The MSBS-5.56 project was to spawn a total of 11 variants, five in classic configuration (standard rifle, grenade launching rifle, carbine, LMG, DMR) and five bull-pup equivalents, plus MSBS-R, a fixed-stock ceremonial rifle for the Polish Army’s Honor Guard Battalion. As of now, MSBS system consist only of two weapons - MSBS-5.56B Radon-B bullpup assault rifle, intended for Special Forces, and MSBS-5.56K Radon-K standard configuration rifle intended for infantry and other units. Future versions of the MSBS also may include heavy barreled Designated Marksmen rifle and Squad Support Weapon (light machine gun). Although there seems to be little revolutionary stuff in the MSBS (as with most recent assault rifles), it’s the small details that make up the masterpiece. The designers applied for 7 patents and 11 utility models in the process. The backbone of MSBS system is an inverted U-shaped receiver, made from aluminum alloy.
This receiver, along with bolt group, return spring, barrel and gas system are common for both current versions of MSBS rifles. MSBS is operated using short stroke gas piston, located above the barrel, and its gas system has manual gas regulator. Breech lock is achieved by a conventional rotary bolt with seven radial lugs that lock into the barrel extension. Ejection windows are made on both sides of the receiver, and weapon can be set up to eject to either side; this requires partial disassembly of the gun and installation of the ejection port cover on the side opposite the “active” ejection window. Non-reciprocating charging handles are located on both sides of the receiver. Polymer stocks are made integral with magazine and trigger unit housings (pistol grips are separate Ar15/M16-compatible parts), and available in two versions – standard (with side-folding, telescoping shoulder stock) and bullpup (with fixed buttplate). Both versions feature ambidextrous safety / fire mode selectors located at the top of the pistol grip, and ambidextrous magazine release buttons located in front of the trigger guard.
Bolt stop release buttons are located on the underside of the stock, behind the magazine housing. Both stock versions are interchangeable and attach to receiver using cross-pins. Polymer forends also interchangeable.
MSBS rifles are fed from STANAG-compatible (M16-type) magazines. Sighting equipment is installed using Picatinny rail at the top of the receiver. Both MSBS-5.56B Radon-B bullpup and MSBS-5.56K Radon-K standard rifle can mount proprietary knife-bayonet (above the barrel) and specially designed 40mm grenade launcher (below the barrel).
Rate of fire - 725 bullets per minute / Caliber - 5.56x45mm NATO / Weight - 3.70kg / Feed 30 rounds clip.
The Tactical Combat Operation-series 14 sub machine gun is a bullpup style firearm developed by Trident Firearms. It is a mid to close range firearm that fires Trident Firearms' 3.52x32mm pistol rounds from a 20 round or 30 round skewed box magazine. Under normal conditions it fires 600 rounds/min with a muzzle velocity of 700 m/s. It has full-automatic and semi-automatic fire-modes.The TCO-14 A1 has a few improvements over the base weapon. It features a tighter bolt system, elevated rail and adjustable cheek-rest. Pretty interesting.A few things I didn't like, though:1.
Angle of the cheek rest. I think it'd be better if you angled it the other way (where the forward part rises and the back part is stationary). If you think about it, the net motion is you going forward to the gun; so it'd make more sense for the cheek riser to 'accept' your cheek, rather than coming at it from a weird angle.
Look at the SCAR or the ACR/Masada for what I mean.2. It's pretty clear that this weapon is a righty weapon, and on your other post you can see the angle of the skewed magazine. However, you've put the ejection port on the left side. Now unless it's a reversible port (and again, with your skewed magazine port I'm not sure how useful it'd be firing from the left shoulder) then hot brass is just going to go into the shooter's face.3.
The size of the cartridges (and the magazine). You say that the TCO-14 fires a 3.52x32mm round, but if I take the diameter of one of the casings shown and use that as a reference for the proportions of the length, it's definitely not a 1:10 ratio. In fact, your rounds right now look like REAL rounds - 9x19 Parabellum or.45 ACP.Other than those, though, I like this design. It reminds me of a lot of things - maybe all combined into one. I see the Assault SMG from GTA V, the MSBS Radon, and the airsoft APS Urban Assault Rifle.
Its profile and size is like the P90 - very static, but very sleek.