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Pscan13 — World War Z Standard Infantry Rifle (SIR)

Published: 2012-11-28 15:33:25 +0000 UTC; Views: 14670; Favourites: 51; Downloads: 381
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Description Max Brooks' novel "World War Z" has a rifle he created just for this war. The rifle, affectionately called the SIR, is a mesh between the AK-47 and the AR-15 on a wood stock. Its key features are the durability of the weapon, the accuracy and the unfailing reliability. The rifles displayed are my interpretation of the weapon system. A fixed stock with a bayonet (not displayed), an AK operating system, modified with a three lug bolt, a beefed up and polished AR-15 semi auto trigger group, and an 18", 1:8 RH twist to stabilize the longer profile Cherry PIE round. There are some differences in the three. The sniper variant has a 24", 1:8 RH twist with modified port to account for longer internal ballistics. The carbine has a 14.5" barrel, 1:9 RH twist and a left folding stock. The lack of stock forearm length negates a folding bayonet. A standard removable U.S. bayonet should fit. I added a flash hider as a personal touch. As for sights, the SIR has a 20" sight radius using an A2 style peep sight. The SIR-C has a 15" A2 peep sight. As for the SIR-LR, no sight was added. I imagine the extra material spent on a rail system would be a waste. With this in mind, I would mount the scope rings directly to the upper receiver, reducing the scope height from center of bore.
As for the function, the piston sits in a shrouded, removable tube for cleaning. The upper receiver slides into and pins to the receiver block and lower receiver. A guide rod and spring reset the bolt on each cycle, and rests in a fixed block on the lower receiver. The whole operation is kept simple and smooth. The right hand reciprocating charging handle has one small problem. When the bolt assembly returns into battery, an opening between the upper receiver and stock would allow debris to enter the rifle. To combat this, a pivoting dust shield inside the housing raises with each pass of the handle. A spring returns the cover into place after each cycle.
The safety would be a simple button safety, behind the trigger group. The magazine catch would be a simple button style AR-15's have always had. This would allow for anyone with an AR-15 magazine to use what was on hand.
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Comments: 13

straycat-74 [2020-05-05 18:29:09 +0000 UTC]

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Reaper1998 [2019-12-02 03:52:39 +0000 UTC]

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Cardenas1 [2019-08-01 01:45:07 +0000 UTC]

Reading the book for the first time, this is really cool and looks great 👍

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GP40X [2018-09-19 22:35:49 +0000 UTC]

Actually I pictured the SIR as more of a copy of a SKS-45.  Permanently attached folding bayonet.  Permanently attached 10 or 20 round magazine fed by stripper clips.  Can easily be manufactured on fairly primitive machine equipment.  I have a friend who was one of the lucky few that was able to pick up a Norinco SKS chambered in .556 (around 400 were imported in the 90's before the Bush Norinco Ban, Politics, Bah) and the thing is a nail driver at 200 Meters with good optics.  Perfect rife design for a survival, Zombie killing situation.  No magazines to damage or fail.  Carrying .556 Nato rounds on bandoleers on stripper clips allow you to carry more ammo than loaded in magazines.  On a semi-auto with a locking bolt, a stripper loads almost as fast as a magazine change. and the SKS 45/AK-47 piston style system is fool proof and can take much more abuse/firing before it has to be cleaned compared to the AR-15/M-16 weapons system.  Not as versatile but in a feces hitting the oscillating air movement device situation, I would rather have an SKS chambered in .556 NATO instead of one of my Space Guns (one of my competition Ar-15 platform rifles).

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TedBacon12 [2018-03-26 22:27:06 +0000 UTC]

Cool! When I was reading the book I imagined it as just a completely wooden AK.

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SithiR [2017-06-13 19:10:31 +0000 UTC]

I have become a self-taught expert on the TRW Low Maintenance Rifle concept, which was carefully planned in every detail, and mocked up, but never progressed far enough to be made a fireable prototype. I wanted to have that be something modernized and used in a Project-modernized form when playing The Morrow Project RPG.

I thought is was so promising that it should be the basis for the SIR, because LMR was hyper-reliable. But then I found that, unlike the semiauto-only SIR, the LMR would have been low rate of fire full-auto only, and more accurate on full auto then on single fire. So, I do not think it would have been suitable.

But you could borrow the LMR's integral ejection port cover.

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SirRegginald [2015-02-09 09:21:09 +0000 UTC]

Flipen fantastic

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JbobRodriguez [2014-10-20 20:11:31 +0000 UTC]

Very impressive. Though it looks more like you left a M14 alone with an AK47, that actually works in your favor in making it look like a WW2 gun. 

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TheWildWestPyro [2013-12-04 10:01:23 +0000 UTC]

This is probably the best interpretation I've seen-although I'd probably use the Lee-Enfield instead, or the M1 Carbine, although I wouldn't really recommend it.

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121963 [2013-10-07 20:48:19 +0000 UTC]

Looks like the M14, just how I pictured the SIR. Well done.

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Flamethrowing-bobcat [2013-09-12 03:23:49 +0000 UTC]

me likey


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Pscan13 [2013-06-21 05:40:44 +0000 UTC]

A couple of thoughts came to me while designing this. The first is the propensity of soldiers to customize firearmsand tools. Secondly, it is very difficult to operate vehicles of jump out of planes with full size battle rifles. The idea of removing the stock is very similar to removing the stock from any of the garand style rifles. With the stock removed (presumably with a trigger housing screw and a receiver screw, the action pulls free from the stock entirely. The firearm could, in theory be fired from this configuration once. Then you would release the barrel lock, unscrew the barrel (I recommend using interrupted thread patterns for a quick field barrel change), remove the full length piston assembly, replace with the carbine length, screw in the carbine length barrel, lock in and your rifle is ready for the modified stock. As the sight is perminately attached to the gas piston block at the front of the barrel, there is little need for zeroing after a swap.

Regarding the stock, I favor the simplistic side folding steel tube style. In practice, this kind of metal work would be easiest. No complex machines but a welder required. The stock would be slightly thinner at the forearm when compared to the full size rifle, as it would not require the girth to handle the bayonet mechanism or conceal one from cutting the user's hand when being carried. A simple M7 bayonet lug need only be welded in, and those knives are easily made and readily available in most surplus stores.

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WystenDraco [2013-05-02 11:00:59 +0000 UTC]

I just bought Max Brooks' books and am finished with the comic imagery book "Recorded Attacks," nearly finished with World War Z, and over halfway through Zombie Survival Guide(Been reading them all at once). Yours is the first imagery I found searching for what the SIR might look like if real.

I just have one question about the Carbine form up top? Could you explain a little more about the switching of the stock?

Other than that, great pic. It will be first favorite into a new favorites section dedicated to WWZ gear.

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