Posted on 03/21/2004 4:58:12 PM PST by Incorrigible
Edited on 07/06/2004 6:39:36 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
The replacement, called the XM8, is under development at Picatinny Arsenal in Morris County and is being tested at Fort Benning, Ga.
Developers say the rifle with the futuristic-looking curves is a marked improvement over the M-16 because it is shorter, lighter, easier to clean and unlikely to jam in a firefight -- an M-16 shortcoming illustrated in the ambush that wounded former POW Jessica Lynch and killed 11 of her comrades in Iraq.
(Excerpt) Read more at nj.com ...
Yes, yes, yes. The M4 the poor bloody infantry gets has the retarded 3-shot (or sometimes 2-shot or 1-shot, sorry bout that) burst mechanism that was thrown into the M16A2 as a way to eliminate the need to "waste" ammunition in training soldiers in fire control. In specific situations full auto is useful -- at close ranges, and in achieving instantaneous fire superiority as in a meeting engagement or counterambush. So SOF got the M4A1 which along with a couple of other tweaks has the auto-fire mechanism of original M16/M16A1 vintage.
Now that the Army has decided that other troops deserve rifle training too, this abortive burst gadget seems destined for the scrap heap. Ordnance and Quartermaster guys may try to resuscitate it, but in this iteration of the Army the combat soldiers are driving the train. (That will be good news for the Marines, who often get stuck with whatever the Army cooks up, for good or for ill. Marines are great troops, they deserve the best, too, not hand-me-downs).
Some HKs used to offer burst as a fourth choice on the dial (the others being safe, semi, and auto).
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
Yep. Fastest bolt action ever made. Just keep your sights on target and snik-snik you're ready to shoot again. It's ugly as hell, but maybe that's just character...
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
Democrat: "That looks so menacing"
Ask H&K -- or the British Army. H&K burned through at least two gargantuan contracts to fix the British L85 bullpups and the upshot of the whole thing is that -- they still stink. SAS carries M4A1s, mostly, and won't touch the L85 with a bargepole. The rest of HMs Army has no choice but totes the L85 around. Bullpups are a good idea that are yet to have a good implementation.
The French FAMAS is almost as bad, but then again, it was designed only to be dropped or stacked...
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
1- A soldier can carry about twice as many rounds of .223 for about half the weight of the same amount of .308 rounds.
2- .223 rifles are far more controllable in full-auto mode than .308 or .30-06 rifles
The .223 round, as others have pointed out, needs to be deployed under rather limited optimal conditions in order to achieve its maximum lethality. That means shot out of a 20" barrel and hitting an enemy within 150 yards or so. If the barrel is any shorter, and/or the enemy any farther away, our soldiers are giving up terminal ballistics performance that might get them killed.
I think 40 years with a sub-standard round is long enough. the XM8 might be an improvement over the M-16 in some regards, but it's perpetuating the use of a lousy batle round.
Either crash test and develop the 6.8 X 43mm round (which has as much energy at 200 yards as the M-16 round has at the muzzle, and will fragment at velocities down to 2100 FPS versus a necessary 2600-2700 FPS for the M-16 round) or issue M-16s (or XM8s) with 1/7 twist and 75-77 grain bullets that display better fragmentation than the 62 grain bullets the US uses.
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
One thing I've wondered about: would it be practical or advisable to design a rifle with a trigger that worked like an electric typewriter's "X" key [push lightly for one strike, mash for automatic?] I would think that in a surprise situation, it would be difficult to flip a selector lever in the heat of the moment, while applying an extra 5 pounds or so on the trigger would be easy if not automatic.
The M16A2 is a Marine Corps development. The A2 sights, longer butt stock and heavier barrel while great for match shooting really don't lend themselves to instincitive combat shooting...but they are better than this short barrled plastic carbine.
From the article they reference fighting from vehicles and how hard it is with an M16/M4. I think they are mixing apples and oranges with their arguments. If they are mounted troops, arm them with the appropriate weapons. But if these are infantry troops being transported then arm the damn vehicle with a heavy weapon(s), put the troops on a gun truck .
The advantage of the shorter profile of this weapon is lost once the troops dismount and take to the field. This is not an infantry rifle. Where's the bayonet lug ? Did the military remove the requirement to mount a bayonet ?
That defeats the whole purpose of the intermediate cartridge: to give the infantryman more firepower and more mobility. A 6.5 x 51mm cartridge would probably require a nine pound weapon to avoid soldier fatigue in combat.
What people are telling you about using sniper or crew-served weapons beyond 600m is straight doctrine. Remember, a combat unit is not individual riflemen on the range. The power of the unit resides principally in its MGs and mortars. The riflemen keep these vital power-projectors from being flanked. There is a range at which your prime weapons are your crew served weapons; and there are special purpose weapons available for the rare situation where you need to bring aimed fire on individuals at 600+ meters. You should see what happens when you put scopes on the SAWs and M240s (which we have done). It's a beautiful thing, unless you're an enemy.
You can suppress at 600-800m with the M4/M16 as it is. The accuracy of the weapon is seriously degraded at 800m but it is definitely accurate enough to get the enemy to put his head down. But with a 6.5x51mm weapon, like a 7.62x51mm one, you can't carry enough ammo to go around wildly suppressing stuff.
Afghan or Iraq are a bit rare in that you do get long range shots. In Vietnam a typical sniper shot was 150m. Most firefights took place at under 20m! In Europe in training, I very seldom could see 100m straight, let alone have hopes of engaging a target there. Infantrymen are not meant to go fighting in the wide open spaces -- that's why those dudes in the rolling foxholes still have a place in the Army today. (It's also why we like to have an Apache overhead when we are out in the open like that).
Many people focus on the rifle as if it existed by itself, in a vacuum. No, it is part of the system that is a soldier. In turn, he is part of the system that is the unit. While I don't doubt that, say, the .270 Win would be better for shooting THAT guy THERE dead RIGHT NOW, it would be a grievously bad decision for the system that is an SF team, an infantry company, or an entire Army. (Weight of ammunition not only impacts your soldier but your whole logistics train. You might wind up needing double the air sorties to transport ammo. Is it worth it? I dunno -- that's why we send smart guys to general staff colleges, to answer questions like that. But it has to be considered by people who can make informed comparisons, which doesn't include me).
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
I think the military "authorities" are wary of starting from scratch, as they envision unforeseen development problems. The fact that the 6.8 can be tested and used with relatively small modifications seems to be decisive.
In my engineering mind I was visualizing a comparison of the A2 and the M4...I guess 'M4' has become synonymous with the full up M4A1, and with that I can see the difference, in fact, the difference between an A2 and and M4A1 would be much greater than $300.
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