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July 9, 2019, 09:12 PM | #51 | |
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Suppressive fire isn't the number of rounds sent down range. It is the first time the enemy looks out from cover he gets his head blown off and everyone else near him says, "Screw that!". |
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July 10, 2019, 01:08 AM | #52 |
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lol, so true
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July 12, 2019, 12:34 AM | #53 |
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44AMP: Did you read the comments in "The Gun" about how some senior officers with the DoD (allegedly) bypassed almost the entire, normal selection process for the Armalite AR / "M-16"?
Somebody...correct my memory if this wasn't the gist of what Chivers documented. I don't remember the sources for any of CJ Chiver's info (former USMC Infantry Captain & graduate of Ranger School), but I only read/skimmed over a few of the sections while standing in the 'late' Borders Books years ago. This segment might still be linked on the Amazon website, if I remember ---- Even if his reporting of the US' initial AR selection is seen as very incomplete or distorted (not defending him, just baffled if the basic scenario is valid), the guy has acquired some interesting awards in journalism. One of you guys/gals has read parts of, or even owns this book. Last edited by Ignition Override; July 12, 2019 at 12:46 AM. |
July 28, 2019, 05:00 PM | #54 |
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July 28, 2019, 06:03 PM | #55 |
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So they confirmed that they are going to try to develop a new round?
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July 29, 2019, 12:52 AM | #56 |
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How many million rounds of 5.56 ammo does our DoD have stored in the US, excluding overseas?
Maybe it's not only a rhetorical question. |
July 29, 2019, 01:38 PM | #57 | |
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July 29, 2019, 01:50 PM | #58 |
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Not bad, considering they've been pondering upon it for 10-15 years. Once they've actually gotten the ball rolling, maybe they'll actually have it online and in some warfighter hands in another 10 years.
By the time it's in common military service, the 5.56 will have served our military for probably 60+ years.
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July 30, 2019, 02:16 PM | #59 | |
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Well when the issues with the lack of lethality appeared in the beginning of the GWOT the Army tried to overcome the limitations of 5.56mm.
Years of trying but alas......no wonder bullets existed and the physics could not be overcome. Quote:
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July 30, 2019, 05:41 PM | #60 |
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They may well start putting some in some hands by then, but imagine how long it's going to take to fill the contracts and start replacing old with new at the depot levels ... everywhere.
I'd think having the changeover complete within 5 years, worldwide, would be amazing. Our military industrial complex doesn't seem to often do "amazing" anymore. Nature of gov work.
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July 30, 2019, 09:53 PM | #61 |
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I’ve disagreed on this issue before, but seems like they’re pretty urgent and intent in fielding this new weapon system.
Since it’s been a while since completing my lengthy service, I look at myself as an outsider now. If it’s better for the troops I fully support it. A lot of us are skeptical because we’ve heard this before and doesn’t pan out. I will stand by my stance that whatever the next cartridge will be will still underperform as a military as a military cartridge when compared with its full potential, as does all military cartridges. |
July 31, 2019, 07:56 PM | #62 | |
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The gov't just does not move that quickly.
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July 31, 2019, 08:35 PM | #63 | |
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They may want to make the change, but being able to do so goes way beyond what they want.
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August 1, 2019, 10:42 AM | #64 |
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It is now August 2019.
If the Kalahari bushmen bombed Topeka harbor on Aug 7, we wouldn't have a new cartridge design in a new rifle design "fielded" by 2021. My crystal balls are cloudy... one says if they get even one rifle and a few rounds of ammo in the hands of A troop (which might be a proving ground guard) then someone will claim it's "fielded".... The other one says we'll stick with the generally recognized definition of "fielded", none will be, the contract will fail to be met, and expire. Then after securing MORE funding, they begin a completely new round of design, testing, contract negotiations and all the rest, essentially starting from square one all over again. Which do you think more likely?
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August 1, 2019, 11:35 AM | #65 |
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I think there is movement and it will happen.
When? Crap shoot.
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August 1, 2019, 06:08 PM | #66 |
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I think the military would be much better served if they simply began to teach each soldier real marksmanship. IF they did that, whatever weapon they put in a soldier's hand would be much more effective. The talk of defeating upgraded body armor is the same old diatribe heard for years and it goes the way of all military development. By the time such a weapon is fielded, someone will have come out with a diamond embedded super polymer that will stop a .50 cal at 5 yds. Then, you'll need a 20mm weapon, or just a 5.56 bullet with the ability to hit where the armor isn't.
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August 1, 2019, 07:59 PM | #67 | |
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In the end it is not about shot placement, it is about physics. Yes, a temporary fix was to begin teaching Regular Forces to use CQB shooting techniques such as controlled pairs and double tapping to improve lethality odds. Make no mistake that training band-aid did not and cannot overcome the basic physics. |
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August 1, 2019, 10:00 PM | #68 | |
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I'm of the same opinion. When will it happen? Anybody's guess. Last edited by ed308; August 1, 2019 at 10:05 PM. |
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August 1, 2019, 10:24 PM | #69 |
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The US has been in a state of war for 222 years, the 5.56 has been in use for 55 years, 24% of that time and 23% of the time we’ve been a nation.
In these high tech modern times, it will still take s fairytale unicorn round and weapon that does really exist yet to replace it. It is physics, yes... physics led to its adoption... and it’s physics that has kept it in use for so long. Of course there’s better cartridges, but the 5.56 is basically logistically and economically optimal. I hope we can get this new system, and I hope even more that it never gets used in another war that America doesn’t want. Who wouldn’t want game rifle power in a lightweight M4 sized select fire package. Edit to add: One thing is for sure, we won’t be able to do it if it’s never tried, so this is a good start. |
August 2, 2019, 02:31 AM | #70 | |||
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Stopping power? Or however you want to phrase it, the ability to put an enemy down and out? Seems to me that shot placement is kind of important, if you don't HIT the enemy, I don't think the physics of the round matter much. (Thermonuclear weapons / high explosives excepted) Quote:
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And that's the big point, The round has to be effective enough to accomplish the mission and be cost effective. AND any new round not only has to do that, it has to do it well enough to justify the COST of replacing the existing round, AND the weapon systems that use it. This is the lesson you should take away from the failure of the US to adopt the .276 Pedersen. While the .276 was superior to the .30-06 in several ways all of them added together were not enough to convince the powers that be, (at the time) that it was worth replacing the .30-06. For general service use, there is a lot more involved than just new rifles. You may think the 5.56mm has been in service so long because tis the best thing since sliced bread, canned beer, and girls who smell nice, OR you might think it's been in service so long because the govt is too cheap to buy something better and too obstinate to admit they should have gone with something else in the first place. My personal opinion, considering how many "upgrades" and modifications we've made to the 5.56 and the M16 over the years, looks to me a lot like "this is what we're stuck with, lets keep trying to make it work better..." Today, with those people who gave /forced the 5.56 to/on us long retired, their careers and their place in the history books is no longer threatened, so people are beginning to actually look at the fact that there MIGHT be something else, possibly a better alternative. However, millions and millions of $ worth of inventory has an inertia all its own. Overcoming that takes either a seriously significant performance AND cost improvement, or a top down "Fuehrer Directiv" from the Sec Def or higher. I don't see either of those on the horizon, ….yet
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All else being equal (and it almost never is) bigger bullets tend to work better. |
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August 2, 2019, 06:54 AM | #71 | |
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'In a lightweight M4 size select-fire package,' would generally indicate less than a 30-cal something chambering. Which do they want? |
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August 2, 2019, 08:40 AM | #72 | ||
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The army does change equipment when needed, and for the 15 years that I was in, lots of equipment changed including a few iterations of the M16/M4. One thing didn’t change, (off topic,but) the M2 machine gun. As to the 222 years, you can look at it in different ways but I’d suspect that if you count military “consulting” that time would be even longer. But the 222 year figure does include some low intensity conflicts, police action and the military’s expulsion of the indigenous population(which accounts for the largest time period) |
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August 2, 2019, 12:19 PM | #73 |
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6.8 = .270
If only old "Cactus" Jack O'Connor were alive today to see the 270 caliber become the US military choice for combat!
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August 2, 2019, 06:51 PM | #75 |
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Primary and Secondary is a good podcast. There is a lot of truth in Chuck Marsh’s commentary there but I think some of that commentary reflects his experiences and not everyone’s experience. The truth is, you can drill a guy 15 times and depending on SHOT PLACEMENT, he may not immediately go down. The history books are full of walking dead guys who took lots of folks to Valhalla with them. If you don’t hit CNS or get a psychological stop, then the guy has to bleed out and that may be 10 seconds or 10 days depending on a variety of factors.
On a semi-related note, take a look at this article on structured barrels. I’ve got zero experience with it; but if the claims are true it makes the targets for barrel life, rate of fire, and accuracy a lot more realistic. https://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/...-every-aspect/ |
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