New Army "Caliber Configuration Study"

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  • stanc
    Banned
    • Apr 2011
    • 3430

    Originally posted by JASmith View Post
    ...and that is the difference between undocumented opinion and documented policy.
    Joe, even the Marine Corps recognizes that there is a distinct difference between (belt-fed) light machine guns and (magazine-fed) automatic rifles. Notice that the M27 IAR is officially classified as an automatic rifle, not an LMG.
    We are very pleased to have permission to proceed.
    Sarcasm ignored. It's a waste of time trying to offend me, Joe. I cannot be offended.

    Comment


    • AGAIN,

      Originally posted by cory View Post
      What the hell difference does it make whether it's classified as an LMG or MMG here on the forum??? I assure you the nomenclature makes no difference to the Grunts on the ground who are employing it on the battlefield or are on the receiving end of it's barrage. We're arguing the pronunciation of the word "THE".

      The only difference that's relevant to this discussion is how it's tactically implemented and how much man power the platform requires.
      Perhaps we should open a new thread entitled "Nit-picking Details and Personal Insults." An alternative title could be: "Picking the Fly Shit out of the Pepper."

      Comment

      • cory
        Chieftain
        • Jun 2012
        • 2987

        Originally posted by LRRPF52 View Post
        One of the things I've suggested in the Machine Gun department is a totally new classification of weapon, which embodies the benefits of both a LMG and MMG/GPMG, without either of their main limitations.

        LMG
        Pros:
        * Lightweight (supposed to be, that was lost in the fiasco known as the M249)
        * Low recoil
        * Individually served
        * Supposed to be capable of suppressive volume of fire (high mag cap or belt fed usually)

        Cons:
        * Limited range and terminal effectiveness, especially if small caliber/conventional projectile construction is used


        Medium Machine Gun/General Purpose Machine Gun
        Pros:
        * Extended range and suitable terminal performance from 800-1200m on soft targets

        Cons:
        * Weight and weapon size limits maneuverability
        * Ammunition weight and space limit carrying capacity
        * Limited ammunition capacity significantly reduces unit combat endurance, tires soldiers quickly, and makes gun-mounted solutions even more difficult.
        * Recoil and muzzle blast reduce hit probability, while increasing the gun position signature to the enemy

        The happy medium 6.5mm takes the pros from each, while cutting out the cons. With a constant-recoil operating principle, we could have an 11lb belt-fed machine gun that is very well suited for the close range maneuver fight in the Fire Team, while being able to exceed the retained energy of both the 7.62 NATO and 7.62x54R belt-fed machine guns past 500yds, staying supersonic well into the 1100-1300m range.

        What this suggests is a totally new machine gun classification, that I call the Multi-Role Light Machine Gun-a morphing of the LMG and MMG/GPMG.
        No argument out of me. My only question is, why has AA not designed an LMG for the Grendel? I'm assuming Bill A. doesn't have the proper licensing (hasn't paid of the right bureaucrats), correct?

        If Bill would partner up with one of the big boys, this could be a worthwhile project for ALL partied involved, mostly the grunts.
        "Those who sacrifice liberty for security, deserve neither." Benjamin Franklin

        Comment

        • stanc
          Banned
          • Apr 2011
          • 3430

          Originally posted by LRRPF52 View Post
          Medium Machine Gun/General Purpose Machine Gun

          * Limited ammunition capacity significantly reduces unit combat endurance, tires soldiers quickly, and makes gun-mounted solutions even more difficult.
          How does the limited ammo capacity tire soldiers quickly?

          What do you mean by "gun-mounted solutions"? And how are they made more difficult by limited ammo capacity?
          * Recoil and muzzle blast reduce hit probability, while increasing the gun position signature to the enemy
          The position signature doesn't look that bad to me.



          The happy medium 6.5mm takes the pros from each, while cutting out the cons. With a constant-recoil operating principle, we could have an 11lb belt-fed machine gun that is very well suited for the close range maneuver fight in the Fire Team, while being able to exceed the retained energy of both the 7.62 NATO and 7.62x54R belt-fed machine guns past 500yds, staying supersonic well into the 1100-1300m range.
          Okay. How do you suggest making your happy meal 6.5mm machine gun a reality? I sure can't see FN or HK developing it.
          What this suggests is a totally new machine gun classification, that I call the Multi-Role Light Machine Gun-a morphing of the LMG and MMG/GPMG.
          Oh jeez. MRLMG. Another five-letter abbreviation. Can't we have a three-letter type, preferably one that can be spoken as a word (such as AUG and MAG are)?

          Comment

          • stanc
            Banned
            • Apr 2011
            • 3430

            Originally posted by cory View Post
            My only question is, why has AA not designed an LMG for the Grendel? I'm assuming Bill A. doesn't have the proper licensing, correct?
            If AA doesn't have the necessary licensing, it shouldn't be difficult to get. I have a friend who used to be a federally-licensed machine gun manufacturer, and his operation was much smaller than Alexander's.

            I imagine a big reason AA hasn't developed a Grendel LMG is that there's no assurance it would prove profitable. In 1986, Reagan banned production of new machine guns for civilian enthusiasts, which eliminates that market, and the possibility of military contracts is far too "iffy" to bet on (especially in a non-NATO caliber).

            Comment


            • Originally posted by nincomp View Post
              AGAIN,



              Perhaps we should open a new thread entitled "Nit-picking Details and Personal Insults." An alternative title could be: "Picking the Fly Shit out of the Pepper."
              Well stated. It also seems that we don't really have permission to proceed without being harassed.

              Oh well ... I hope the moderators are watching as closely as the OZ and the BWaites posts suggest. One gets tired of tantrums and taunting after awhile.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by stanc View Post
                How does the limited ammo capacity tire soldiers quickly?

                What do you mean by "gun-mounted solutions"? And how are they made more difficult by limited ammo capacity?

                The position signature doesn't look that bad to me.




                Okay. How do you suggest making your happy meal 6.5mm machine gun a reality? I sure can't see FN or HK developing it.

                Oh jeez. MRLMG. Another five-letter abbreviation. Can't we have a three-letter type, preferably one that can be spoken as a word (such as AUG and MAG are)?
                Limited ammunition carrying capacity is a result of the heavy ammunition, which fills the same amount of space with more weight. Weight is what makes you tired trying to lug it.

                Gun-mounted ammunition feed solutions, which we don't have and haven't ever had with the M60 and M240, unless you were in a unit that purchased after-market COTS solutions (i.e. not big Army who could give a crap about it, obviously).

                The video you posted is a shining example of so many of the things I'm talking about.

                * Burn through starter belt on initial contact....check
                * Scream to the enemy, "Here I am with the most casualty-producing weapon!".....check (just a reality with 7.62 NATO weapons, especially in dry/dusty environment)
                * Make a tactical pause while reloading the gun when I could be slaying bugger-eater/goat rapers....check
                * Hope the gun works as I belt-feed it exposed with no drum or ammunition pouch for the pig.....check

                Compare that with the RPD and PKM we've fought against. They always have had a purpose-built canister for carrying at least 100rds on the gun, which is what you need to be effective with an LMG.

                Comment

                • stanc
                  Banned
                  • Apr 2011
                  • 3430

                  Originally posted by LRRPF52 View Post
                  Limited ammunition carrying capacity is a result of the heavy ammunition, which fills the same amount of space with more weight. Weight is what makes you tired trying to lug it.

                  Gun-mounted ammunition feed solutions, which we don't have and haven't ever had with the M60 and M240, unless you were in a unit that purchased after-market COTS solutions (i.e. not big Army who could give a crap about it, obviously).

                  The video you posted is a shining example of so many of the things I'm talking about.

                  * Burn through starter belt on initial contact....check
                  * Scream to the enemy, "Here I am with the most casualty-producing weapon!".....check (just a reality with 7.62 NATO weapons, especially in dry/dusty environment)
                  * Make a tactical pause while reloading the gun when I could be slaying bugger-eater/goat rapers....check
                  * Hope the gun works as I belt-feed it exposed with no drum or ammunition pouch for the pig.....check

                  Compare that with the RPD and PKM we've fought against. They always have had a purpose-built canister for carrying at least 100rds on the gun, which is what you need to be effective with an LMG.
                  Thanks. But, you still haven't said how you expect to make your idealized 6.5mm machine gun a reality.

                  Comment

                  • NugginFutz
                    Chieftain
                    • Aug 2013
                    • 2622

                    Jeeze - would the internet "sniping" please just end? If this sort of thing amused me, I'd be over on AR15.com. This is one of two, otherwise interesting, threads I'm having to plow through.
                    If it's true that we are here to help others, then what exactly are the others here for?

                    Comment


                    • There is an advantage to having two calibers, many of the Talibs I interrogated said they attacked us in 2 waves,

                      The first from short distance (Usually 2-3 inexperienced men/kids and 1 experienced man) this team was largely made up of forces who only had command wires and RPG's, no small arms. Their job was to draw fire then blend in to the populace after disabling vehicles or disrupting columns.

                      The second was set up on a higher or further overwatch type position, they fired mortars from behind mountains if no helos were present and if there were, the long distance crews would fire heavy weapons (DSHK's and DP-25's) at the column to get them to fire their 5.56's at them, meanwhile a second element would maneuver, further down the kill box to assault through the forces, the same way we lift and shift in a box. they were sound in their tactics, I have watched them bounding in on us before. I have also been on FOB's that have been penetrated (Baghram May 2010) they weren't stupid and they took our weakness and used it to their advantage (Only 5.56's are mobile so they hit convoys from the front (German and English Naval Tactic called crossing the T) This gave them firepower advantage and on the narrow mountain passes, we couldn't do anything about it. If we had more MK48's in country, we would have done a little better in the short ambushes but in protracted firefights the lighter caliber stuff worked. We countered this by using overwatch scout teams on routes that were likely to have ambushes and used air assets whenever available.... In my experience if you send a B1 through a valley at lower than mountain peak altitudes, bad guys run and the the good guys get to see cool stuff btw.... good to know when the B1 has no ordnance on board but uses the aircraft to scare the hell out of them (And me because I didnt know what they were going to do)

                      Comment


                      • The B-1 can go pretty darned fast on the deck. Mach 1.2 is the nominal speed. The Taliban (and you) could well have thought the visual and sound effects were from ordnance dropped on them! Engine noise & sonic boom are pretty deafening up close - together: BOOM! ROAR! I imagine that would cause at least a few sphincters to relax...
                        Last edited by Guest; 04-15-2014, 03:53 PM.

                        Comment

                        • BluntForceTrauma
                          Administrator
                          • Feb 2011
                          • 3900

                          Joker, in your examples above is this more a matter of tactics than a question of technical performance of small arms? Even if U.S. units equipped with 6.5 Grendel ARs and LMGs can overmatch 7.62x39 and 5.45x39 and match the range of 7.62x54R, no one would ask them to slug it out with mortars and 12.7x108 DShKs, would they?

                          Having said THAT, very early on in the 6.8 vs 65G vs 5.56 debate I remember a special operations vet giving the example of needing small arms with range to engage an enemy mortar team at 900 meters. Someone challenged him, "Why didn't you just call in air or artillery?" The vet answered, "Easier said than done. All I'm saying is the mortar team NEEDED to be engaged in that moment."

                          I still like that with the 65G the high BC gives you range in the mountains and the high SD gives you penetration in the city.

                          So let's walk through this scenario based on your example above: Your convoy is ambushed on a narrow mountain road by a savvy enemy who "crosses the T." Your heavy weapons mounted on your vehicles are somewhat neutralized by that tactic because they can't easily fire over the vehicles in front of them. However, your infantry dismount and fan out with their 65G ARs and LMGs and their man-portable air-burst grenade launchers.

                          With the range afforded them using their 65G ARs and LMGs (with 4x optics, firing 123gr slugs twice the weight of 5.56, or 84% the mass of 147gr 7.62N, with less drop and drift) they pin down anything in sight. The harassers now become the harassed. This capability, combined with shoulder-fired, laser-ranged, air-bursting 40mm grenades to reach the mortar and HMG crews in cover, counters the ambush until air and artillery arrive.

                          In this scenario, I've got a 65G Unified Cartridge to ease strategic supply issues, combined with air-burst grenades to round out the capability, making a 7.62N MMG unnecessary. Workable?

                          John
                          :: 6.5 GRENDEL Deer and Targets :: 6mmARC Targets and Varmints and Deer :: 22 ARC Varmints and Targets

                          :: I Drank the Water :: Revelation 21:6 ::

                          Comment


                          • John,

                            I like your description!

                            I cannot claim an authoritative viewpoint, and will depend on folks who have been there to weigh-in, but it sure sounds workable!

                            Also, being vehicle borne, the ammunition load-out for these troops should be less an issue than a patrol having to hike a fair distance before getting in trouble (or should I say doing what they came to do!).
                            Last edited by Guest; 04-15-2014, 03:59 PM.

                            Comment

                            • stanc
                              Banned
                              • Apr 2011
                              • 3430

                              Originally posted by HANKA View Post
                              I still like that with the 65G the high BC gives you range in the mountains and the high SD gives you penetration in the city.

                              So let's walk through this scenario based on your example above: Your convoy is ambushed on a narrow mountain road by a savvy enemy who "crosses the T." Your heavy weapons mounted on your vehicles are somewhat neutralized by that tactic because they can't easily fire over the vehicles in front of them. However, your infantry dismount and fan out with their 65G ARs and LMGs and their man-portable air-burst grenade launchers.

                              With the range afforded them using their 65G ARs and LMGs (with 4x optics, firing 123gr slugs twice the weight of 5.56, or 84% the mass of 147gr 7.62N, with less drop and drift) they pin down anything in sight. The harassers now become the harassed. This capability, combined with shoulder-fired, laser-ranged, air-bursting 40mm grenades to reach the mortar and HMG crews in cover, counters the ambush until air and artillery arrive.

                              In this scenario, I've got a 65G Unified Cartridge to ease strategic supply issues, combined with air-burst grenades to round out the capability, making a 7.62N MMG unnecessary. Workable?
                              Minor point: With lead-free bullets, 6.5 Grendel ball rounds would most likely be no heavier than ~110gr. (Note that the 7N6-type, FMJ projectile in the Wolf steel case ammo is only 100gr.) I don't know what effect this will have on long range ballistics.

                              Important point: Notice that joker31 said "they fired mortars from behind mountains." In that case, the mortar crews would be doing indirect fire from positions not viewable by the ambushed unit. Which mean the latter would be unable to place direct fire (from rifles, machine guns, and grenade launchers) on the enemy mortars.

                              Very important point: Dismounting and fanning out on a narrow mountain road would be problematical, at best. Reference the following video. (Caution: It's not exactly easy to watch.)




                              Even when there is room for dismounts to fan out, it'd be extremely tough to do when the enemy has the high ground, and is raining down fire on the patrol.


                              Comment

                              • babaganoush
                                Warrior
                                • Jan 2013
                                • 251

                                It appears to me, gentlemen, that there seems to be an element of naysaying based on thinking that "exceptions are the rule", rather than understanding that all rules have exceptions. From a grander sense, the tactics and scenarios being discussed are for the average conflict and engagement. What must be understood is that, regardless of the weapons deployed, the tactics employed and the logistics involved, there never be the perfect load out for every situation.

                                Having seen that, can we stop nitpicking on every point, and see the bigger picture, here? It is well understood that there is an abundance of information available from which one may pick and choose to score points, but doing so does not invalidate the opposing viewpoint. Rather, it shows (at least to me) a narrow viewpoint, which does the writer no justice or this discussion any service.
                                Last edited by babaganoush; 04-15-2014, 05:04 PM.
                                "A problem thoroughly understood is always fairly simple. Found your opinions on facts, not prejudices. We know too many things that are not true."

                                Charles F. Kettering

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