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Fallout 3 nexus durability
Fallout 3 nexus durability








So, maybe going above 15 shots in a clip makes it prone to jamming. My Glock with a 13 shot clip and my SKS with a 10 shot clip never jam. I once owned a replica Thompson submachinegun with a 32 shot clip. It might be something to do with clip size. He modded his to take an external 30 shot clip, and his jams just about every time He fires it. My brother got one at the same time I did. It has an internal clip, loaded with 10 shot stripper clips. I also own a Chinese SKS assault rifle, which I got dirt cheap (!50 bucks for the rifle and 600 rounds of ammo). In any case, it's far better than, say, Far Cry 2, where you would be lucky to get 200 out of an AR-15. While as an overall, compared to real life modern weapons, that is low, it's actually a very reasonable amount for a gun in a video game, and semi realistic given that the characters don't clean their weapons and use whatever ammo they can find, be it handloaded, surplus, reloaded, or factory. That aside, using the standard assault rifle as an example, from 100% condition, it can fire 1250 rounds before breaking.

FALLOUT 3 NEXUS DURABILITY FULL

I fire them in a dry, dirty area, and using whatever ammo is cheapest (hence I am somewhat obsessive about cleaning them after every use) and can tell you that pumping 250 rounds through an AR-15 via mag dumping and then immediately reloading with full mags has a noticeable effect on accuracy and causes a multitude of misfeeds due to chamber fouling. Especially considering you mention a firing range explicitly. Therefore your experience in perfect conditions is not really relevant. The majority of it is gonna be military surplus. The ammunition in fallout 3 is also unlikely to be pristine factory ammo. The issue is more with accuracy and damage in fallout 3, which is quite reasonable. Most the guns don't start jamming until you reach 25% or so condition. And I'd end up cannibalizing one of them for parts. If my weapons deteriorated like those in Fallout 3 I'd need to bring 2 Glocks to the range every time I shot. Lead bullets can crud up a barrel very quickly. For the Glock I use clean burning hollow points with no reloaded ammo or lead bullets. Most military ammo is very dirty burning, imo. Of course when I'm done shooting I clean it, but it doesn't really get that dirty while I'm firing it.

fallout 3 nexus durability

I fire it semi auto I can fire off a 13 shot clip in just a few seconds with no problems. I have fired it literally hundreds of times in one visit to a firing range.

fallout 3 nexus durability

Originally posted by danconnors:I also own firearms.

fallout 3 nexus durability

I will admit that the combat shotgun breaks down ridiculously quick, but that is a balance function due to the raw power of the combat shotgun. Keep in wind the LW and Courier never stop to actually clean their guns, they just replace parts wholesale, and travel in very dirty, dusty environments, as well as do stupid ♥♥♥♥ like cowboy their revolvers (the.

fallout 3 nexus durability

The guns in fallout really aren't that far off from real durability, especially given the environments they are being used in. Assault rifles you cannot just empty 10+ mags on full auto, it will heat the barrel a little much and can foul the chamber. SAWs and Lmgs are about the only ones that you can lay on the trigger without worrying too much, but even they require time for the barrel to cool after a couple hundred rounds (so that it doesn't warp, keep in mind these weaapons are designed for sustained fire, too), which is why even for those weapons soldiers are taught to fire in bursts. You have to clean your guns pretty often otherwise you will have major issues.Įven military weapons don't tend to handle going through hundreds of rounds in quick succession well. It will cause misfeeds, misfires, and other failures. Aside from actual damage to the firearm, gunpowder leaves residue, which can cake the chamber, barrel, firing pin, and any moving parts that aren't completely isolated from the chamber and barrel. Even they misfired a few times and had very noticeable decrease in accuracy. I've done so with a couple different guns, and the only ones that werent repeatedly misfiring by the end were a bolt-action rifle and a revolver. You've clearly never put a couple hundred rounds through a civilian firearm in one sitting. I'ma copy paste from an answer to the same question which I gave only a few days ago:








Fallout 3 nexus durability