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What if the Spanish firm CETME sent Model 58C rifles to the US Army Trials in 1953?
During the early 1950s, the US Army was looking to replace their M1 Garand rifles with a more modern rifle chambered in 7.62 X 51mm NATO. The US Army considered: T44, T47, T48, EM2, FN FAL, and some sources suggest CETME.
The T44 was the updated M1 Garand which eventually became the issue M14 rifle.
T47 was a bullpup prototype built be John Garand that was dropped early during trials.
T48 was the Fabrique Nationale Fusil Automatique Leger widely adopted by many NATO Nations.
EM2 was a short-lived British bullpup that saw only limited service.
CETME Model 58C evolved into the popular Hecker & Koch G3 rifle.
For the sake of simplifying debate, let's pretend that all rifles were chambered for 7.62 X 51mm NATO ammo and let's also pretend that all submissions were almost ready for production with all major "bugs" corrected.
During the early 1950s, the US Army was looking to replace their M1 Garand rifles with a more modern rifle chambered in 7.62 X 51mm NATO. The US Army considered: T44, T47, T48, EM2, FN FAL, and some sources suggest CETME.
The T44 was the updated M1 Garand which eventually became the issue M14 rifle.
T47 was a bullpup prototype built be John Garand that was dropped early during trials.
T48 was the Fabrique Nationale Fusil Automatique Leger widely adopted by many NATO Nations.
EM2 was a short-lived British bullpup that saw only limited service.
CETME Model 58C evolved into the popular Hecker & Koch G3 rifle.
For the sake of simplifying debate, let's pretend that all rifles were chambered for 7.62 X 51mm NATO ammo and let's also pretend that all submissions were almost ready for production with all major "bugs" corrected.