Talk:FN P90
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I read somewhere that the p90 feed system is highly problematic (it's a huge magazine horizontal on the top of the weapon, that has to rotate the rounds 90 degrees to feed) and jams constantly, especially if the gun is knocked around with less than a full load in the clip. Can anyone find a source on this?
for the stargate reference, is the gun portrayed actually as a P90? or is it a sci-fi gun that uses the P90 as a starting point? Vroman 19:44, 26 Apr 2004 (UTC)
- It's identified as the P90 -- though probably a lot of people don't realize it's a nonfictional weapon. It was brought in in the fourth(?) season, as an upgrade for the MP5. Inside the show, it's valued for its armor-piercing capability and magazine size. Outside the show, the downward ejection allows the actors to stand close together while shooting. --wwoods 20:24, 26 Apr 2004 (UTC)
-I read that the P-90's magazine loading system was streamlined to prevent such jamming.~Berserker
- I've only run into two mentions of the feed problems and both would not be considered unbiased sources. The first mention of this was on the HKPRO website, a Heckler and Koch afficiando page, in an article on the then-new MP7 PDW H&K released. Another was from a blog posting on Defense Review (IIRC), in which the author took a submachinegun course through Heckler & Koch's firearms instructor group (who do a lot of training on weapons other than H&K). He was told, by the instructors, about the P90's feed problem, but he did not experience it when he fired the P90. He also said the issue might be with the half-full magazine outside the gun, not the magazine while it is in the gun (in fact, there might be evidence to this, as I've seen some P90 ammo pouches that have a cup that goes over the magazine lips, possibly to prevent rounds becoming loose). Since both mentions of the P90 having any feed problems come from a rival company that is competing with a rival product, I'd take it with a grain of salt.--YoungFreud 07:34, 28 Aug 2004 (UTC)
If anyone's seen the anime series Gunslinger Girl, they may have wondered as i currently do if the ejected cartridge cases are a problem. In one scene the protagonist slips and falls because she treads on a number of spent cartridge cases which have fallen at her feet and roll underfoot, causing her to lose her balance. Does this actually happen IRL?--YourMessageHere 05:11, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] P90 TR
Is this variant real? so far as I know it exists only as an Airsoft creation by Tokyo Marui, who originally made a standard P90 replica but have since discontinued it and now sell only the TR version. They also make some other unreal variants of real firearms, most noteably the G3 SAS and AK47 Beta Spetznaz, so my suspicions were aroused. I read of the airsoft version being liked except for the sight, which apparently was somewhat susceptible to breakage if hit by BBs, and certain people disliked not being able to mount their own optics on it. The creation of the TR variant addressed these problems and also makes them cheaper to make. Can anyone rule definitively on this?--YourMessageHere 05:00, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, it does exist as a real variant of the P90. Jane's Infantry Weapons confirms it. --D.E. Watters 06:56, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Wound Ballistics
I seem to recall that in reported combat use all shots were either to vital organs or the CNS. Anybody have any source material to support or disprove this? Veritas Panther 10:27, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Copyright infringement?
This article is a word-by-word copy of http://world.guns.ru/smg/smg13-e.htm, seems to be the same problem as with combat shotgun. Now I might be mistaken and whoever posted this actually have the permission (or is just the original author anyway), but then an indication of that (probably together with a link to the original article) would be nice.
- Part of the article ("Overview" section, excluding the final paragraph and all other sections) was originally lifted directly from that site, apaprently without the author's permission. If nobody can prove otherwise, I'd be willing to rewrite the copyrighted sections. However, it is my opinion that the original author does a much better job of overviewing the P90 than I possibly could, so if anyone can show that we already have his permission you'd be doing us all a great service. Tronno 23:53, 1 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- Since nobody has come forward to provide proof that the copyrighted text was reproduced with permission, I have rewritten the paragraphs in question. The article is now clean. Tronno 20:36, Nov 13, 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Incorrect weight?
I'm having trouble verifying the weight/mass of the P90 loaded and unloaded. Values I've found:
- 6.6 lbs (loaded) - http://www.fnmfg.com/products/p90/p90.htm
- 6.6 lbs (loaded)- http://www.fnhusa.com/contents/tw_p90.htm
- 2800g (6.18 lbs) (empty) - http://www.floridaairsoft.com/reviews/p90/
Some searching on Google for "p90 weight" give you plenty of hits to cull the information from, but I'm not sure which is correct.
In any event, the nice round numbers listed in the infobox seem to be either fictitious, convenient approximations, or mistaken.
--ABQCat 05:02, 4 Dec 2004 (UTC)
The metric weight listed in the infobox is accurate, but the imperial is just a rounded approximation. I've edited the article to include accurate imperial values. Tronno 03:26, Dec 5, 2004 (UTC)
One of the sites listed is for an airsoft version of the P90, therefore all info from that site is invalid and any effects they had on the article need fixing.
That's already been addressed - all numbers in the article are from the real thing. Tronno
[edit] Added external link
I added an external link on the FN P90 page (also the Five-seveN and 5.7x28mm pages) to point to my blog, where I have been collecting information about the 5.7x28mm weapons system. My hope is to distill/sanitize much of the information that I've been blogging into the Wikipedia entries.
Esteves 21:40, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Popular culture
Just so it's clear, I oppose a list of every single appearance the FN P90 has made as a prop, be it in the form of prose, bulleted list, or table. I don't oppose using specific examples to illustrate how and why it is used in fiction, but there's no need for every single article to list every time the object appears in a work of fiction. - A Man In Bl♟ck (conspire | past ops) 04:08, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
- This is not "every single article", its one of the few firearms to achive such a level of use. Its not your place to block readers access to this information. Ve3 04:20, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
- There are at least a half-dozen guns with more prominent roles in fiction, and that's just off the top of my head. Plus, this list doesn't say anything about the gun's role in fiction that the prose does not.
- It is my place, just as it is every editor's, to do something about indiscriminate lists of trivia, something Wikipedia is not. - A Man In Bl♟ck (conspire | past ops) 04:28, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
- There may be more prominent firearms, but that is not of concern for somone looking for more information on the P90's use. Including information directly relevant to the firearm is hardly "indscriminate". Ve3 04:34, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
- Look guys, it's obvious we're not going to end this conflict through sensible discussion, so we might as well end it for the sake of compromise (as per wiki etiquette). I propose we go ahead and trim the Pop Culture section to a short paragraph, with no lists. However, before that, we go into every article listed in Pop Culture and link to P90 from there, so that people interested in those subjects can easily read about the gun. MIB and I hate lists, but Ve3 has stated concerns with perceived censorship; I believe this is an adequate solution to both problems. Thoughts? Tronno 16:15, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
- We may yet solve it with disussion or a compromise. However, your proposal is not a compromise when the issue is links from this page. It doesn't do people any good when they read the P90 article to have the data missing- even its because its been scattered across other articles. Whether we like lists, or dislike certain information is immaterial-its not our job to remove it any more then it is remove tables or detail other info because its 'disliked'. Ve3 16:40, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
- In that case, please propose some other solution that satisfies all parties. Being adamant in your stance isn't going to lead us anywhere. Tronno 17:08, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
- This already was a compromise- part of it was to merge in the content but in a more compact form, but also have the summary section. That is aside from issue that the content is a standard part of firearm articles, and its not our place to remove whole article sections. Ve3 18:25, 2 December 2005 (UTC)
- I wouldn't object to Tronno's suggestion at all. I still don't see any value in the raw data of every work the P90 appears in; Wikipedia is the place for encyclopedic overview, not every single datum no matter how trivial or tangental. - A Man In Bl♟ck (conspire | past ops) 01:17, 3 December 2005 (UTC)
- One last suggestion - a true compromise. If anybody wants a complete list of Wiki articles with even the vaguest connection to FN P90, they can hit What links here. Most of the pop culture stuff we have now (and some we don't) will appear there, clear as day, if you just link from it. If you're clever, you can file that stuff under its own column using a soft redirect & dedicated pop culture redirect combo. The end result is a clean pop culture list that is created and sort-of-automatically maintained by The System. It's not cruft, it's not censored, and it can be made complete and up-to-date with minimal effort (unlike the current list). Worth considering, Ve3. Please think about it. Tronno 03:57, 3 December 2005 (UTC)
- PS - the new list would be stored in What links here, not in the article itself. Tronno
- Once again, the current page is already a compromise. Its the same as suggesting 'compromise' that expands the debated sections. As for 'what links here' being a substitute- that is a listing of anything that list here. It would not only strip away info that makes it less indiscriminate, but be a major inconvenience to anyone actually trying track down the info. Not to mention that the entries, which can't be noted, will be scattered among dozens of links.
- Anyone with a serious interest int he P90 deserves to have access to the information, and its not our job to block it. It relates directly to the firearm, is a standard part of firearm articles, and has been compacted down (listing game series rather than individual title for example). Ve3 15:40, 3 December 2005 (UTC)
- No Ve3, it's not, because it's the same thing we've always had - a loosely associated bunch of games and movies. Going from a list to a table is not a change. It's not a compromise.
- In any case, I'm tired of your stubborn refusal to adhere to the policies and the spirit of Wikipedia. You've stonewalled every attempt to discuss solutions that make everyone happy, you've ignored all sensible arguments, and have responded to all pleas with the same regurgitated rhetoric. I've had enough. I will now turn the other cheek and let you do whatever you want. Have fun, buddy. Do me a favor and brush up on the rules. Tronno 17:11, 3 December 2005 (UTC)
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- I think the brief, informal listing of pop culture uses found at the Desert Eagle page is stylistically better, but as long as the table is still in the article I have a correction to make: the gun used by Major Kusanagi at the end of Ghost in the Shell isn't a P90. It's referred to as a Zastaba M23 and is larger than a P90 would be. Also, it loads from what look like M16 STANAG magazines as opposed to the real P90's top-loading system. Inspired by the P90, perhaps, but not a P90 itself. BobBQ
- I agree with Tronno and A Man in Black on this as well. This article is SERIOUSLY becoming a source for trivia, something Wikipedia is not supposed to be. The Desert Eagle site is *REALLY* a trivia source (it *IS* better though :) ), and I don't want to see this article go farther down that hole. How about doing something along the lines of the Wikipedia:Fiction says is "good practice" to do with a long list of minor characters in a fiction work - create another article for them. Something like FN P90 Popular Culture References or along those lines, keep the detailed list there, and have a summary in this article saying something like "There are many popular culture appearances by the P90. These are detailed in the P90 appearances page, but include Stargate....blah...blah.....whatever." Anyone agree/disagree/think I'm on crack? Just something to think about. The Deviant 14:35, 7 December 2005 (UTC)
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- A separate page was posted for Pop Culture appearances of the P90. However, it was quickly tagged for deletion as administrators thought that it was too trival. --D.E. Watters 15:49, 7 December 2005 (UTC)
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- Brilliant. The Deviant 20:06, 7 December 2005 (UTC)
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- It wasn't "admins", it was MIB (a admin) who tagged it before even discussing. As a compromise, the AFD was withdrawn and the content merged here. Ve3 21:42, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
I've removed the list again. It continues to get longer and longer, without adding any actual information or insight to the article. I still feel an ever-incomplete list of appearances where the gun features merely as an incidental prop is trivial and unencyclopedic, whether as part of this article or as a separate list. - A Man In Bl♟ck (conspire | past ops) 03:27, 26 December 2005 (UTC)
- I salute the spirit of your gesture, but in practice it will just lead to another revert war / dead-end discussion. However, I will take this opportunity to ask a favor - namely, your support to move the list to a separate page (again). After that, I'm stepping out of the debate for good, I swear. Tronno (talk | contribs) 06:50, 26 December 2005 (UTC)
Adding a side note to the pop culture section that the FN P90 is only the standard sidearm as of Season 5. It might seem trivial to others but it's just a few characters that makes all the difference to pedantic fans. - vainglory (unregistered)
As expected, the reverts at FN P90 have started up again. I've moved the cruft away from the serious part of the article, to here -> FN P90 in popular culture. This time, please do not revert or request AFD. Tronno (talk | contribs) 02:27, 8 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] FN PS90 and P90
I have added a number of photos of my PS90 (a real civilian sporter version of the P90). There's no "Feeding" problem. It was very hard for me to even jostle the rounds in a half-full magazine. The HK MP7 uses a gas system and rotating bolt, which is more prone to failure (in a worst case scenario) than a delayed blowback system. The P90 has very few parts as you can see from the breakdown. The problems with the P90 are in the standard MC-10-80 reflex sight (same issues as the Trijicon Reflex) and slower mag changes than a drop free system. I've been a fan of the P90 since 10-15 years ago when I first heard about it. I stopped watching SG-1 after the 3rd season so I didnt realize they went to the P90 until afterwards (although I started watching re-runs of Season 8 and am catching up). I hope everyone enjoys the photographs.
Also note that in Stargate (SG-1 or Atlantis) the P90 is the standard weapon, but the M9 / 9mm Beretta Full-sized pistol is still the standard sidearm of ALL SG members. Lt Col Shepperd usually deploys with the M9 and P90. Lt Col Mitchell also used both the P90 and M9 when he was attacked by a member of the Sodan. The REMF's like McKay on Atlantis are only issued the M9 on off-world missions, while Daniel Jackson, probably because he proved his worth, gets the P90. However, in some instances Lt Col Shepperd would deploy with the M16 or some variant (SPR, M4, etc...) for medium range sniping or other applications.
As you can see, 5.7x28 is limited to about 200m in real life. In Season 4 or 5 when Carter demonstrated the P90 to the Go'Auld as a weapon of war, she made the reference that it was good out to 5 times that of the Staff weapon range (which was about 75 yd). If you do the math, that's more than 300m. If you manage to hit something with the 28-32gr .224" bullet at 300m, it won't do much damage especially against armor. 5.56x45 still plays an important role in Stargate.
- Nice job! Looks great. Just wondering, should we center the table? =) therearenospoons 00:34, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
I second that comment! Also, I've been meaning to add something to the article about the PS90 SBR, but I'm confused about the gun's status on the market and with the BATFE... as I understand it, civilian owners can swap out their 16-inch barrels with the standard 10-inch P90 barrel, then register the whole thing as an SBR. However, I've also read about a bunch of FN-manufactured SBRs that have internal modifications which make them illegal for civilian ownership (ATF still considers them machine guns, even though they're semi-auto). Maybe somebody could clarify the situation... maybe Metroplex? XD - Tronno ( t | c ) 04:11, 4 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] FN PS90 SBR...
SBRs are not legal in my neck of the woods, but it is legal in many states so long as you fill out the paperwork with the BATFE FIRST before you do anything with the weapon. Follow the procedures (engraving of the receiver is required) after the paperwork is processed, and get your 10" barrel. Other than the barrel, the SBR'd PS90s you see on the market do not have any other modifications on the inside. Some people have decided to void their warranties and dye the stock black. To each his own I suppose!
Metroplex 14:28, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Black stock PS90
Yes, FN does have black stocked PS90s for sale. However, many choose to dye their stocks with black liquid Rit dye (nothing wrong with that). However, the owner's manual states not to modify the PS90 in any way, otherwise it may void the warranty.
This is different from buying a factory black stock PS90.
(Metroplex 13:40, 11 May 2006 (UTC))
[edit] Bolt vs Breech
As per the FN Herstal owner's manual for the PS90, the operating principle is: Blowback mechanism firing from closed breech.
There is no bolt in the P90/PS90. There is, however, a breech block that contains the ejector and extractor.
(Metroplex 14:50, 21 May 2006 (UTC))