Why the Israeli Army Created the Galil Rifle

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  • čas přidán 29. 12. 2021
  • The IDF crossed the AK-47 / M-16 and a bottle opener to make the IMI Galil. But Why doesn't the Israeli Military use the 5.56mm Galil rifle anymore? The Israeli Defense Forces used the Galil as their primary combat rifle from 1972 - 2000. But can the new Galil ACE that was recently resurrected give this legendary weapon the comeback its always deserved?
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    The one I’m holding here is an older model Galil. It had a long 18 inch barrel. One thing that hasn’t changed since its creation is that it's always featured a full send mode with a high rate of fire at 650 rounds per minute. I was able to dump the entire clip before I could say shalom! That means hello. One of the distinguishing features that you’ll notice right away is its long curved magazines that its often seen with. I think this comes from the IDF’s dislike for their old FN FAL which could only carry 20 rounds. You’ll see a lot of design choices in the Galil are a direct consequence of the bad taste left in their mouth from the FAL.
    This was one of the first military weapons adopted to fire the accurate small NATO 5.56mm from the reliable AK47 style action. The AR Galil has an impressive muzzle velocity of 950 meters per second and an extended max effective range of 500 meters. The IDF made this as a purpose built solution for close range desert fighting that didn’t require a whole lot of love and care in regards to maintenance.
    You have to remember at the time of its development in the late 1960’s the Galil was a very novel idea. If you think about it, two years after it went into service the Soviet Army made a version of the AK that fired a smaller round that was very similar to the Galil. It also had a foldable stock just like the Galil. Coincidence, maybe! But I still think the Israelis were inspired by the Soviets AK who were then inspired by the Israelis Galil. Isn’t the circle of firearms life fascinating?
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Komentáře • 2K

  • @Taskandpurpose
    @Taskandpurpose  Před 2 lety +181

    Thanks for watching guys I really appreciate it! Check out the last video I made about the SEALs vs. Special Forces czcams.com/video/MEFlQ8bMWfY/video.html
    What're your thoughts on the Israeli Defense Force's Galil ?

    • @nitinjadhav5326
      @nitinjadhav5326 Před 2 lety +6

      Make a vedio on world's worst guns

    • @Taskandpurpose
      @Taskandpurpose  Před 2 lety +8

      @@nitinjadhav5326 the M320 is my least favorite piece of military equipment ever created. Not really a gun, a grenade launcher but still. That launcher is gross. For real. Heavy, bulky, a pain to reload, the pistol grip drags in the dirt. I'm upset just thinking about it.

    • @leostormrage8201
      @leostormrage8201 Před 2 lety

      How do you know Vietnam have this Galil ACE factory... Oups

    • @nitinjadhav5326
      @nitinjadhav5326 Před 2 lety +1

      @@leostormrage8201 cause he keeps on searching about the vedio topic

    • @nitinjadhav5326
      @nitinjadhav5326 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Taskandpurpose then is m79 more better than m320 ?

  • @AiAngel
    @AiAngel Před 2 lety +695

    The fact an Israeli guy named "Balashnikov" was hired to make an Israeli counterpart to the Kalashnikov lmao

    • @VinnyUnion
      @VinnyUnion Před 2 lety +23

      Bljatshnikov

    • @thokim84
      @thokim84 Před rokem +26

      A Russian-born Israeli guy. A colonizer.

    • @mrno.7366
      @mrno.7366 Před rokem +89

      @@thokim84 he came back to his homeland

    • @mistergibzzz1948
      @mistergibzzz1948 Před rokem +76

      @@thokim84 colonizer? Like arabs?

    • @truthseekers864
      @truthseekers864 Před rokem +1

      The only colonialists are the Arabs who left Arabia to colonize other lands.

  • @ca9968
    @ca9968 Před 2 lety +1121

    I carried the South African R4 for a few years in the South African Defense Force, never let me down, rugged, reliable and very accurate, I later bought an LM4 (The semi auto civilian model of the R4) and that too was an absolute gem of a rifle...

    • @marcg1686
      @marcg1686 Před 2 lety +43

      Let me guess, you used Kiwi shoe polish to cover the night sights😀

    • @empire-classfirenationbatt2691
      @empire-classfirenationbatt2691 Před 2 lety +20

      It's too bad we have to get part kits for the LM4 now since they stopped production of the LM4.

    • @ca9968
      @ca9968 Před 2 lety +88

      @@marcg1686 Nah, I use to use the night sights to line up on the enemy`s teeth when fighting in the pitch black darkness of Thokoza Township at night, all you had to do was tell a joke and they lit up like a Christmas tree...

    • @ca9968
      @ca9968 Před 2 lety +24

      @@empire-classfirenationbatt2691 I unfortunately had to sell mine in 2013 when I left for the UK...I still see one or two for sale at gun shops online in SA but the prices they are quoting are ridiculous, I paid less than a 3rd for mine compared to what they go for now...

    • @marcg1686
      @marcg1686 Před 2 lety +18

      @@ca9968Damn, I'm old. R1, G3 and finally the R4. We had to blank the night sights with Kiwi. A long time ago. I emigrated too.
      Amended. We blanked the rear sight only.

  • @dfgggg89
    @dfgggg89 Před 2 lety +89

    I carried the Gallil when I served in The IDF. Still my all time favorite assault rifle.

    • @banishedvideos1014
      @banishedvideos1014 Před 2 lety

      How many kids did you shoot with your Gallil? how much land did you steal for a false state?

    • @mrno.7366
      @mrno.7366 Před rokem +15

      הייתי צנחן בלבנון עם גליל ארוך.
      והמטוליסט היה עם M16.
      הוא תמיד היה אומר לי שאשמור עליו ואהיה לידו כי הוא לא בטוח שהנשק שלו יירה בגלל לכלוך. בוץ. וברמת הנשק שלו היה נתקע לפרקים.
      הגליל היה החבר הכי טוב שלי שם.

    • @royliber3824
      @royliber3824 Před rokem +9

      אני שמח שIWI עדיין מייצרים גליל בתור נשק חדש וקל, חבל שהוא לא החליף את הM16 כי אני חושב שבתור נשק סטנדרטי לכוחות הפחות מיוחדים בצהל הוא יכול להיות מושלם

  • @adamchurvis1
    @adamchurvis1 Před 2 lety +14

    I was lucky enough to meet Israel Galili in Atlanta in 1980 at the SHOT Show, just two years before he passed away. He was energetic and full of enthusiasm for his rifle, which he demonstrated by hopping up and down on it while its bipod was deployed to show just how strong the entire setup was despite the bipod's light weight. He gave me his IMI business card which was of larger dimensions than typical business cards, and his autograph in Hebrew on a postcard showing the Galil 7.62 x 51mm version. I have them still.

  • @christianjohnsalvador1121
    @christianjohnsalvador1121 Před 2 lety +272

    The Philippine National Police is also beginning to use the Galil ACE as their standard service rifle alongside their M4s(been seeing less of the cops in my city with M4 and M16A1's and more of the modern Galils)

    • @josephbilling6445
      @josephbilling6445 Před 2 lety +2

      Why were they using A1's? surplus? Why not have newer m16's.

    • @alwayscurious3357
      @alwayscurious3357 Před 2 lety +34

      @@josephbilling6445 IIRC Philippines produced a lot of M16s or M16A1s locally back then so they're much more common than the other variants of that rifle

    • @christianjohnsalvador1121
      @christianjohnsalvador1121 Před 2 lety +11

      @@josephbilling6445 we had and supplied a lot of M16's, both A1 and A2 models from the US and the A1 is popular amongst everyone because of its full auto capability compared to the A2 having only a 3 round burst fire mode. Regular cops use the A1 since most of it came from the former Philippine Constabulary stocks after they merged with the Local Integrated Police force in the 90's to form the PNP, while the Special Action Force(their counter terrorist commando branch) and SWAT teams used both M16's and M4's until recently

    • @neiljasonvillanueva1864
      @neiljasonvillanueva1864 Před 2 lety +3

      @@alwayscurious3357 Ano po ang IIRC? Ang alam ko lng ELISCO A1s and carbines.

    • @alwayscurious3357
      @alwayscurious3357 Před 2 lety +2

      @@neiljasonvillanueva1864 Shortcut for "If I Remember Correctly". My bad. Wrong placement
      Akala ko si Elisco tools is M16s lang Ang minanufacture... Pati rin pala m4 carbines? Today I Learned

  • @IkeanCrusader1013
    @IkeanCrusader1013 Před 2 lety +347

    It was based off the rk62 valmet, a finnish improvement of the AK, and then they took the design ideas from that and the FAL, making some chambered in .308, and 5.56, as well as having conversion for warsaw pact 7.62x39. The new Galil ACE is even further improved and possibly one of the best self loading rifles ever made. The bottle opener was added because troops like cola, and the bipod was able to function as wire cutters too because why not. LRBHO was intentionally left out cause it could let sand and crap get in, it's optional on the Galil ACE based on customer specification.

    • @pinerider19
      @pinerider19 Před 2 lety +8

      I saw that in Balashnikov's demonstration, and thought it was absolutely genius.

    • @CalvinL.Stevens
      @CalvinL.Stevens Před 2 lety

      What's an LRBHO?

    • @IkeanCrusader1013
      @IkeanCrusader1013 Před 2 lety +8

      @@CalvinL.Stevens Last round bolt hold-open

    • @chadhaire1711
      @chadhaire1711 Před 2 lety +1

      More bullshit stories...the LRBHO was never omitted because it kept dirt out.....LOL.....NEVER..that is an old wives tale...

    • @psywalker7973
      @psywalker7973 Před 2 lety +2

      The new galil would be much better as a bullpup design. Get an extra 5-6 inches out of a barrel whilst maintaining the compact design.

  • @rararnanan7244
    @rararnanan7244 Před 2 lety +65

    I had both the Galil and M16 during my service. The M16 was nice to cary around, easy to operate and maintain, but total crap in combat - jammed all the time. The Galil has never NEVER jammed on me. The only rare occasions when you pulled the trigger and bullet didn't come out was due to faulty ammunition. The gun never jammed no matter how poorly maintained and full of sand it was. The short Galil with its folding butt was so short you could easily get through tank hatches or sit on the bus with it in your lap. On the other hand, it weighted a metric ton.

    • @normanocampo4466
      @normanocampo4466 Před rokem +4

      That is WHY the Philippine Army are NOT using anymore the M16 Rifle, even our Home Defense Force doesn't want the M16, because of frequent jamming, they much prefer the M1 Garand, M2 Carbine, all WW2 old school stuff, but very RELIABLE, much of our M16s are in storage, today the Philippine Army's standard rifle is the AR-15, some units are using the Galil, AK-47, even the AUG-Steyr and the Tavor

    • @StrainXv
      @StrainXv Před rokem +1

      Uh... how was it easy to maintain, yet jammed? You do know those two things don't go hand in hand, right?

    • @armynurseboy
      @armynurseboy Před rokem +4

      ​@Norman Ocampo the M16s are not used anymore because they're old and worn out. The Philippine Army and Marines standard rifle is the R4, which is essentially an M4 clone made by Remington instead of by Colt or FN.

    • @rararnanan7244
      @rararnanan7244 Před rokem +1

      @@StrainXv Easy to maintain means that it is simple to take apart, does not accumulate too much residue, and most important - does not tend to rust even in wet conditions. Regular servicing it was short and easy. The Galil would show rust spots very quickly with even the slightest slack in scrapping and oiling - it would still fire, but would look like you stole it from a 3rd world militia.
      All this was over 30 years ago in the early 90’s.

    • @StrainXv
      @StrainXv Před rokem +1

      @@rararnanan7244 Sorry, but a well maintained weapon does not jam. A poorly maintained weapon will.

  • @johndo3930
    @johndo3930 Před 2 lety +42

    I fought in the border war in the early 80s in south Africa and used the R4 .it was basically an Galil made under license . Some differences we had an plastic hand held instead of wood. An collapsible stock . The south Africans being generally large people there where 2 stock lengths the smaller troops could ask for an slightly shorter stock to be fitted. And the R4 did not have an carry handle so that on patrols troops had to carry it in the ready position and could not carry it by the handle which would slow down your response in an contact situation and could cost you your life. Remember it was bush war so engagements usually where on short distances we also carried shorter magazines but we all carried a longer magazine as well. Then there was the R5 version with a shorter barrel length usually used by paratroopers. Was n great weapon never gave any trouble.

  • @VGClanMember
    @VGClanMember Před 2 lety +413

    Correction, Estonia made the switch to an LMT rifle designating it R-20 "Rahe", my battalion(you feature us prominently in the vid) was actually the first to get it. Spent a fair amount of time with both rifles and gotta say, the galil is still definitely my favorite AK variant, everything on it just makes sense, the charging handle, the safety, it was very pleasant to operate(didn't have the cap opener though, we had a pic mount :) ). The R-20 is a really good AR imho, not the HK416 but still very nice. Though how light and compact it felt in hands after the Galil was astonishing.
    Former Sargeant, paramedic in the Estonian Scout battalion for 3 years

    • @Taskandpurpose
      @Taskandpurpose  Před 2 lety +84

      I had the pleasure of training with the Estonian army at Saber Strike international training event in 2010 you all were a great bunch of dudes! Glad to hear you dig the Galil. I'll have to look into the R-20 for a future video!

    • @bradcampbell7253
      @bradcampbell7253 Před 2 lety +16

      Thanks for serving in the cause of freedom !

    • @BigRussianCatWithFloppyEars
      @BigRussianCatWithFloppyEars Před 2 lety +2

      @@bradcampbell7253 Hey glowy,they are not serving you, they are serving capital. (Unless you are a cia bot then i guess they do)

    • @John-ro3vu
      @John-ro3vu Před 2 lety +11

      I’ve got one of the Estonia LMT rifles. Excellent system!

    • @Infinite-if7uq
      @Infinite-if7uq Před 2 lety +12

      Yep, if I recall the New Zealand defence force also adopted the weapon (they designated it as "MARS-L") a few years ago as their service rifle to rplace the old Steyr AUG.

  • @mav333
    @mav333 Před 2 lety +190

    During my service in the Colombian Air Assault regiment we used the Galil Ace-23. It is made under license by INDUMIL here in Colombia. Very reliable rifle used extensively in different terrain and environments and never had any issues in combat. During our deployment to Egypt in the Sinai we had no issue as well.

    • @dbmail545
      @dbmail545 Před 2 lety +2

      Is INDUMIL the successor to IMBEL?

    • @mav333
      @mav333 Před 2 lety +15

      @@dbmail545 No INDUMIL is the Colombian military weapons maker run by the Government. IMBEL is Brazilian Defense maker.

    • @landenmorton4543
      @landenmorton4543 Před 2 lety +8

      When were you deployed to Egypt? Genuinely just curious I love learning! I only fairly recently learned that Cuba deployed significant forces in Africa so I'm trying to learn more about conflicts on the continent.

    • @jordonstewart2092
      @jordonstewart2092 Před 2 lety +3

      @@landenmorton4543 to the MNF base. Prolly. I've been there. There are other nations involved too, italy, fiji, US, AUS and NZ. Its mostly peaceful but they do get the occasional mortar fire from the Egypt-ISIS fight in the sinai.

    • @viceralman8450
      @viceralman8450 Před 2 lety +15

      @@landenmorton4543 Colombia deploys troops to Sinai as part of a UN peace keeping mission after Egypt took back the peninsula.

  • @alanfenick1103
    @alanfenick1103 Před 2 lety +52

    The Galil was also available in 7.62 NATO and was used as a sniper rifle with a very good 4x German made scope.

  • @knghtbrd
    @knghtbrd Před 2 lety +7

    When I was working on video games, I spent a lot of time looking at how military weapons work. The Galil … is freaking amazing. The Swiss Army Rif-er, IDF Rifle. Barbed wire cutter in the bipod, bottle opener in the stock, the ability to fire off a grenade … this thing was MADE for video games…
    Never shot one, obviously. Nobody crazy enough to invite me along to try out anything that's got select fire for some reason. Can't put my finger on why. Anyway, I'm glad they've modernized this thing. Very unique weapon that nobody else at any other time could've built.

  • @GugureSux
    @GugureSux Před 2 lety +141

    Galil's like that extroverted little sister of the Valmet RK62, who decided to go tour around the world, while the big sis stayed back home.
    Neat guns, and definitely a fine middle-ground between the robust, conscript-proof design of the AKs, and the NATO's more professional user-oriented ARs.

  • @hunterphille1280
    @hunterphille1280 Před 2 lety +52

    I have an original Galil, and this year I purchased a 2nd generation Galil Ace in rifle configuration in 7.62x39. I love them, and felt my collection was incomplete without them

    • @robison87
      @robison87 Před 2 lety +2

      How much did you pay for them?

    • @hunterphille1280
      @hunterphille1280 Před 2 lety +1

      @@robison87 I got the original Galil for a shade under $7000, and I wanted a low number Ace, so I got in a bidding war with another guy and just straight up bought it for $2379 after all fees and taxes. By the way, my Galil is a 1971 model

    • @HauntedHideouts
      @HauntedHideouts Před 2 lety +2

      I’ve always wanted a original Galil but I’ve never seen one it person plus wouldn’t be able to afford it anyways so I settled for a Galil ace gen 2 rifle variant.

    • @hunterphille1280
      @hunterphille1280 Před 2 lety

      @@HauntedHideouts which Ace did you go with?

    • @HauntedHideouts
      @HauntedHideouts Před 2 lety +1

      @@hunterphille1280 the gen 2 rifle variant in 7.62x39. Just picked up some iron sights for it the other day. It’s a real shame the gen 2’s don’t come with iron sights like the gen1 did.

  • @michaelbiniakewitz2329
    @michaelbiniakewitz2329 Před 2 lety +8

    I actually love this dude’s videos because he reminds me of a dear friend I served with who passed away recently and never took himself nor fact that he too served too seriously like way too many seem to. Great videos and sense of humour

  • @charlesvanonselen6251
    @charlesvanonselen6251 Před 2 lety +6

    The South African army used a version of the Galil called the R4 and R5(SHORT). Excellent weapon.

  • @84Actionjack
    @84Actionjack Před 2 lety +58

    Trained with the Galil as a Marine in the early '90s.It had a scope mount that would allow easy detachment and still hold the zero when remounted. That gun also made me despise gas impingement systems. Great rifle.

    • @Taskandpurpose
      @Taskandpurpose  Před 2 lety +15

      the marines always get to cross train on foreign weapons and I love it. there was a lot of footage and photos of the Galil bieng used by marines. Interesting to hear it made you dislike the M16 haha I've heard that before - makes sense

    • @letsgobrandontrump2024
      @letsgobrandontrump2024 Před rokem +4

      I don’t hate gas impingement but fuck is it dirty after a few mags or more, although I’ve been letting my ar 15 go to see how many rounds I get before it malfunctions and I’m 1400 rounds in nothing but a light wipe of oil on the bolt and no malfunctions I’m close to just cleaning her and calling it lol

    • @jasonleerjason5001
      @jasonleerjason5001 Před rokem +2

      Served in South African Marine Brigade 87-89 ... also used SA made Galil (R4) , a superior weapon , although I had a Mag58 LMG ....."All the way " my Semper Fi brother ..👍

  • @riaanpotgieter475
    @riaanpotgieter475 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I am from South Africa and after using the(R1) FN FAL for many year in our defence force we changed to R4, R5, R6 which is the Galil with very minor changes in different roles.

  • @davidka5204
    @davidka5204 Před 6 měsíci +5

    Ex IDF here. The biggest problem of the Galil was it's accuracy. A major design flew where the rear sight was on the cover that you took apart every field strip, unlike the AK-47, requiring calibration after every cleaning. And in anyway it moved around while the front sight remained fixed. After seeing soldiers had very low hit rates it was decided to ditch the Galil. It was also heavy and rusted easily. But yes, it kept shooting no matter how much sand was in it...

    • @HerveyShmervy
      @HerveyShmervy Před 5 měsíci +2

      did you ever use the MTar?

    • @davidka5204
      @davidka5204 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@HerveyShmervy the Tavor was after my time. In reserve duty I only used CAR15.

  • @AndrewTranBaseball
    @AndrewTranBaseball Před 2 lety +62

    It's nice hearing you mentioned Vietnam in the video. I'm from Vietnam. We adopted the Galil Ace but have made many changes to it so that soldiers would have an easier time switching to the Galil from the AK

  • @ChrisCappy
    @ChrisCappy Před 2 lety +42

    I had too much fun firing the Balashnikov I mean the Galil wait no I mean the Kalashnikov. What a trip through military history this one was!

  • @denispol79
    @denispol79 Před 2 lety +5

    I had served with the full length Galil for several months. Boy, was I a happy trooper when I finely finished the medics course and got the short m16.
    The Galil, together with mandatory 6 magazines, weighted twice as my new weapon.

  • @GameWorldRS
    @GameWorldRS Před rokem +8

    Galil, Tavor, Negev, Uzi, and the Desert eagle, yeah...they know how to make weapons

  • @Niinsa62
    @Niinsa62 Před 2 lety +29

    If I'm not totally mistaken, when Sweden upgraded from the H&K G3 in 7.62x51 NATO (called the Automatkarbin 4 in Swedish service, or AK4 for short) to something in 5,56x45 NATO back in the 1980's, the two finalists were the Belgian FN FNC-80 and the Galil. We went for the FNC, but if we had gone for the Galil, it would have been a funny kind of round trip for the gun. I mean, it is based on the RK-62 of Finland, which is our neighbor state. Well, I guess since the Galil made it to Estonia, which also is a neighbor state of Finland, the gun still made that funny kind of round trip. 🙂

    • @threestrikesmarxman9095
      @threestrikesmarxman9095 Před 2 lety +3

      The Estonian national anthem uses the same melody of the Finnish national anthem, so there's that.

    • @ThanhNguyen-xf9dl
      @ThanhNguyen-xf9dl Před 2 lety +2

      After 1975, the vietnam war come to an end so that IDF can get M16 with much more reasonable price from USA. IDF dont need galil anymore. 40 years later in 2015, Vietnamese buy the design and technology to produce Galil Ace and equip it as main assault rifle. What a compensation ?

  • @anhnam8863
    @anhnam8863 Před 2 lety +47

    Nice vid! Hope you could do a video about Vietnam People's Army service rifles including the AK-47,AKM, the Galil and it variations: STV-215, STV-380 and STV-410. STV stands for Vietnamese Assault Rifle in Vietnamese. The guns, once again, combine the traits of both the more modern Galil (picatinny rails, milled receiver, triangular stock) and the more traditional AK-47s, AKM (right side charging handle, fire selector, 7.62x39mm cartridge). The reason behind this is indeed easier for conscripts to use and NCOs to get used since the PAV has been using the AKs since the Vietnam War. Apparently, Vietnam purchases the license to produce a limited number of Galil ACEs. After the contract, Vietnam decided to use the technology and design transferred from Isarel to come up with their own design - the STVs.

  • @leifmanson7599
    @leifmanson7599 Před 2 lety +15

    Nice video. I was drafted into the IDF in 1979 and fell into /"volunteered" for the paratroops. We had M-16s in basic and got our long galils when we joined the Brigade. Within a year, they introduced the Galil short version, without the wooden grip, or bipod. My guys in the crew served weapons support squad (I carried a 52mm Yugoslav commando mortar) received the short version. I wanted to keep my long version with greater accuracy at range, but it's the army.
    Besides the simplicity of the Kalashnikov mechanism, my favourite feature of the Galil was speed on the draw: I could flick the selector lever on the left side of the pistol grip with my thumb, slap back the vertical bolt post to load with my left hand, and squeeze off a round from the hip without disturbing the direction of my barrel. There are certain kinds of polite confrontations where that can be crucial.
    In training, I never fired it on full automatic. I heard that when Central American armies bought it for jungle warfare, they did a lot of automatic fire and the barrels were not adequate.

    • @vtwinrenegade9365
      @vtwinrenegade9365 Před 2 lety +7

      My dad got a Galil from the Israeli embassy in Panamá, personally gave it to President Somoza of Nicaragua in 1977. He had it adopted immediately. The Nicaraguan national guard was dealing with a communist insurrection/invasion, a lot of urban and jungle operations; the Galil never had issues. Even though it was lighter than the M16a1 (which was also in service) soldiers preferred the Galil even if it was heavier.

  • @Polarian1
    @Polarian1 Před 2 lety

    Greetings from the UK, Cappy!
    Came across your videos a few days ago and have absolutely been bingeing hard! Such a unique mix of totally and intelligently informative...and then dumb "humour". I"m big on things that blow up, people that blow things up and stupidity. So you hit all the spots mate! Many thanks for all your vids. Take care and God bless you.

  • @wazzarsa
    @wazzarsa Před 2 lety +17

    I was issued a R4 - Galil - in 1985 at the start of my National Service, got to know this rifle like the back of my hand. At the time I was not sure of the round, would deflect in wind and small twigs... as training progressed, I got to use the R4 effectively. Oh "COD - Spray and Pray" would end up with a full ammo case above the head and yes, off you go...
    Dec 86, discharged from National Service and joined, then called South African Police in '87. Here I was trained on what we called the R1 - FN/FAL/SLR South Africa/Rhodesian version - Loved this rifle. Long and heavy, but totally awesome.
    '91 I transferred over to the Military Police, again issued with the R4, and 9mm Beretta FS. Qualified with both weapons during basic training. Later I would use these weapons in Practical Shooting. Where I learnt how to shoot properly with R4 and the Beretta - not just static target on a open range... I learned to love the R4. I left the service in December '96...
    Now 25 years later I have the CYMA Galil, and a Beretta M9 - both Air soft AEG and Gas.... love them both, they talk and "tangos" answer!😁🤣😎
    Oh: The R4/Galil, and variants - R5 and R6 are still in use with the South African Defence force.
    Please see this video: czcams.com/video/SLDw6i1D52U/video.html From Forgotten Weapons
    Task & Purpose/Chris Cappy: Spend a lot more time with the Galil, do a number of "practical shoots" and let me know what you think.

    • @useryggfdcc
      @useryggfdcc Před 2 lety

      Goeie tye gewees.
      Groete uit Kanada.

    • @Aphony66
      @Aphony66 Před 2 lety

      Hahaha... I too was in the SADF in 1985

  • @fennoman9241
    @fennoman9241 Před 2 lety +175

    Fun Fact: Galil is based on Finnish Rk-62's given by Finland to Israel, which is an highly improved Ak-47 Type 3.

  • @buddymac3993
    @buddymac3993 Před 2 lety

    Fascinating ,a bottle opener!! I see coke commercial,beer commercial and during a battle,yhe pause that refreshes!!!!

  • @boxtapper8550
    @boxtapper8550 Před 2 lety +10

    I got my R1 FN (British called it SLR) in 1980 in the SADF. A few months after basic we were the first to get the R4 (Galil). We only loaded the R1 mag with 18 instead of 20 rounds because of blockage (stoppage). The R4 was a good weapon and got me through a few contacts in the border & Angola bush war.

    • @RudolfStern3399
      @RudolfStern3399 Před rokem +1

      You still live in SAF ?

    • @boxtapper8550
      @boxtapper8550 Před rokem +2

      @@RudolfStern3399 No , left in 2002.

    • @Phansikhongolza
      @Phansikhongolza Před 6 měsíci

      The SADF failed to train their troops to shoot straight so opted to teach them to shoot lots! Spray and pray tactic.
      I refused to adopt the R5 when they began issuing them, preferring to stick to my trusty R1. Because I can shoot straight. 😂😂😂😂
      By the way I never only loaded 18 rounds in my magazines. And never had "storing" either.

    • @boxtapper8550
      @boxtapper8550 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Phansikhongolza yeh right, they never taught us to shoot straight LOL.

    • @Phansikhongolza
      @Phansikhongolza Před 6 měsíci

      @@boxtapper8550 The average national serviceman was hopeless!
      Couldn't hit an elephant on the arse with a banjo.

  • @mr.k.i.s.s7496
    @mr.k.i.s.s7496 Před 2 lety +11

    The bottle opener was also used for Soda and water. There were no plastic bottles of water during the 70's and 80's. Heck, that didn't start being a thing until Evian and Perrier started being sold in plastic bottles.

    • @crazypath573
      @crazypath573 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah... the plastic bottle as an innovation is a scourge upon the Earth. Makes me sad.

    • @Matt-xc6sp
      @Matt-xc6sp Před 2 lety +2

      @@crazypath573 reject modernity, return to drinking from animal skins

    • @crazypath573
      @crazypath573 Před 2 lety

      @@Matt-xc6sp or.. glass. Try glass.

  • @fredboat
    @fredboat Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks, Enjoyed, Been a fan/user of IMI weapons for a long time. They also make world class ammo.

  • @MR-vt3np
    @MR-vt3np Před rokem +2

    I had the rifle grenade pack for a few months when deployed. Very effective and accurate, about 80m range. You had to use a blank to fire the grenade.

  • @Roberto-REME
    @Roberto-REME Před 6 měsíci +1

    Great video production and outstanding narration. Informative, entertaining, interesting. Really well done!

  • @petesheppard1709
    @petesheppard1709 Před 2 lety +4

    I remember watching a news report about the Galil as a young teen and being all 'WOW!' as the neat features were demonstrated. 😃

  • @parasportz
    @parasportz Před 2 lety +9

    When I served in the SADF, I don't recall our R4s having bottle openers like the Galil but I do remember the bipod having a wire cutter to cut through barbed wire. Never used it for that purpose and it looked pretty flimsy.

    • @CAMSLAYER13
      @CAMSLAYER13 Před 2 lety +1

      The bottle opener was for a specific reason, the troops were using their mags to open bottles and damaging them. It'd be an easy cost cut if thats not an issue.

  • @SLINGSHOT_RUST
    @SLINGSHOT_RUST Před 2 lety

    Incredible history. Your content is simply awesome!

  • @TheSouthernshark
    @TheSouthernshark Před 2 lety +6

    A lot of the South and Central American countries have adopted the ACE, or I should say are phasing it in as the old Galils wear out; Colombia, El Salvador and Guatemala for certain. There are factories in Colombia and Guatemala that make the Galil Ace, Tavor and Uzi (which is why the old Colombian Cartels always had Uzis).

  • @ice-xv1hi
    @ice-xv1hi Před 2 lety +3

    "The kitten of the sandbox" lmfao!!

  • @NilfgardianNationalist
    @NilfgardianNationalist Před 2 lety +9

    great video!!!!! I enjoy these Israeli weapons videos very much!!!

    • @Taskandpurpose
      @Taskandpurpose  Před 2 lety +2

      great to know, I'll do one on their machine gun in the future soon

    • @TheBucketSkill
      @TheBucketSkill Před 2 lety

      Israeli's enjoyed them so much, that they replaced it with a decent bullpup. X95!

  • @dl6860
    @dl6860 Před rokem

    Thanks Cappy for another hilarious and informative video!

  • @WhocaresWhy44
    @WhocaresWhy44 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Excellent tutorial. The circle notion 5.56 M16A1 to Galil/AK 47 to AK74 in 5.56. The FAL "the Right Arm of the Free World probably fared well in the Michelin Plantation in the Battle of Long Tan that in Israel/Egyptian theatre. The comic bits are great as well for the necessary segues.

  • @fuzzyreticle
    @fuzzyreticle Před 2 lety +11

    More of an iteration of the Finish Valmet than a Ak and Ar. But close enough.

  • @michaelmarkspersonal
    @michaelmarkspersonal Před 2 lety +58

    The original AKs were had forged and milled receivers. The AKM were stamped.

    • @quyha3234
      @quyha3234 Před 2 lety +7

      type 1 ak were stamp ,type 2/3 is milled

    • @allangibson2408
      @allangibson2408 Před 2 lety +1

      The original type 1 AK’s went to machined receivers in the type 2 because they couldn’t get the stamped ones to work reliably.
      The pressed steel concept was based on the StG-44 (but the Russians changed almost everything to suit themselves).

    • @rkan2
      @rkan2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@allangibson2408 Galil is a very new compared to the AK/AKM so they wouldn't have been comparing to the type 1 AKs in the 70s anymore... I doubt they even saw a type 1 AK.

    • @allangibson2408
      @allangibson2408 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rkan2 The IAI Galil was derived (licensed production) from the Valmet RK-62 which was derived the Polish licensed version of the AK-47.
      Valmet is in Finland and the Finns are intimately familiar with every Russian firearm ever made from border clashes and direct imports.
      Each step added tweaks to the production process and tolerances.

    • @rkan2
      @rkan2 Před 2 lety

      @@allangibson2408 Yeah, I know that much, though there would've not been any "border clashes" since WW2.. I shot the rk62 as a conscript :P

  • @danmills2932
    @danmills2932 Před 2 lety

    I love the dude behind you, he accomplished a lot.

  • @adamhuskey5306
    @adamhuskey5306 Před 2 lety

    Between this and the m249 operation, I'm really impressed with your explanation, graphics and energy.

  • @TacShooter
    @TacShooter Před 2 lety +3

    The Galil SAR and ARM still have a look that awakens my appetites, like pictures of the Jaguar XJS-HE or Phoebe Cates.

  • @paulharris4821
    @paulharris4821 Před 2 lety +19

    We licensed made a version in South Africa called the R4. I loved mine. Never jammed even in Angola. I think the Army still use it now.

    • @gidi3250
      @gidi3250 Před 2 lety +1

      The lice versions where the R1 and R2 the R3 was made right after the license expired and the R4 was according to my dad a parabat weapon especially with the fancy folding stock, the R5 was made late 80's and is the police version of the R4 and the R6 was made as an improvement to the R5/R6 but the R4/R5/R6 are all 3 still used, some thought the government would replace the previous models with the R6 but somewhere the money for that went into a pocket.

    • @WolfmanFoxtrot
      @WolfmanFoxtrot Před 2 lety +1

      @@gidi3250 The R5 is not only used at SAPS, its also used in the motorized battalion and tank regiment

  • @mauricecohen3830
    @mauricecohen3830 Před 2 lety

    That was a fun and instructive video. Thanks.

  • @justice_w6
    @justice_w6 Před 2 lety

    Whoever wrote the script for this episode. Just Beautiful. ✌️

  • @shawnjones3853
    @shawnjones3853 Před 2 lety +5

    I am a happy owner of a Galil Ace rifle and I love it. I prefer it over my ARs. It is a little heavy but to me it helps with what little recoil you get with a 5.56 round. You should do a video on the Tavor rifle also. I have a Tavor 7 which is the 7.62x51 version and love it also. It is the least amount of felt recoil when firing a 7.62x51/308 cartridge I have ever felt behind a rifle. Great videos. Informative and entertaining.

    • @mariontinsley8646
      @mariontinsley8646 Před 2 lety

      Have you ever fired a SCAR 19?

    • @shawnjones3853
      @shawnjones3853 Před 2 lety

      @@mariontinsley8646 No I have yet to fire one. I would like to but the problem is that I am afraid I will love it and then just have to deal with not being able to ever afford one. FN is extremely proud of their guns, especially that one. Not saying they shouldn't be but it's just not in my budget.

  • @KillerMZE
    @KillerMZE Před 2 lety +12

    I had a short Galil (Glilon) as my main weapon when I was driving a tank. Those things could fire even when filled with sand. As for accuracy, it's terrible since the rear sight goes out of zero anytime you fire it or even bump the rifle against something

    • @youvanced6593
      @youvanced6593 Před rokem

      Yeah they moved the scope to the back of the rifle, but didn't account for that

  • @nonyabiz9487
    @nonyabiz9487 Před 2 lety +3

    The only problem with the Galil is the price. They are expensive! Because of that I went with the S&W M&P-15. What an amazing deal for a rifle that shoots just as good and accurate as my old Colt M-16.

  • @vndafu
    @vndafu Před rokem +1

    Thank you, this was pretty much correct. I served in the 80's and we did have plenty of M16s to go around and the Galil was used only for infantry missions. While true it never stuck in sand, it was a nightmare to use due to excessive weight and cocking resistance. I don't miss it.

  • @dbmail545
    @dbmail545 Před 2 lety +10

    I was lucky enough to pick up an ACE in 5.45x39 last year. I had always wondered what a 5.45 AK with a machined receiver would be like. Answer: not much difference at all. Still the best AK pattern platform IMO.

  • @Rocketsong
    @Rocketsong Před 2 lety +3

    The AK has a complicated manufacturing history. It was originally designed to be stamped steel, but the Russians were unable to hold tolerances and they had serious reliability issues when they heated up, so they changed to a milled receiver. It took over a decade before they were able to make stamped receivers reliable.
    And yes, the older milled AKs are noticeably heavier than the stamped AKM.

  • @dalestark3343
    @dalestark3343 Před 2 lety +1

    Happy New's Years T&P!! Cappy nice review, owning a Galil AR in .308, one of the best damn battle rifles out there in my opinion.

    • @Taskandpurpose
      @Taskandpurpose  Před 2 lety

      happy new years buddy ! thanks for watching stay safe - lucky you've got a 308 version !

  • @galilhub
    @galilhub Před 7 měsíci

    Great video!! 🤘🤙

  • @ALovelyBunchOfDragonballz

    Fun fact, the South Afrikan R4/R5 is so similar to the Galil that Israel made some of the first batches of R4s for South Afrika, and South Afrika ended up exporting some R4s to Israel as Galils.

  • @robstone4537
    @robstone4537 Před 2 lety +21

    Still the primary rifle of the South African Defence force. Was adopted in the early 80’s and South Africa made a version with a few minor changes and called it the R4. Used the rifle during the Angolan Bush war in the 80’s, it was a very rugged and reliable rifle and in the thick Angolan Bush most combat was happening at under 50m so long range accuracy was not a concern.

    • @WanderlustZero
      @WanderlustZero Před 2 lety +1

      Just perfect for shooting those fookin prawns eh

    • @bmhater1283
      @bmhater1283 Před 2 lety

      @@WanderlustZero District 9 baby!

  • @Kane-ib5sn
    @Kane-ib5sn Před 2 lety

    Super Awesome video - keep up the Excellent Work! - it makes for a more superb world.

  • @usedcarsokinawa
    @usedcarsokinawa Před 2 lety

    Your vid’s are getting better. Keep it up.

  • @cbwelch4
    @cbwelch4 Před 2 lety +14

    Their first versions were made by Valmet. The best 5.56 AK was the Valmet which used a thicker stamping (1.6 mm) that provides a receiver with less flex than a standard AKM. Valmet helped IMI out with its development. Borrowed the iron sights. The Valmet is 2 lbs lighter. 8 lbs vs 10 lbs.

  • @astrid779
    @astrid779 Před 2 lety +5

    And they go for the Tavor because of the low cost of polymers and the power boost of the long barrel with the 556.

  • @LairdErnst
    @LairdErnst Před 2 lety

    Interesting. Can’t wait to see what’s next.

  • @john.rc.3274
    @john.rc.3274 Před 2 lety

    Informative, interesting and funny. Another great lesson. Excellent.

  • @alanfenick1103
    @alanfenick1103 Před 2 lety +4

    The Finns had the Valmet which was a superb version of the AK47 with milled parts and was quite accurate! The were available here in the USA on the commercial market. Expensive and worth it compared to the the available AK’s

  • @itsmemaario
    @itsmemaario Před 2 lety +7

    You can't talk about Galil history without mentioning Valmet RK-62.

  • @powerofseven10
    @powerofseven10 Před 2 lety

    Great vid.

  • @avnernichamkin8963
    @avnernichamkin8963 Před 2 lety +1

    great video!!!

  • @yossshooter1198
    @yossshooter1198 Před 2 lety +5

    I used it here in mexico while in the state police (basically militarized police) and it was awesome, we also got the ar160 beretta which was also good but i liked the galil better as it is more compact and lightweight

  • @jurgnobs8178
    @jurgnobs8178 Před 2 lety

    i like how the creator shot the gun at what looks like a demonstration. wide stance, gun on the hip and spray!

  • @MrYerak5
    @MrYerak5 Před 2 lety +1

    20 years later and i still feal pain in my shoulder from carying it all day long

  • @SouthPoleAntarctica
    @SouthPoleAntarctica Před 2 lety +12

    a downside for reloaders - it eats your brass. i've seen comments elsewhere that the ejected casings rammed against the ejecting window are a feature not a flaw. anyways, the 50rounds mag was a news to me, as the standard issue would be the 35 rounds magazine.

    • @BenyKarachun
      @BenyKarachun Před 2 lety +2

      Galils with 50 round mags were used as light machineguns, like the Russian RPK.

  • @unknowDwarf
    @unknowDwarf Před 2 lety +7

    small mistake, it isnt the main rifle of estonia anymore and previously was one of 2 rifles used by estonia

  • @dannysmith9217
    @dannysmith9217 Před 2 lety

    Well done Chris.

  • @Axemantitan
    @Axemantitan Před 2 lety +3

    There are Picatinny-rail bottle openers, in case you still want one for your M4. Midway USA and some other companies sell them.

  • @andresyingwei7122
    @andresyingwei7122 Před 2 lety +3

    Great Rifle to shoot, shot one in Paraguay, since it is the standard rifle of the Paraguayan Army and Police. Very accurate and easy to shoot.

    • @dbmail545
      @dbmail545 Před 2 lety +1

      Are they using the rifle in 7.62x39 or 5.56x45?

    • @andresyingwei7122
      @andresyingwei7122 Před 2 lety

      @@dbmail545 5.56 x 45, Colombian made Galils and Galil ACEs

  • @ScrawnyClownSnatch
    @ScrawnyClownSnatch Před 2 lety

    Had to go grab mine to watch this video.
    though mine is just a parts kit, semi-auto version. Still a great addition to the collection.

  • @phoenix5694
    @phoenix5694 Před 2 lety

    Hilarious,informative and just fucking awesome content.Subscribed!

  • @rogue___tr00per24
    @rogue___tr00per24 Před 2 lety +8

    Interesting article. I was one of the first units (7 SAI) in South Africa to be issued the R4. Apart from the obvious improvements to earlier weapons was that it had very little recoil, and thus had amazing accuracy, added to that the amount of rounds you could carry, and its robustness, made it a very effective weapon. Not sure what the gripe about its weight is, basic training took care of that, and even in "R" mode you could lay down a good rate of fire, accurately.

    • @michaelpitcher1131
      @michaelpitcher1131 Před 2 lety +1

      Tenecuter

    • @marcg1686
      @marcg1686 Před 2 lety

      I transitioned from the R1 in 1982. The two things I didn't like about the R4 was the forearm and the lack of balance that the R1 had. Other than that, a fine weapon.

  • @Aphony66
    @Aphony66 Před 2 lety +3

    SADF used the Galil to excellent effect during the border war from 1984 to about 1992. the thing fired all the time, never jammed at all.

  • @ermoscowitz
    @ermoscowitz Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Chris, to start with I liked your video. You should have also mentioned the Short Galil version called "Glilon" which in Hebrew translates to "mini-Galil" - it also seen some service at IDF (I carried it for one and a half years). It lacked the bottle opener but was easy to carry.

  • @BillMcGirr
    @BillMcGirr Před 2 lety

    Interesting.
    Good stuff.👍🥃

  • @petervanbalderen7877
    @petervanbalderen7877 Před 2 lety +4

    Also a very similar gun to the Galil is the South African 🇿🇦 R4. Developed around the same time. 4 me one of the best guns I have ever used.

  • @noverdinho
    @noverdinho Před 2 lety +2

    I was very sad when IDF introduced Tar 21 as their main issue 😭 hope one day they will use Ace

    • @Taskandpurpose
      @Taskandpurpose  Před 2 lety

      agreed its unfortuntely the TAR 21 was ever made when they had the perfectly fine as heck Galil waiting to be upgraded

  • @chuckgreenfield4484
    @chuckgreenfield4484 Před rokem

    Love the bottle opener

  • @alexbarnett8541
    @alexbarnett8541 Před 2 lety

    The fluted 2x4 grip is very nice.

  • @user-sv9ef2mc5x
    @user-sv9ef2mc5x Před 2 lety +10

    My father fought with this weapon in the First Lebanon War

  • @TheGreg6466
    @TheGreg6466 Před 2 lety +5

    I loved the galil, It was my most used weapon in blops, the standard 35 round mag and low recoil made it one of the best rifles in the game, I pwned many a newb with it and also trolled many veterans when I attached a pro pipe (newb tube/grenade launcher) ah the memories, :)

    • @Taskandpurpose
      @Taskandpurpose  Před 2 lety +2

      definitely a fun one to use in video games, always over powered for some reason haha

    • @TheGreg6466
      @TheGreg6466 Před 2 lety

      @@Taskandpurpose wow! I'm a big fan of the channel, I just love your work, replying to my goofy comment really made my day, sorry for 'fan girling' but I'm all giddy because you took time to type a comment for little old me! You've made me so happy, Cappy! Thank you so much! :) :-) :-) :-) :-))))). I got a heart too! wowzers! I can die a happy man now XD (I'm exaggerating but only a little ;-)) bye Cappy

    • @NotOnDrugs
      @NotOnDrugs Před 2 lety

      @@TheGreg6466 not weird, at all... the fuck

  • @1AlejoYT
    @1AlejoYT Před 2 lety +1

    I am surprised you did not mention Colombia manufactures the ACE since the 2010's and uses it extensively.

  • @haroldbell213
    @haroldbell213 Před 2 lety +1

    I have one and I love it. The oldest version . It's a excellent assault rifle.

  • @zoiders
    @zoiders Před 2 lety +14

    The US just straight up gave the M16s and CAR15s to Israel as military aid rather than selling them. Strangely at the time they had a policy of no direct sales of M16s to foreign powers. The US also obtained as many AKs as they could get hold of and again gave them away as military aid as well.

  • @user-pq4by2rq9y
    @user-pq4by2rq9y Před 2 lety +3

    The real question is why don't we all have bottle openers on our rifles. Huge oversight.

    • @banditoshockydrugs4627
      @banditoshockydrugs4627 Před 2 lety +1

      those israelis are smart asf for thinking about that

    • @sarath431
      @sarath431 Před 2 lety

      Because nobody is drinking soda from bottles?

    • @user-pq4by2rq9y
      @user-pq4by2rq9y Před 2 lety +2

      @@sarath431 what about beers, mate.

    • @sarath431
      @sarath431 Před 2 lety

      @@user-pq4by2rq9y - I forgot about them. Still, Aren't beers available in cans too? I mean unless shot, cans can't break. But bottles might break due to several reasons

  • @soulflower666
    @soulflower666 Před rokem +2

    The Galil rifle served starting 1974, a few rifles were issued to some paratroopers during the Yom kippur war but the FN was mostly still in service during the war, and was out of service by 1975. in 1992 the IDF started to phase out the Galil from the infantry units, which was replaced by the lighter M16. the Galil was still used by the armored corps, artiliary and engineering corps untill the late 2000's after which it was retired...I'm sorry to say.
    BTW - the Galil's bottle opener was used to open soda pop bottles and NOT beer, since alcohol is not permitted in the IDF.

  • @JF-xq6fr
    @JF-xq6fr Před 2 lety

    I have an IMI ARM 392 with a 16" barrel and it's very, very accurate. Feels like a tank, reliable as an anvil. Also have an IMI Uzi Model B which is unstoppable, and surprisingly accurate way out. IMI = Quality

  • @kcb7772
    @kcb7772 Před 2 lety +3

    During my active service I have used the R1 (various versions of FN FAL), R4, R5, AKM and M4. One gets to develop very personal relationships with one's weapon under shall we say certain "activities". Combat and environmental conditions certainly impact on the type of weapon being carried. The R1 despite austere conditions never let me down ever! The 7.62 x 51 still remains my all time favorite. The rest were all excellent and reliable which were confidence inspiring. The M4 was my choice when operating from civilian type vehicles as it was more wieldy and light. The 5.56 caliber didn't always deliver the sort of results expected of it though.

  • @trallorc5313
    @trallorc5313 Před 2 lety +20

    The reason why the IDF completely phased out the Galil (rarely used after 1990) is that you just cant beat an m16 for a dollar. It was even cheaper to convert most of the m16a1's from the 1973 airtrain to shortened m16's (car15) than to continue manufacturing new Galils. Also the fact that the m16's and car15's were much lighter really helped their reputation.

    • @NimDod
      @NimDod Před 2 lety +4

      IDF infantry units switched to the M16 in the 90's, but Tank and Artillery units kept them until the middle 2000's, and only then switch to the sawd-off version of the M16 (which they still currently use).
      As a tanker in the IDF in the early 2000's, I loved this Galil-SAR for it's reliability