Quote:
Originally Posted by Kartoffel
Why did armies in real life switch to crappy 8 hex rifles when 10 hex rifles are so much better in-game? Ditto for the 10 hex LMG vs. the 12 hex.
Give me a circa 1930 A.D. Lewis & Enfield armed squad and I will beath any 21st century squad, with less points spent to boot! 
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There are endless discussions about this on various sites, like ARRSE (try digging through this thread
http://www.arrse.co.uk/weapons-equip...-calibres.html there forex) and so on.
Also worth a look are Tony Williams articles on weapons and ammo
http://www.quarry.nildram.co.uk/miltech.htm
see this article for example:
http://www.quarry.nildram.co.uk/Assault.htm
Basically - blame the cold war, mechanised infantry and the Americans for First insisting on the 7.62 as standard, then for introducing the 5.56 in spite of thier previous insistence on the 7.62 NATO.
The .280 British that the USA stepped on, in retrospect would have been a perfect 'balanced' cartridge.
See:
http://www.quarry.nildram.co.uk/256brit.htm
The 5.56 was really introduced as a jungle carbine round, not for all-round use. It just kinda-sorta "Borged" into the all purpose calibre in the USA and then elsewhere.
But mechanised doctrine of the old cold war saw a short and handy carbine as being all troops would need - tanks and APC would do the long range stuff. 5.56 would do at close range and in the urban area that modern Germany usually was.
Now fighting has generally focussed on long range fires in open terrain in Afghanistan. 7.62 vs 5.56 is a hot topic - but is it just a temporary aberration?. 5.56 certainly does have a problem with knock-down lethality especially if used from short carbine barrels. (The USMC still uses as many "long" M16s, having deliberately not completely going the wholesale carbine way the US Army seems to have?).
SP maps are perhaps not as crowded in Europe as they need be, though fields these days are much more open than even in the 60s due to the digging out of hedges and so on. But a "Germany" map can have quite a lot of urban terrain.
In SP:
Assault rifles do have better hitting and accuracy if in range, but full bore rifles have that extra little bit of range.
If you can catch enemy out in the open,
and keep him at a distance, then the full bore rifle is a no-brainer.
If however it is a jungle, wooded or urban map or you are prepared to close with the enemy (using smoke, arty, MMG, tank or APC support fires as well as movement to facilitate this) - then your assault rifle trumps the bolt rifles. It is like a longer ranged bayonet - aggressive tactics may be needed to close and kill with the AR.
in SP the most powerful thing is the Section LMG(s) however. Quite frankly, I see no point in 5.56 or 7.62 AK SAW if you have access to a proper full bore LMG using 7.62 "long" (NATO or Soviet).
The rifles behind that are not too important then,
provided your LMG is full-bore. Also provided that your rifle does have a useful range (8+ hexes). The SMG, or extra-shortie AR with 3 or 4 hex range is
barely usable outside a city or close wood or jungle, even with a section LMG. A section (as opposed to a scout team or other sneaky-beaky type) with only these personal defence weapons is asking to die in open field combat.
Thus something like the later UK sections where the GPMG was returned to the section level is perfectly OK. Just avoid any sections with any 5.56 LSWs or Minimis (
unless there as a booster to a proper "general" in 7.62).
The 1970s UK rifle section with a "general" as well as the 7.62 SLR would have a small margin of superiority for 2 hexes over this later organisation. (Ignoring the night sight ability). It is entirely nullified by closing those 2 hexes. Plus the modern UK platoon usually has several generals in the fire support section, unlike the 70s one.
Note that the Soviets kept the full bore LMG in the rifle platoon (PKM etc), with the AK versions being used more as a backup SAW. This appears to also have been more emphasised as a policy post Afghanistan. So if buying Russian sections - check that it is one with a longer range full-bore LMG (12 hex) if there is a choice.
If fighting a primarily infantry enemy then a section with 2 full-bore "generals" is golden.
But - once more - blame the US generals and their confused ammo standards that they imposed by fiat on the rest of the NATO alliance in the 50s and 60s. Everyone
could have been using a 6.5mm intermediate cartridge in the 50/60s and no dichotomy would exist.
Cheers
Andy