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  1. #1
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    Default Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    Looks like an interesting prototype that's being tested

    https://www.businessinsider.com/army...y-armor-2019-6

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    looks like they are developing an SMG and don't expect it to make it to the field, but rather concepts utilized in it to work their way into other projects.
    Engineers at the Army Research Laboratory (ARL) are working on a small, lightweight infantry rifle with the ability to fire rounds at twice the muzzle velocity of standard-issue sidearm.
    The aim, one engineer explained, is to get rifle-like capabilities out of smaller, high capacity weapons that could be used for room clearing operations and combat in a confined space.
    The current unnamed prototype has only a 10-inch barrel, but it has been able to reach muzzle velocities of 2,900 feet per second, significantly faster than other comparable compact firearms.

    Sometimes, size truly doesn't matter.

    Engineers with the Army Research Laboratory are working on a new infantry weapon that, at half the weight and length of the M4 carbine, is capable of firing rounds at double the muzzle velocity of a standard-issue sidearm that could easily defeat Russian or Chinese body armor.

    The as-of-yet-unnamed prototype, currently in development at the ARL's Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland, integrates an unusual breech and barrel design and an improved tapered-bore barrel to achieve lethality at extended range — and despite its dainty 10-inch barrel, apparently outperforms other compact firearms like the FN P90, reportedly hitting a muzzle velocity of roughly 2,900 feet per second.

    "The goal is to get rifle-like velocities out of a very small weapon that is high capacity, that's either adaptable for room-clearing or confined spaces," ARL engineer Zac Wingard told TechLink, which first reported on the development of the new weapon. "Like you're getting in and out of vehicles or a subterranean environment, but also applicable for remotely operated systems."

    Unfortunately, rank-and-file soldiers won't get their hands on this lethal bad boy anytime soon. While the pursuit of lethality at range has induced the Army to engineer a brand new Next-Generation Squad Weapon (NGSW) chambered in an intermediate 6.8mm cased-telescoped round to lighten the system's overall weight, this ammo requirement means that the NGSW will remain a distinct platform from the weapons system that researchers are cooking up at Aberdeen.

    "This effort is not the Next-Generation Squad Weapon intermediate caliber," ARL spokeswoman T'Jae Ellis told Task & Purpose, noting that the service couldn't yet provide a specific effective range for their unnamed prototype. "This effort is about accelerating technology transition from the laboratory prototype and integrating into other programs."

    The way the prototype is designed is relatively simple. While increased chamber pressure would require the significantly bulkier bolt assembly to accommodate for the additional force, the new rifle's barrel breech assembly locks in like a screw. In addition, tapered-bore barrels allowed Army researchers to translate that increased chamber pressure into additional kinetic energy on the round itself, maintaining lethality at extended ranges.

    While the overall goal of the ARL project is to reduce the system's overall weight and bulkiness, the added chamber pressure packs a delightfully lethal punch when applied to various platforms. As researchers toldTechLink, one 24-inch tapered-bore barrel produced velocities of between 4,600 to 5,750 feet per second and boosted overall chamber pressure to between 65 ksi and 100 ksi, near double that of the M4 carbine.

    Based on the Army's response to Task & Purpose, it seems likely that at least some of the engineering lessons picked up on the ARL prototype will make their way into the NGSW platform that officials once equated to the iPhone in its relatively versatility and potential for iterative improvements.

    Indeed, Army HQ force development division chief Col. Geoffrey A. Norman previously told Task & Purpose that the NGSW would fire a small bullet "at the pressure equivalent to what a tank would fire" using specially-designed ammo in order to maintain kinetic energy at ranges up to 600 meters.

    "The chamber pressure for the standard assault rifle is around 45 KSI [kilopound per square inch], but we're looking for between 60 and 80 KSI … the chamber pressure when an M1 Abrams tank fires is on that order," Norman said during a February 2018 interview. "We're looking to reach out around 600 meters and have lethal effects even if the target is protected by body armor."

    All of this, Norman added, was in the service of the U.S. military's broad pivot to so-called "great power competition" with adversaries like Russia and China.

    "For the past 10 or 15 years, we've been really focused on the requirement of lethal effects against unprotected targets," he said at the time. "Now we're looking at near-peer threats like Russia and others. We need to have lethal effects against protected targets and we need to have requirements for long-range lethality in places like Afghanistan, where you're fighting from mountaintop to mountaintop over extended ranges."

    Changing Army requirements may necessitate such integrations sooner rather than later. In late March, Textron Systems' AAI Corporation announced the delivery of an initial NGSW prototype demonstrator to Army combat capabilities officials to "inform the Army's formal NGSW program and include weapon and ammunition weight reduction, weapon sound suppression, as well as fire control integration technology."

    The following April, Army modernization officials told Congress that the service aims to start fielding NGSW in fall 2021.
    There is no way to make it out alive...

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    That's excellent.
    I applaud any effort that results in punching holes in communist_socialist body armor
    Crusader's local #556 South Central Asia chapter

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    Default Re: Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    Quote Originally Posted by cdi View Post
    That's excellent.
    I applaud any effort that results in punching holes in communist_socialist body armor
    You mean the Democrats?

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    https://taskandpurpose.com/army-next...n-squad-weapon
    img.jpg
    The Textron 5.56mm LSAT light machine gun. In the SASC hearing of Feb. 7th, 2018, the NGSAR demonstrator weapon was revealed to be a Textron prototype based on LSAT technology. Image source: Picatinny Arsenal, US Army (public domain).
    Illegitimus non carborundum est

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    Default Re: Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    Is it a Glock with a silencer, bump stock, and heat shield?

  7. #7
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    Default Re: Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    Quote Originally Posted by R.A.D. View Post
    Is it a Glock with a silencer, bump stock, and heat shield?
    nope. just a shoulder thing that goes up.
    it's all the military needed to improve the lethality of their existing weapons.
    There is no way to make it out alive...

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    Most Prototypes tend to disappear into the black hole of no funding, I think it more likely that we will dump body armor and go back to the usual gear in a few years t just to reduce the cost of the equipment. There is a trade off between wearing extra weight and loss of movement. Someone will always come up with a new way to defeat armor as exampled in history. As I no longer have a dog in the fight I just smile and shake my head at the Ghee Wiz stuff.

  9. #9
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    Default Re: Army working on new assault rifle to defeat body armor

    Quote Originally Posted by R.A.D. View Post
    Is it a Glock with a silencer, bump stock, and heat shield?
    In 45-70?

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