Built upon the combat-proven chassis of the M1 Garand with which the American GI liberated the planet, the M14 incorporated such upgrades as an improved gas system, a removable 20-round steel magazine and select-fire capability. The most modern iteration of this venerable military arm—Springfield’s SOCOM 16 CQB—is the very pinnacle of modern .308 tactical tools.
Its Archangel stock is polymer, collapsible and essentially indestructible. There is enough railed real estate on the forearm to accommodate any manner of electronic gadgetry, and the stubby 16-1/4-inch barrel is topped off with a compact flash suppressor. The action accepts any standard 20- or 30-round box magazine. The front sight sports a luminous strip for easy acquisition, and the gun comes from the factory with a miniaturized electronic red dot sight.
With the VortexVenom mounted on the stripper-clip guide, the SOCOM 16 CQB is optimized for close-range work, becoming a room-clearing hotrod. Whether you’re moving through buildings or operating out of an automobile, the CQB combines feline maneuverability with raw punching power. If the threat is behind a car door or mild barrier material, then the SOCOM 16 CQB will reach it.
While I like to print impressive groups at 500 meters just as much as the next guy, the reality is: there is no imaginable scenario wherein an American civilian shooter would be called upon to do that in a real survival situation. As any use of a firearm would be entirely defensive in nature, ranges will inevitably be close and scary. But with the SOCOM 16 CQB, any American forced to take flight in the face of disaster won’t be outgunned.
Any gunman worth his spurs knows while a long gun is indeed a proper and indispensable tactical tool, a handgun is your constant companion when 911 gives you nothing more than a well-intentioned recording. Springfield Armory has you covered there as well.
The XD(M) .45 is the company’s ultimate iteration of their proven and popular XD line of combat handguns. Incorporating Browning’s apparently perfect recoil-driven, tilting-barrel action originally introduced in the P35 Hi-Power, the polymer-framed XD(M) is a robust, reliable and mature weapon system.
It offers such amenities as a manual grip safety combined with a trigger blade safety for truly fail-safe operation. The polymer chassis comes in Flat Dark Earth, and the gun arrives with interchangeable backstraps, proprietary Mega-lock grip serrations, synthetic holster, magazine loading tool, mag carrier and two 13-round magazines.
In the case of this particular XD(M), the sights are elevated for use with a suppressor, and the 5.28-inch match-grade barrel is threaded accordingly. Call me old-fashioned, but the 1911-style grip-to-frame angle of the XD guns has always suited me better than the more Luger-esque layout of the “Other Guys’” plastic pistols. The overall impression is the XD(M) is attractive, lightweight (for a full-figured handgun) and comfortable.