

The Diemaco C-7 rifles have maple leaves on the left side. There is also an M16 variant for the Canadian Army called Diemaco C-7. The independently ambi GRIP-N-RIP Charging Handle accommodates left- and right-handed. The M4A1 is built around a 14.5 inch Cold Hammer Forged M4 Profile barrel with a permanently attached Daniel Defense Flash Suppressor. The M16 normally holds 30 cartridges in its magazine, but there are variants of the magazine that hold only 20 or 10 cartridges. The M4A1 AR15 style firearm features the RIS II picatinny quad rail, which has been in use by US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) for the SOPMOD Block II program since 2005.
#M4a1 riffle full
The M4A1 Carbine retains full automatic and semi automatic fire. The M16A2 can shoot semi automatic and three-round-burst fire. The M16A1 can shoot semi automatic and fully automatic fire.

Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) and the Navy developed the Special Operations Peculiar (SOPMOD) M4A1 Accessory Kit to make this weapon. A shorter, more compact version of the M16A2 rifle, it was specially designed for U.S. The M16 uses the 5.56mm NATO (.223) caliber cartridge, with a muzzle velocity (the speed of bullet leaving the rifle) of over 900 meters per second (over 3,000 feet per second), and has a maximum effective range of 600 yards, with a rate of fire (how fast the gun shoots) of approximately 800 rounds per minute. The M4A1 carbine is the primary weapon used by SEAL operators. The rifle is being used by over 80 nations. First designed by Eugene Stoner in the United States of America, it is currently the standard infantry rifle used by the United States Military Forces. Since 1975, the M16 has been used by many different countries. The M16 is an assault rifle used by the United States since the Vietnam War in 1963, based on the AR-15. From top to bottom: M16A1, M16A2, M4A1, M16A4ġ996 Gangneung submarine infiltration incident
