt cheap as well (I think like 200-300). Which in all makes it sound like an interesting time to be shopping around for pews.
This was fascinating guys, thank you.
Kengs brought in a bunch of polytech in the 80s. Oh the good old days . Great podcast
I find these latest vids. So interesting… just opening up topics I never would have thought about but now want to learn more about… keep up the great work guys!!
I always wondered why Americans are jealous of us here in Europe being able to get Chinese ak's. All the ones I've seen have been extremely crude with sharp edges and were very unreliable, often having a malfunction just after I ask the owner whether it's Chinese. You guys pointed out the drop in quality quite well.
I believe it because the ones that were imported before the 1989 ban (thanks to Bush senior) were in great quality, especially for the price.
I own one that was imported right before the ban and it overall decent. But definitely not as good as the polish or Russian variants.
I have acquired both 56's. SKS and AKM. People talk shit about them but God Damn the go bang everytime you pull the trigger. They work. And work everytime.
Excellent presentation thank you.
The current Chinese drug labs have the same reputation as those gun factories. Some are better than pharmaceutical purity, some don't clean vats so your bulk packaged discount protein powder has enough steroid residue that when the creatine is used to cut cocaine a user tests positive and is suspended from the UFC.
yeahhhhhhhhhhh all depends on how much the brand company pays the contract...
Oh nice. Quite the timing of an episode for this particular weapon. I'm about to pick up a PolyTech Stamped Mak90 I found at a decent price in the morning. Can't wait try it out. It's a little bubba-ed up but nothing major.
What's a decent price for that ?
Excellent Video Chan Sifu! I've learned
So Much from you and Josh... Especially appreciate Chinese content
ie. HK Police and NORINCO... First handgun I bought was a Norinco 1911A1
Circa 2001, US$275.00, Still NIB!
Looking for a Chinese Warlord period Mauser .45 acp and a "Dai Dao" Big Ring
Broadsword.
Indeed, Chinese Metallurgy is first rate... even vintage Wilson Combat catalog specifies They'll ONLY Accept Colt, Springfield Armory and Norinco 1911's to Build On... still have the Catalog, but Not the Gun! (WC)
Looking Forward to your Next
"Anything..."
San Francisco Chinatown, Gold Mountain
The comment about the rifle weighing more is 100% real, I was messing with a Kalashnikov USA 103 at a shop and it was definitely lighter then my parts kits gun made in combloc countries. Something about the steel is different.
At least on the examples in Finnish market, the sheets are 1,5mm thick compared to 1,0mm in AKM's. And hard as hell.
That was very informative.
Hmm, I sense that 9HR will be releasing a Type 56 video in the near future. Not sure why, just a hunch.
This was a really interesting podcast! I do have a post-ban MAK-90, 1991 vintage, and although it shoots great and is very reliable, my blood pressure goes up every time I look at it and see the places where the bayonet lug and cleaning rod retainer were ground off.
OK, I get the bayonet lug, but why the heck did we require them to get rid of the cleaning rod retainer?
Anyway, back in those days, the "neutered" MAK-90 was just about the only game in town in regards to AKs. Really, even considering ARs, all there was that was readily available and reasonably priced were the Bushmasters. (Remember that bullpup AR that Bushmaster made that was sourced out of Australia, I think, that was built on an aluminum extrusion that was reminiscent of a rain gutter?)
"Arms dealer" is a title to aspire to
I remember at Knob Creek back in the mid-90s that one dealer set up there had a stack of semi-auto Type 81 rifles in the boxes for sale. Didn't think much about it at the time but I've never seen another one in person since. Regret not buying one to this day.
I worked for a distributor in the mid-‘90s, and we sold SKS’ to retail shops for $60-80, and Chinese AKs for $170-180.
While there was no doubt they were fantastically reliable guns, the machining, blueing and wood just looked cheap, as did packaging and literature.
Ad yes, I encountered some virulent hate for Chinese guns from Vietnamese and Korean war veterans.
Hey Thanks for that input thats awesome!
I for one didn't think the wood looked cheap, blueing was more even than a lot of guns at the time. esp compare to wood on Maadis. The box was a different story. lol
@@LP18888 In retrospect, I also felt that military-style weapons should have military finish and accessories, so a blued AK just looked wrong. I freely admit that I was on the 'Cheap Commie Trash' wagon. Now I wish I had grabbed one of those sub-$200 AKs...
We here in New Zealand in the 80s had brand new semi Type 56 double folders or a wood stock and folding spiker with sling ,cleaning kit ,mags and cheap ammo for maybe $399 nzd but no I brought a beaten Ex NZ Army L1A1 ,SLR,FNFAL and 6 mags but it shot every time i pulled the trigger and harvested many a red deer ,I had one when I was in the NZ Army,All our old M16A1s prob Vietnam war aid from US were given to the Fiji army when we got the AUG,funny see the Fijians on TV and the never have mags in their M16 weapons for some reason ,maybe in case they might lose them,no good as a club the ole A1
How am I just finding this podcast now.
My dad had giving me his original type 56 ak and SKS. I love peices of history
15:53 don't forget norico also build the forbidden 1911's for la gangs
There has been a lot of debate of how the Chinese acquired the SVD Dragunov type rifles. So taking one off the body of a dead Viet sniper is interesting. That gives only the dimensions, but not the the processes of how to make make the parts and run the productions lines.
For the polytech M14S there was story out there that it was built on TRW fixtures and related equipment obtained from Taiwan. I know that at least that one polytech bolt was rockwell 40 while the receiver was from 56 to 60 when we tested it. There were several things showing a lack of quality control on some areas of that gun. But for the money it was a good rifle. Part of another story is that the rifles were intended for guerillas in the Philippines and if true my guess is the bolts were made soft to limit the round count of the guns.
I think the factories located in northeast China made better steel because it's very cold there. They didn't have to make their own cold hammer forged parts because it was already cold.
The Type 56 Ak's from China used a 1.5 mm steel receiver, the same as a Warsaw Pact RPK... so they use 50% more steel in just the receiver then a Warsaw Pact AK.
Awesome video thanks
Thank you
The Polytech AK47 (Milled) is my grail gun, but unfortunately at 4k or more it would be a safe queen.
My Polytech M14/s (5 digit, heel marked) accepted all usgi parts and a good shooter.
I won't mention the factory 26 Sino SkS I let get away from me.
I think some reasons that people think the quality of the type 56 is poor is probably just patriotism tbh. But that just a guess
The ones recovered from the third world tend to be genuinely low quality. Hence the discussion.
That’s nationalism. Patriotism towards your own country has nothing to do with denigrating another country
@@TenaciousTentacruel ah okay
Chinese AKs are some of my favorite AKs, the only thing I don't like is their bluing rusts pretty easily in Florida humidity.
Making me lament not being born before that era
Dave reminds me of Dr strange”s friend in the marvel movies
You are not the first one to say that, that actor is Korean and all eastern Asians look similar.
Norinco still sells in Canada, granted recent changes in laws have limited the repetoire of what is sold here.
Very jealous that y’all can (or used to could?) get the Norinco M14 variants.
Used to be able to, can't now. Can still buy t97's, which are the 5.56 civi version of the type 95
@@509Gman any anymore.
@@509Gman They just banned those. Now it's SKS and Type 81.
Interesting… I couldn’t afford ARs back then so I naturally fell in love with what I could afford and what I could shoot the most. AKs were where it was at for me. I did sell some and miss my double folder BUT they’re my favorite AKs in my collection.
I’d love to get my paws on a type 81
They are very nice to shoot. :)
Most akms have 1 mm thick receivers type 56 was running a 1.6 mm thick receiver. Do to heat treating issues on the start of production in China
I have an old Norinko SKS. It’s the shorter barrel version and it’s a pig. Saw one at a local gun show a few years back going for $800.
The "paratrooper" model SKS was the first firearm I got.
When did China start making stamped receiver type 56 AK's?
Coolest story Chinese firearms manufacture factory
That fixed stock H&K91 in today's dollars would be under $1,300. 😢
PTR price then
An NDM-86 was $499.
😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
#Newsletter gang
His prices seem way off. My friend was selling SKS'es in the late 80's for $50/with cosomoline and $75 clean.
$75 to $69 ooooo yah that way off smh
also you do realize back then there is no such thing as MSRP and MAP pricing right?
I need a cousin henry shop tshirt
What, Henry? I'm looking at you, I'm staring at you. You got a problem, huh? What you gonna do with that pissed off dailo look on your thumbnail? Tryna look all tough and shit. You gonna be dissing like that? Let's see what happens when I get Mrs. Chan!
🤣🤣🤣
Wonder what you'll pull out next time.
"Wei... Saw Loh...!" Neih Gong Mut Yeh!"
No Respect... Dui Loh!
DO NOT Disrespect and Talk About Sifu's Wife!
Real Chinese DO NOT DO THAT!
San Francisco Chinatown,
Gum Sahn
@@michaelr.l.militia8921 Look at his thumbnail!
Jeoi miu miu, Mmm seon Chiu!
Also, there's more than one Mrs. Chan in the world.
Yihga... Neih Gong Keiuh ga Mah Ma...
(Now... You Talk About His Mother!)
Neih jeun ga! Neih Chi Seen! Gou La! Mow Cho!
(You're Too Much, You're CRAZY! Enough! Shut Up!)
(Translated for Non Cantonese Speakers!)
@@michaelr.l.militia8921 Dude, dudes in every culture bring out the women in their lives whenever they chat.
"My boss have me a hard time today, M___F____"
"Dillama, I stepped on poop today!"
Plus, he's a DaiLo. It's nuclear option, or nothing.
Unfortunately, I don't watch enough movies, HK or otherwise... so I don't know which movie he's going for... 陳小春in 古惑仔?
Glad I got my mak spikered before the chaos, people might hate me for it but Its binary and not a safe queen. 😂
Enjoy your tools bro, safe queens are over rated.
Thinking of the physics, a short stroke piston system should make no difference to accuracy when compared to a long stroke system. I watched many Chinese state produced documentary on their weapon systems, and there's a bizarre love for the SKS over the AK that was a common sentiment back then, commie Fudds?? Mainly around belief the SKS was more accurate, longer sight radius maybe? That's why they kept using SKS up to the late 70s. After they kept getting outgunned by Vietnamese with AKs (ironically most were Chinese made) they finally gave up on it and went to the Type 81. The Type 95 and the 191 also both use short stroke pistons.
Honestly most of the state produced documentaries are made by people who have no idea about guns and they often steal Henry's footages.
@@LP18888 They were interviewing the designer of the QBZ95 and PLA soldiers
@@Nathan-jh1ho Exactly what I said, people who have no idea about guns. If you think Duo YingXian knows guns you are mistaken.
@@LP18888 well, the QBZ95 original version was extremely unergonomic, had poor aiming system. But it still worked and he one of the most "know how guns work" person you can find in the Chinese state arms factory at least back then
@@Nathan-jh1ho There are people who were trained by the Soviet Union for years and there are people who didn't have any knowledge and he was the latter. He simply looked at a Famas and said this is the one I am going for. Sprinkle in some AK element and you have the Type95. People in charge loved the design because it looked "west" and not Russian. That is how Type 95 came about.
Wait wait wait, hold up... the Chinese developed their svd from 1 capture... or at least decide they wanted to produce it.... that's awesome
The Chinese SVD (type85) was reverse engineered from a captured soviet SVD that a member of the Vietnamese army dropped.
@@9HPodcast well I knew they did it from the Vietnamese captures but to do it from 1....
@@brandonalmeida5493 they have more then one , can get from other source (Arab or Afghan , African ) , beside the capture one,claiming they made it all base on 1 capture svd made it more bad ass sound
👊💪🤙🇺🇲
Early gang early gang early gang
Am I the only one that noticed the Chinese make allot of type 56 designated firearms? My question is why type 56, and what is the significance of the designation type 56?
Might just be year of adoption and that year, 1956, probably is when the Soviets dumped a bunch of technical packets or weapons they've already developed onto their lap.
@@andreivaldez2929 yes that is it, like their Mosin is a Type 53 because the Soviets gave them the info for those first in 1953 and then a bunch more weapons in 1956
See 3:30
Really nothing special or unique about the naming convention employed: The gun's official name is "Assault Rifle, Model of 1956" with the word "Model" often being rendered as "Type" in western translation. It is a rather common trend in Western, especially Anglophone, traditions to call east-Asian things "type" instead of "model."
Someone spoke before watching the video...or has poor listening skills. 🙄
Thanks a lot you Gen X’ers that bought this crap!
This is one reason I always try to avoid buying anything Chinese made if I can at all help it. Why help the economy of an enemy government?!
Least boomer world view
You typed this message on a Chinese product.
To be fair, it is not really the Gen-Xers who are to blame. It was the American diplomats that pushed to open relations with the People's Republic back in the 1960s who started it all. The temptation to "exploit" the apparent divide between the Communists of China and the Communists of the USSR allowed the Chinese Communists to really play the US diplomats like fiddles, using American money to prop up their regime and then build it into a power to rival the Soviet Union and now the USA. If you want to get mad, get mad at the politicians and civil servants who keep resisting checks on Communist Chinese trade with the USA today, not the kids who were just buying what the market was providing.
He said he tries to avoid buying Chinese made when he can - is reading comprehension something they stopped teaching in school?
Same here. Even if a product says made in Bangladesh or Taiwan I will gladly pick that up just to avoid giving any extra money to a country that's out to get mine.
Chinese AKs suck.
#newslettergamg
China isn't allowed anywhere near our jets or any other sensitive equipment, everything t