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M16 rifle - Future replacement? |  | M16 rifle - Future replacement?: Encyclopedia II - M16 rifle - Future replacement? |  |
M16 rifle - Overview.
In the 1980s, many soldiers who had been equipped with M16A1s were given a M249 (in addition to the M60s it replaced). In the 1990s, the adoption of the M4 Carbine meant many more M16A2s would be replaced by it. The Air Force currently plans to replace all its M16s with M4s according to a 2004 presentation. The M16A2 still remains the main U.S. service rifle in the Army, though in the 2000s the Marine Corps moved to M16A4 rifles. Also the M16 never entirely replaced the M14 in all roles, which continues to be used in a number o ...
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|  |  | M16 rifle: Encyclopedia II - M16 rifle - Future replacement?
M16 rifle - Future replacement?
M16 rifle - Overview
In the 1980s, many soldiers who had been equipped with M16A1s were given a M249 (in addition to the M60s it replaced). In the 1990s, the adoption of the M4 Carbine meant many more M16A2s would be replaced by it. The Air Force currently plans to replace all its M16s with M4s according to a 2004 presentation. The M16A2 still remains the main U.S. service rifle in the Army, though in the 2000s the Marine Corps moved to M16A4 rifles. Also the M16 never entirely replaced the M14 in all roles, which continues to be used in a number of niche applications throughout the Armed Forces.
Replacement of the M16 family has been proposed at various points, and its longevity is in part due to a series of delays and failures in projects meant to replace it. It was going to be replaced by the winner of the Advanced Combat Rifle program, but none scored high enough to be worth the cost of changing over. It was also potentially going to be replaced by the SABR, from the OICW project. The weapon system originally planned by the OICW project was put on hold around the turn of century, in favor of a simpler new 5.56 mm rifle project that offered less far-reaching improvements. The resulting XM8 rifle was also intended as a potential replacement for the M16 family. However, this program too ran into problems around 2004-5, and was put on hold in favor of a competition for what became known as the OICW Increment 1. The OICW-1 competition was put on hold in the summer of 2005 to take into account input from other services, and several months later was cancelled outright.
M16 rifle - History
Throughout the 1970s the Army experimented with various materials to replace the brass casings. Brass has a number of features that make it almost ideal for a cartridge, including low-friction against steel which made it easier to extract, and its ability to carry away a considerable amount of heat from the weapon and thereby keep it cooler. However brass is also heavy and expensive, replacing it would lower both the cost and weight of the ammunition.
Aluminum and steel were popular materials for complete rounds, and AAI successfully developed a plastic blank. However none of these materials ever entered production for one reason or another. Completely caseless ammunition was also studied on several occasions, notably the German 4.7 mm designs, but issues with reliability and "cook off" were never completely solved.
Later in the 1980s the Advanced Combat Rifle program was run to find a replacement for the M16. The Army was pressing for a 100% increase in the ability for infantry to hit their targets, in the same way that SALVO had aimed to increase effectiveness by 100% through increased rate of fire.
Colt entered a modified M16A2 known as the Colt ACR, which used duplex rounds, used a system that lowered recoil by 40% to allow better repeating shots, and added a 3.5x scope. This weapon, designated M16A2E2, also featured a "guide" of sorts as part of a special handguard developed by the U.S. Army Human Engineering Laboratory (HEL) designed to assist in snap-shooting, and a carbine style stock very similar to the recent stock developed by the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane Division.
The Steyr ACR used new flechette ammunition that was nominally called 5.56 mm, with a very high 4750 ft/s (1450 m/s) muzzle velocity. Other variants experimented with caseless ammunition technologies as well.
Although they all offered some improvement, none came close to the benchmark set for the testing.
More recently, the Army started the XM8 system project for a radically improved weapon. However, the program was shelved in favor of an open competition for what became known as OICW Increment 1. (Increment 2 is the stand-alone airbursting grenade launcher known as the XM25, and Increment 3 will be the XM29, a weapon which combines the earlier two increments.) The OICW-1 competition was cancelled on October 31, 2005.
Other related archives5.56 mm, AK-47, AK-74, AK47, AR-10, AR-15, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Advanced Combat Rifle, Advanced Research Projects Agency, America's Army, Ares Shrike, ArmaLite, Australia, BAR, Balkans, Barbados, Battlefield 2, Belize, Black Hawk Down, Bolivia, Botswana, Bradley IFV, Brazil, Britain, Brunei, Burma, C7, CAR-15, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Chile, China, Colt, Colt Automatic Rifle, Colt Commando, Colt Firearms, Colt M231 FPW, Comparison of the AK-47 and M16, Con Air, Congo, Costa Rica, Curtis LeMay, Cyrus Vance, Denmark, Diemaco C7, Diemaco C7, C8, Diemaco C8, Dominican Republic, Eugene Stoner, FG42, FN FAL, Fabrique Nationale, Fiji, France, Full Metal Jacket, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Grenada, Haiti, Honduras, Indonesia, Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Jamaica, John F. Kennedy, Johnson Light Machinegun, Knight's Armament Company, Kuwait, La France M16K, Laos, Liberia, List of individual weapons of the U.S. Armed Forces, List of weapons of the U.S. Marine Corps, M1 Carbine, M14, M203, M231, M249, M4 Carbine, M4, M4A1 Carbine, M4A1, MIL-STD-1913 Picatinny rail, Malaysia, Mark 11 'SWS', Mark 12 'SPR', Mark 18 'CQBR', Marksmanship, Mattel, Maxwell Taylor, Mexico, Morocco, NATO, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, OICW, Oman, Panama, Philippines, Picatinny rail, Platoon, Qatar, Robert McNamara, SAM-R, SAR-21, SDM-R, SEAL Recon Rifle, SPIW, Saudi Arabia, Scarface, Secretary of Defense, Singapore, South Korea, Springfield Armory, Squad Automatic Weapon, Squad automatic weapon, Sri Lanka, Steyr ACR, Stoner 63, Strategic Air Command, TV series, Taiwan, Thailand, The Rock, Thompson submachine gun, Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon, Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six, Tunisia, Turkey, U.S., U.S. Navy, United Kingdom, United States, United States military, Uruguay, Vietnam, War on Terrorism, Washington, DC, We Were Soldiers, XM148, XM177, XM231/M231, XM25, XM26 LSS, XM29 OICW, XM320, XM4 (Colt Model 720), XM8, XM8 rifle, aluminum, ammunition, assault rifle, body armor, carbine, caseless ammunition, catch phrase, comic book, composite, designated marksmen, direct impingement, films, flash suppressor, flechette, fully-automatic, fully-automatically, gas operation, gas-operated, infantry, machine gun, magazine, manufactured, muzzle velocity, night vision, operations research, plastics, recoil, rifle, sear, semi, semi-automatic, sniper rifle, space age, special operations, steel, titanium, toy, trigger, urban legend, video games
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Future replacement?", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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