This article or section should be merged with M14 (rifle).
The M14K is a rifle produced by Smith Enterprises, Tempe, Arizona, United States. It is actually a late 1980s modification of the M14A1 with the gas operating system of the M60 machine gun Small icon for merging articles File links The following pages link to this file: Friction Jacobin Private branch exchange Pro-feminist Rotary piston engine Tagalog language Saint Veronica Spoiler effect Parser Password length equation Sudovian language Wikipedia:Why arent these pages copy-edited Static scoping Maximum power theorem General... The M14 is a select-fire battle rifle that fires 7. ... A rifle is any long gun which has a rifled barrel. ... Tempe is a city located in Maricopa County, Arizona. ... Events and trends The 1980s marked an abrupt shift towards more conservative lifestyles after the momentous cultural revolutions which took place in the 1960s and 1970s and the definition of the AIDS virus in 1981. ... Selective fire version of the standard M14 (rifle) and used as a Squad Automatic Weapon. ... Caliber: 7. ...
External links
http://www.smithenterprise.com/ The M14K is a rifle that was another Tim La France “compact” weapon modifications similar in concept to the La France M16K. The first gun was built about 1983 on a Smith Enterprises receiver Smith Enterprises, Tempe, Arizona, United States, and utilizing GI parts. The first gun converted was a M14A1 with a barrel shortened to 14 inches using the gas operating system of the M60 machine gun, subsequent guns had gas systems manufactured expressly for this “K” conversion. The modified gas system was to control the cyclic rate in full automatic fire. Mike Gruber wrote an article for “Solder of Fortune” magazine about the M14K in 1983 or 1984.
The proportion of spontaneously proliferating cells was 46% and 51% in M14K and M38K cells, respectively.
The extent of proliferation was reduced by epirubicin exposure in M38K cells in a dose-dependent manner, whereas the proliferative activity in M14K cells was increased with low doses of epirubicin (IV).
Apoptosis was induced dose-dependently in M14K cells assessed by TUNEL-method (a) and by caspase 3 activation (b), but not in M38K cells (a,c).