On 2017-11-21 at 10:04 PM, Sturn said:I could swear I've seen it unfolded on screen, but my Google-fu (or memory) fails me.
I'd love to see it if you find it. I'm pretty sure it doesn't exist, but I'm not going to go through four movies and an entire tv show frame by frame, not to mention the comics. If had even an inkling of that kind of patience I'd go over the battle of Scarif looking for footage of the E-22 actually firing. I'd *love* to see whether the barrels actually reciprocate and whether it alternates fire or just fires both....NO! NO! WE NOT GET SIDETRACKED! BAD PENPENPEN! WE HAVE FLAUNTED OUR GEEKDOM ENOUGH!
On 2017-11-21 at 10:04 PM, Sturn said:Hasbro released a new E11 toy in 2014 that has a folding stock. The Star Wars visual dictionary identifies it as a stock.
I know, a lot of books do. And it seemed fairly reasonable until Rogue One showed up. Gareth Edwards might have stealth retconned our stocks. And that kind of makes sense too. It would explain why no one bothers to use the stocks. I mean, it's not like most people in the franchise use the sights either but at least the stormtroopers supposedly have targeting displays in their helmets..... aaaaaanyways.
We never see the E-11's predecessor, the DC-15 (-A? -S? They keep changing their mind) carbine with an unfolded stock either. Turns out, if you build yourself one and unfold the stock it looks like this:
Since the pivot point is in front of the trigger guard it ends up being much too short to be of use as a stock, and it kind of blocks the trigger a bit. The Visual Dictionaries calls it out as a stock of course, but it sure doesn't look like one. I posit that the DC-15's stock like object might also not be a stock.
On 2017-11-21 at 10:04 PM, Sturn said:my work rifle.
Wow. As a citizen of European Liberalistan I don't see that term bandied about very often.
Edited by penpenpen