meles meles wrote: Pull up a sandbag, ooman, and listen...
Firstly, reliability. It worked irrespective of whether it was covered in mud, sand, water or a mix of all three. Try trogging through the Shatt al Arab marshes all day and keeping it clean when you're being shot at. It worked when others rifles didn't: we had US, Dutch and Spanish troops serving alongside and they all envied its reliability. You may not want to hear that.
Secondly, accuracy. It has a tendency to hit what its fired at, within range limitations, i.e. it's good enough for 500 mard engagements. (Your accuracy may vary, particularly on a two way range.)
Poor balance ? Try using it properly. Yes, it's poor for drill. In combat the weight is where it needs to be, close in. It's easy to carry, especially in CCW*. See comment about accuracy above.
Terrible ergonomics? Only for drill. It's short and easy to climb in and out of vehicles (OTC**, wok-woks or CRA***) , very quickly, with. It's short and so easy to point in close confines. Try fighting room to room or in narrow alleys in an Arab town with something longer. It's short and heavy, pretty good in a room to room bayonet fight.
Poor trigger ? It's not an F class target rifle. When the adrenaline is flowing and the targets are shooting back, our paw / eye co-ordination and fine motor control is almost certainly a little less honed than yours might be at Bisley. The trigger does the job well enough, even when coated in silt. You may not want to hear that.
Can't fire it left pawed ? Agreed. It's not perfect. Its day has passed: it could do with scrapping and replacing by the EM-2.
Pretty much puts to bed a lot of what has been said about the rifle. Good shout.