Danny, I have dozens of books and vids on the Falklands as well, my major interest of military history for many of the same reasons.
So much interesting stuff. The lack of a larger carrier with longer ranged fighters than the Harrier, and no proper AEW/AWACS capability meaning a determined air force was being engaged at very close range to the ships being defended being offset by the skill of the British pilots, the capability of the Harrier albeit having short range, and the incredible performance of the Aim9L, the first really decent all aspect IR missile for the Western nations used in combat.
Much bravery, on both sides at times, and like you said, some very vicious small unit actions in pretty daunting conditions. Amphibious landings and assaults, serious naval engagements of all kinds. The first use of a NATO/Western Nuc sub doing what it is built to do, sink threat ships and sea control. The Argies Sub San Luis possibly got in torpedo attacks but there was malfunctions with the weapons - some supposition and theories about this, but interesting info nonetheless.
My former boss Alan Bell told me about an assault by the SAS on a position garrisoned with very good Argentine troops. Their intel had missed a minefield, and they hit them in the dark, and ran right through it unknowingly, a large unit of SAS soldiers. To their surprise, the Argies incredibly ran up the white flag and surrendered before they closed to a distance where they had picked to engage them. Afterwards they asked the Argentine officer in command why he had chosen to give up so easily. He responded that he had heard many things about the SAS, but when he saw them run through the minefield and nobody blowing up, he then knew they must be supermen of some kind, and feared his men, of whom there were a great many more than the British, wouldn't stand a chance. Pure dumb luck that averted a lot of people dying on both sides that day.
I agree regarding a 30 cal rifle being a better option for troops in many cases. There is a constant discussion and argument about that, just like the constant argument about pistol calibers. The SCAR 762 rifle is working pretty well, I don't think we'll ever see the US or other forces go back to 30 cal as a primary issued rifle, but it would be nice if they did, and the SCAR with a bit more time and tweaks would be a perfectly acceptable way to go IMO.