The history of firearms design and development is interesting. Few poor or mediocre designs stand the test of time, regardless of the designer or Army ordinance officers ego.
Browning, aside from early shotgun designs...I'd say, has designed a few guns that were essentially perfect when adopted. One was a general issue pistol for some eighty years and a heavy machine gun that's still in use today...some 101 years later. I can respect that.
I've been thinking of how I miss having a 50BMG rifle. That's some fun if you have a place where you can do some blasting.
She's sharp, attractive, and has held some admirable positions in the gun industry. She's the type of woman so called feminists should be propping up...but...agenda. They don't really want strong, independent women. They want victims to sell their nonsense.
Also, I put our AR machine gun together at work. It was in pieces for reasons unknown. It's a post sample lower with a cheap, heavy barreled upper. It ran hard and fast. With an H3 buffer it's not too bad...but it's definitely over gassed. I'm going to see if we can get our gunsmith to chop it to a 14.5" and re-thread it (it's a 16" midlength). I think that would fix it right up. We also have a 11.5" upper that would go well with it.
Paint it like a road sign for full redneck credit.
One time when a kid, I tried to catch a bullet in a 3 foot tall plastic garbage can. Home alone, winter, so I put a telephone book on the bottom, filled it full of well packed snow, filled it with water, stood on a chair next to it, and fired one shot, .22LR regular. Bang, big splash.
Quickly put rifle away, and then started digging through the snow for the bullet. It was sticking out the last page of the phone book, after cracking the bottom of the plastic & spalling a 1/4" chunk out of the concrete floor.
I really thought 3' of slush would stop a measly .22... Wrong.
Did my best to clean the mess up, and to this day can't believe I got away with it or how dumb I was.
When I was a kid I did a similar experiment. Dumped a bag of Portland cement powder into a five gallon bucket. Fired a round nose .22 lead bullet down into it, result after sifting through the cement powder...a near perfect lead mushroom.