The G36 had been designed in the early 1990s by Heckler & Koch company (HK). It was intended to replace the ageing G3 rifle in service with the Bundeswehr. The new rifle has also been aimed at the export customers. It is worth mentioning that during trials a prototype of the HK G36 was rated higher than the Austrian Steyr AUG. The G36 entered service with the German Army as a standard infantry rifle in 1995. It is also in service with various law enforcement agencies worldwide.
The Heckler & Koch G36 is chambered for the 5.56 x 45 mm standard NATO round. It is a conventional gas operated, selective fire rifle. It uses some proven elements of the previous G3 rifle design. Internally it also bears a lot of similarity with the US Armalite AR-18 automatic rifle.
The fire mode selector also serves as a safety switch. Rifle's trigger unit is assembled in a separate integral plastic housing, which also includes a pistol grip and the triggerguard. This interchangeable trigger unit has a wide variety of firing mode combinations. A standard version has single fire, two round burst and full-auto modes, however other combinations are possible.
Most of external parts of the G36 are made form polymers. Rifle's manufacturing process also employs the most modern technologies. The G36 is described as a good, accurate and reliable weapon. It is also simple in operation and maintenance. This rifle can be field stripped without any tools. However there were complaints about overheating of the polymer handguard during the sustained fire.
This weapon is ambidextrous. A charging handle can be rotated to the left or to the right. The ejection window has a spent cases deflector, which propels ejected cases from the left-handed shooter. The fire mode selector is also ambidextrous.
This rifle is fed form 30-round box-shaped magazines, made form translucent plastic. Two or three magazines can be clipped together for rapid reloading. This weapon is also compatible with a 100-round dual drum magazines.
The G36 comes with a side-folding skeletonized buttstock, which folds to the right side. When folded this buttstock does not interfere with weapon's operation. After some adjustments this rifle becomes compatible with any standard NATO magazines, intended for the 5.56-mm ammunition.
A standard German Army rifle has a dual sight system. It consists of one 3.5x magnification scope, suitable for long-range accurate shooting and one 1x magnification red dot sight above it, suitable for short ranges. Both sights are built into the carrying handle. Some German soldiers complained that sights are being easily fogged in bad weather conditions.
This rifle is compatible with the HK AG36 40-mm underbarrel grenade launcher. It can be used to launch barrel-mounted riffle grenades.
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