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thedrifter
07-21-07, 03:26 PM
M4 to face new rifles in dust-chamber test
By Matthew Cox - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Jul 20, 2007 11:54:17 EDT

Yielding to congressional pressure, the Army will conduct a test in August to see if the M4 carbine soldiers take to war is the most reliable weapon available in sand-storm conditions.

The test will compare how the M4 performs against a select group of newer, more compact rifles when exposed to a “dust chamber” at the Army Test and Evaluation Center at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., said Col. Carl Lipsit, project manager for Soldier Weapons.

“This would be like standing in a [dust storm] for 30 minutes and shaking off your weapon and firing it,” Lipsit said. The test, estimated to cost $500,000, is slated to last five months, he said.

Army Secretary Peter Geren agreed to the request of Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., to conduct the test after the lawmaker threatened to hold up Geren’s Senate confirmation, according to officials from the senator’s office.

This is the latest round of contention over the M4 carbine since Coburn began questioning the Army three months ago about its plans to spend $375 million to purchase M4s through fiscal 2009. Lighter and more compact than the M16 rifle, the M4 is more effective for the close confines of urban combat. The Army began fielding the M4 in the mid-1990s.

Coburn questioned the M4’s “longstanding reliability” problems in his original April 12 letter and asked if the Army had considered newer, possibly better weapons available on the commercial market.

Sen. Coburn “has lifted his hold on Pete Geren after the Army agreed to do a test of available rifles next month,” Coburn’s press secretary, John Hart, told Army Times on July 11, explaining that one senator has the power to hold up a nomination.

The Senate confirmed Geren as the new Army secretary July 13.

Army public affairs would not comment on statements from Coburn’s office about holding up the confirmation.

Coburn’s office called Geren’s decision a good first step, but “Congress needs to pass legislation to ensure that an open competition actually occurs that puts the best rifle in the hands of our soldiers,” Hart said.

To that end, Coburn’s office will introduce an amendment to the fiscal 2008 Defense Authorization Bill to require the Army to hold a competition, Hart said.

The amendment could go before the Senate for a vote the week of July 16, Hart said. If approved, it will have to survive a conference with the House of Representatives, and President Bush’s final approval of the bill before a carbine competition is required.

Army weapons officials at Fort Benning, Ga.’s Infantry Center — the command responsible for determining soldiers’ weapons needs — continue to argue that the M4 carbine meets the Army’s requirements and see no reason to replace it.

Coburn’s office has criticized the Army for “sole-sourcing” its carbine contracts to Colt Defense instead of searching for alternatives in the small-arms industry.

“Coburn’s goal is to provide our soldiers with the best rifle at the lowest price to taxpayers,” Hart said. “His amendment will ensure that the Army selects a rifle based on a full and open competition, not old habits, convenience or any other parochial interest. Forcing our soldiers to use 1960s equipment is like forcing a football team to use 1960s equipment — it might still work, but in many situations newer equipment is preferable.”
The dust test

The upcoming comparative dust test at Aberdeen will pit the M4 against the Heckler & Koch 416, the H&K XM8 and FNH USA’s Special Operations Forces Combat Assault Rifle, also known as SCAR.

All of the contenders use a piston-style operating system, which relies on a gas-driven piston rod to cycle the weapon during firing.

By contrast, the M4 uses a gas tube system which relies on the gas created when a bullet is fired to cycle the weapon. Weapons experts say that blowing gas directly into the receiver of the weapon spews carbon residue that can lead to fouling and heat that dries up lubrication and causes excessive wear on parts.

The Army’s Delta Force replaced its M4s with the H&K 416 in 2004. The elite unit collaborated with the German arms maker to develop the new carbine. Experts say its piston operating system significantly reduces malfunctions while increasing the life of parts.

Members of the commando unit — known as 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta — have been carrying it in combat since 2004. Other special units, such as the Army’s Asymmetric Warfare Group, have also adopted the 416.

U.S. Special Operations Command has also revised its small-arms requirements. In November 2004, SOCOM awarded a developmental contract to FN Herstal to develop its new SCAR to replace all of its weapons from the M16 family. The SCAR program is slated to enter the initial operational test-and-evaluation phase of its development later this month.

And from 2002 to 2005, the Army developed the XM8 as a replacement for the conventional Army’s M16 family. The program led to infighting in the service’s weapons community and eventually died after failing to win approval at the Defense Department level.

Colt also has developed two versions of a piston-style carbine. Army officials have not decided if these prototypes will participate in the test, Lipsit said.

The dust test will expose the weapons to the same extreme dust and sand conditions that Army weapons officials subjected the M4 and M16 to during a “systems assessment” at Aberdeen last year, Lipsit said. The results of ATEC assessment show that the performance of M16s and M4s dramatically improved when testers increased the amount of weapons lubrication used.

Ten sample models of each weapon will be tested. Testers will shoot 6,000 rounds though each weapon, Lipsit said.

Test data will be sent to the Infantry Center, which is involved in a Capabilities Based Assessment to decide future small-arms needs of the Army.

“It may or may not result in any type of program of record,” Lipsit said. “This is an assessment of sample weapons ... in an extreme dust environment to find out how far the weapons can go.”

Videos
See the other rifles in action

The H&K 416 carbine

www.militarytimes.com/multimedia/video/carbine/

S.O.F. Combat Assault Rifle

www.militarytimes.com/multimedia/video/070712scar/

The XM8 carbine

www.militarytimes.com/multimedia/video/xm8/

Ellie

thedrifter
07-23-07, 06:57 AM
Heavy coat of lubrication shown to improve M16, M4 effectiveness
By Matthew Cox - mcox@militarytimes.com
Posted : July 30, 2007

Army weapons officials might have found a way to improve the M16 family’s performance in the desert.

“Dust chamber” tests at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., last year show that M16 rifles and M4 carbines perform dramatically better when the weapon’s bolt assembly is heavily lubricated.

During each phase of the two-part “system assessment” at Army Test and Evaluation Command, testers fired 60,000 rounds through 10 weapon samples of each model.

Treated with light lubrication, new M16A4s and M4s, performed poorly in the extreme dust and sand conditions of the test, according to a January report from ATEC.

But when testers applied a heavy coat of lubrication to the weapons, the test results showed a “significant improvement.”

Out of the 60,000 rounds fired in each phase, the M4 stoppage-rate dropped from 9,836 with light lubrication to 678 with heavy lubrication.

The M16A4 stoppage-rate dropped from 2,124 with light lubrication to 507 with heavy lubrication, results show.

For years, Army weapons officials have preached to soldiers the virtues of applying a light coat of lubrication during weapons maintenance.

But the test results reinforce a recent change in weapons maintenance guidance Army units are practicing in Iraq and Afghanistan, said Col. Carl Lipsit, project manager for Soldier Weapons.

At the request of Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., the Army will conduct a similar dust-chamber test in August, pitting the M4 against the Heckler and Koch 416, the H&K XM8 and FNH USA’s Special Operations Forces Combat Assault Rifle.

All of the participating weapons will be treated with a heavy coat of lubrication during the test, Lipsit said.

Ellie

thedrifter
07-23-07, 07:03 AM
M4, new rifles to get dust test
By Matthew Cox - mcox@militarytimes.com
Posted : July 30, 2007

Yielding to congressional pressure, the Army will conduct a test in August to see if the M4 carbine soldiers and Marines take to war is the most reliable weapon available in sand-storm conditions.

The test will compare how the M4 performs against a select group of newer, more compact rifles when exposed to a “dust chamber” at the Army Test and Evaluation Center at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., said Army Col. Carl Lipsit, project manager for Soldier Weapons.

“This would be like standing in a [dust storm] for 30 minutes and shaking off your weapon and firing it,” Lipsit said. The test, estimated to cost $500,000, is slated to last five months, he said.

Army Secretary Peter Geren agreed to the request of Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., to conduct the test after the lawmaker threatened to hold up Geren’s Senate confirmation, according to officials from the senator’s office.

This is the latest round of contention over the M4 carbine since Coburn began questioning the Army three months ago about its plans to spend $375 million to purchase M4s through fiscal 2009. Lighter and more compact than the M16 rifle, it’s more effective for the close confines of urban combat. The Army began fielding the M4 in the mid-1990s.

The Corps’ commitment to the M4 is growing as well. On June 22, a Corps-wide message made official what has been unofficial in Iraq: Staff noncommissioned officers and up, and officers up to lieutenant colonel, will be issued the M4. Those ranks previously were issued the M9 pistol, but many Marines operating outside the wire in Iraq have taken to carrying M16s and M4s.

Coburn questioned the M4’s “longstanding reliability” problems in his original April 12 letter and asked if the Army had considered newer, possibly better weapons available on the commercial market.

Coburn “has lifted his hold on Pete Geren after the Army agreed to do a test of available rifles next month,” Coburn’s press secretary, John Hart, told Military Times on July 11, explaining that one senator has the power to hold up a nomination.

The Senate confirmed Geren as the new Army secretary July 13.

Army spokesmen would not comment on statements from Coburn’s office about holding up the confirmation.

Coburn’s office called Geren’s decision a good first step, but “Congress needs to pass legislation to ensure that an open competition actually occurs that puts the best rifle in the hands of our soldiers,” Hart said.

To that end, Coburn’s office will introduce an amendment to the fiscal 2008 defense authorization bill that would require the Army to hold a competition, Hart said.

The amendment could go before the Senate for a vote the week of July 16, Hart said. If approved, it will have to survive a conference with the House of Representatives, and President Bush’s final approval of the bill before a carbine competition is required.

Army weapons officials at Fort Benning’s Infantry Center in Georgia — the command responsible for determining soldiers’ weapons needs — argue that the M4 carbine meets the Army’s requirements and see no reason to replace it.

Coburn’s office has criticized the Army for “sole-sourcing” its carbine contracts to Colt Defense instead of searching for alternatives in the small-arms industry.

“Coburn’s goal is to provide our soldiers with the best rifle at the lowest price to taxpayers,” Hart said. “His amendment will ensure that the Army selects a rifle based on a full and open competition, not old habits, convenience or any other parochial interest. Forcing our soldiers to use 1960s equipment is like forcing a football team to use 1960s equipment — it might still work, but in many situations, newer equipment is preferable.”
The dust test

The upcoming comparative dust test at Aberdeen will pit the M4 against the Heckler & Koch 416, the H&K XM8 and FNH USA’s Special Operations Forces Combat Assault Rifle, also known as SCAR.

The contenders use a piston-style operating system, which relies on a gas-driven piston rod to cycle the weapon during firing.

By contrast, the M4 uses a gas tube system, which relies on the gas created when a bullet is fired to cycle the weapon. Weapons experts say that blowing gas directly into the receiver of the weapon spews carbon residue that can lead to fouling and heat that dries up lubrication and causes excessive wear on parts.

The Army’s Delta Force replaced its M4s with the H&K 416 in 2004. The elite unit collaborated with the German arms maker to develop the new carbine. Experts say its piston operating system significantly reduces malfunctions while increasing the life of parts.

Members of the commando unit — known as 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta — have carried it in combat since 2004. Other special units, such as the Army’s Asymmetric Warfare Group, also adopted the 416.

U.S. Special Operations Command has also revised its small-arms requirements. In November 2004, SOCom awarded a developmental contract to FN Herstal to develop its new SCAR to replace its weapons from the M16 family. The SCAR program is slated to enter the initial operational test-and-evaluation phase of its development later this month.

And from 2002 to 2005, the Army developed the XM8 as a replacement for the conventional Army’s M16 family. The program led to infighting in the service’s weapons community and eventually died after failing to win approval at the Defense Department level.

Colt also has developed two versions of a piston-style carbine. Army officials have not decided if these prototypes will participate in the test, Lipsit said.

The dust test will expose the weapons to the same extreme dust and sand conditions that Army weapons officials subjected the M4 and M16 to during a “systems assessment” at Aberdeen last year, Lipsit said. The results of ATEC assessment show that the performance of M16s and M4s dramatically improved when testers increased the amount of weapons lubrication used.

Ten sample models of each weapon will be tested. Testers will shoot 6,000 rounds though each weapon, Lipsit said.

Test data will be sent to the Infantry Center, which is involved in a Capabilities Based Assessment to decide future small-arms needs of the Army.

“It may or may not result in any type of program of record,” Lipsit said. “This is an assessment of sample weapons ... in an extreme dust environment to find out how far the weapons can go.”

Ellie

thedrifter
07-25-07, 07:52 AM
Last sailors trading in their M-14s
Conversion to M-16 rifles nearly complete
By Jeff Schogol, Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition, Thursday, July 26, 2007

http://www.estripes.com/photos/47617_724184814b.jpg

Courtesy of the Army
7.62mm, M14 (top); 5.56mm, M16A4 (bottom)

ARLINGTON, Va. — For the Navy, it is a farewell to arms.

This fall, the last sailors will trade in their aging M-14 rifles for newer M-16s.

Essentially an enhanced version of the famous World War II rifle the M-1 Garand, the M-14 holds 20 rounds of 7.62 mm ammunition.

Used in the early days of the Vietnam War, the rifle showed it packed a wallop, but it is built in such a way that the recoil makes it nearly impossible to keep the rifle trained on target in full-automatic mode.

Since then, the M-16 has largely become the standard rifle for most of the services, but the Navy continued to use the M-14 for force protection.

But now the Navy is almost finished trading in about 2,000 M-14 rifles for M-16s, said Navy spokeswoman Lt. Karen Eifert.

“The Navy is transitioning to the M16A3 weapon, a more compact and lighter weapon, for shipboard use,” Eifert said in an e-mailed response to questions from Stars and Stripes. “This conforms to the M16s used elsewhere in the Navy, and is a more suitable weapon for boarding parties and shipboard force protection.”

In September, sailors aboard the frigate USS Vandergrift will be the last to be issued M-16 rifles, Eifert said.

Afterward, each ship will still have at least two M-14 rifles aboard to shoot lines to other ships to refuel and bring supplies aboard while at sea, she said.

Because the M-14 fires a bigger round, it can penetrate steel, wood, glass and other barriers better than the M-4 or M-16, Army officials said.

The M-14 also has an effective range of up to about 460 meters, while the M-16 and M-4 are effective up to 600 meters, the officials said in a e-mailed response to queries.

The M-16 and M-4 also can be fitted with sights and accessories, such as a grenade launcher, the officials said.
M-14 still has a place

The services continue to use the M-14 to a limited extent.

The Army has 22,660 of the rifles in use and another 87,462 — both serviceable and unserviceable — in depot, said Army spokesman Lt. Col. William Wiggins.

Army officials said the M-14 is primarily used by a unit’s designated marksman, but a query on what role designated marksmen play and why they are issued the weapon was not answered by the U.S. Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, Ga.

Last year, Army Maj. John Digiambattista carried an M-14 when he served in Iraq because his unit did not have enough M-4 rifles for every infantry soldier, he said.

Digiambattista said he had volunteered to take an M-16, but the day before his unit left for Iraq it received a shipment of M-14s.

“I drew one in lieu of my M16A2,” Digiambattista said in an e-mail. “I did not fire the weapon in anger. But I did believe that the weapon provided me greater range and striking power than the M16A2.”

The Marine Corps uses 381 modified M-14 rifles for designated marksmen, said 1st Lt. Geraldine Carey, a spokeswoman for Marine Corps Systems Command.

Before they are issued to Marines, they are worked on by gunsmiths at the Precision Weapons Ship, Weapons Training Battalion in Quantico, Va., Carey said in an e-mailed response to questions from Stars and Stripes.

“These modifications include the replacement of the stock, barrel with a free-floating barrel, improved trigger mechanism and numerous other modifications in order to provide a semi-automatic precision weapon for use by Designated Marksman in Marine Corps Security Forces, Military Police commands, and Reconnaissance Battalions,” Carey said.

The Air Force has 3,500 M-14s in its arsenal, two-thirds of which are used for ceremonial functions, such as funerals, Air Force officials said.

Airmen involved with Explosive Ordnance Disposal also use the rifle to detonate roadside bombs from a safe distance, the officials said.