Mr. Eisenberg.
Can you give us your position, Mr. Simmons?
Mr. SIMMONS. I am the Chief of the Infantry Weapons Evaluation Branch of the Ballistics Research Laboratory
of the Department of the Army.
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Mr. Mccloy.
If you were having a dry run with this, you could certainly make yourself used to the drag in the trigger without
discharging the rifle, could you not?
Mr. Simmons.
Yes. But there are two stages to the trigger. Our riflemen were all used to a trigger with a constant pull.
When the slack was taken up, then they expected the round to fire. But actually when the slack is taken up, you
tend to have a hair trigger here, which requires a bit of getting used to.
Mr. Mccloy.
This does not have a hair trigger after the slack is taken up?
Mr. Simmons.
This tends to have the hair trigger as soon as you move it after the slack is taken up. You achieve or you feel
greater resistance to the movement of the trigger, and then ordinarily you would expect the weapon to have fired,
and in this case then as you move it to overcome that, it fires immediately. And our firers were moving the shoulder
into the weapon.
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Mr. Eisenberg.
How did he do with the iron sight on the third target?
Mr. Simmons.
On the third target he missed the boards completely. And we have not checked this out. It appears that for the
firing posture which Mr. Miller--Specialist Miller uses, the iron sight is not zeroed for him, since his impacts
on the first and second targets were quite high, and against the third target we would assume that the projectile
went over the top of the target, which extended only a few inches over the top of the silhouette.
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Mr. Eisenberg.
Do you think a marksman who is less than a highly skilled marksman under those conditions would be able to shoot
in the range of 1.2-mil aiming error?
Mr. Simmons.
Obviously considerable experience would have to be in one's background to do so. And with this weapon, I think
also considerable experience with this weapon, because of the amount of effort required to work the bolt.
Mr. Eisenberg.
Would do what? You mean would improve the accuracy?
Mr. Simmons.
Yes. In our experiments, the pressure to open the bolt was so great that we tended to move the rifle off the
target, whereas with greater proficiency this might not have occurred.
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