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Old 11-09-2004, 07:51 PM   #1 (permalink)
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HK G-11 caseless

http://world.guns.ru/assault/as42-e.htm

sorry i know its a ammo hog but i just love this gun
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Old 11-09-2004, 08:10 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Reminds me of the guns in Aliens.
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Old 11-09-2004, 08:56 PM   #3 (permalink)
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The pluse rifle was in Aliens.

Anyway, good luck loving it. It was desinged for a NATO compitition and it failed. As good as history, and no longer around. Not to mention that I bet the cost of the ammo would be EXPENSIVE!!!
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Old 11-09-2004, 10:46 PM   #4 (permalink)
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The problem with this rifle is that nobody really needed anything that would deliver a three round burst before the recoil affected it. That was the sole purpose of building it, and when that need never materialized, funding didn't stay around long.
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Old 11-10-2004, 12:26 AM   #5 (permalink)
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It does look really cool though.
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Old 11-10-2004, 02:33 AM   #6 (permalink)
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HK Pro has more info and pictures about this gun. It also has a link to the Caseless handgun prototype.
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Old 11-10-2004, 03:41 AM   #7 (permalink)
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well like the calico... caseless in anyway looks good yet you get the "mag" wet its a bust.

its rotf is nasty yet its the recoil effect i liked about it.. Yeah i know its poof but still was a cool gun for me. Im into scifi rpg games and this was the bomb for me.
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Old 11-10-2004, 10:31 AM   #8 (permalink)
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Well it looks like a thousand or so were produced, so if they've hit the surplus market, and you happen to have the cash to pay for a collector's firearm, you might be able to get your hands on one.
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Old 11-10-2004, 06:51 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MrTuffPaws
The pluse rifle was in Aliens.

Anyway, good luck loving it. It was desinged for a NATO compitition and it failed. As good as history, and no longer around. Not to mention that I bet the cost of the ammo would be EXPENSIVE!!!


I think that its because of the cost of ammo that eventually we will all be shooting solid propelant firearms... Brass ain't cheap... steel cases are cheaper but will eventually eat up any gun, Kalashnikov's included (although it will take a LOT longer in one of those beasts)


When you think about it, caseless ammo makes sense, less weight for soldiers to carry, less cost, less functions the gun has to do (the majority of M-16 failures are failure to eject from what I have been told) and no ejecting spent cases means theres one less hole in the gun where stuff has to go out/come in, which means less gunk getting into your weapon.


I don't think the G11 was a terribly good idea, in the interest of simplicity, its prolly not a terribly good idea to design a gun that has the ammo making a 90 degree turn on its way into the chamber, but the caseless ammo, I think thats a great idea and is destined to be the norm in combat rifles.



just my opinion, I could be right tho



p.s. The U.S. will not adopt a bull-pup rifle until the problem of left handed shooters is solved (lefties can't shoot bull-pups unless they are lefty specific bull-pups, if they do shoot them they get hot brass in the face)


caseless ammo would solve the lefty bull-pup problem...
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Last edited by ziadel; 11-10-2004 at 06:59 PM..
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Old 11-10-2004, 07:46 PM   #10 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ziadel
When you think about it, caseless ammo makes sense, less weight for soldiers to carry, less cost, less functions the gun has to do (the majority of M-16 failures are failure to eject from what I have been told) and no ejecting spent cases means theres one less hole in the gun where stuff has to go out/come in, which means less gunk getting into your weapon.
Get the mags wet and you're fucked. There's also the issue of cleaning residue from the chamber more often.
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Old 11-10-2004, 07:54 PM   #11 (permalink)
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also the venting of the gas.. only other thing not mention is a missfire... you cant eject anything.. wont work like a paint ball gun either "blow though!!"
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Old 11-10-2004, 08:08 PM   #12 (permalink)
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as solid propellant stands now, your right, water would be a big problem, but I am sure some super-chemist somewhere could come up with something that would go bang when wet.


as for cleaning out the chamber, I dunno, mebbe make the entire caseless round the same diameter as the bullet, bullet gets fired, next bullet gets shoved in, pushing all the gunk in front of it, gun goes bang, gunk gets blown out...

its not the best solution, and I am not saying there won't be problems, but if we dont goto some sort of energy weapons, caseless is definately on the horizon IMO...



I have complete confidence in our engineers to make it work, then make it work better than what we currently have.
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Old 11-10-2004, 10:14 PM   #13 (permalink)
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What a needlessly complicated gun. Hasn't the AK47,M1,SKS,Enfield,Mauser,M16,M4 and all the other combat guns proven themselves to be: cost efficient, effective, and relatively accurate?
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Old 11-11-2004, 12:18 AM   #14 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ziadel
p.s. The U.S. will not adopt a bull-pup rifle until the problem of left handed shooters is solved (lefties can't shoot bull-pups unless they are lefty specific bull-pups, if they do shoot them they get hot brass in the face)
The problem has been solved. The FN P90 ejects brass downward and is fully ambidextrous. The only counter argument for that weapon (which has nothing to do with the G11) is that the ammo is 5.7mm, which isn't NATO standard.
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Old 11-11-2004, 01:18 AM   #15 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ziadel
p.s. The U.S. will not adopt a bull-pup rifle until the problem of left handed shooters is solved (lefties can't shoot bull-pups unless they are lefty specific bull-pups, if they do shoot them they get hot brass in the face)
I almost signed up for the UK Territorial army, kinda like the US reserve.
I've done time in South Africa as a draftee and thought it might be cool to do somthing with all the spare time I had.

I had a look at the SA 80 and realised it wouldn't suit a lefty, asked the instructor what the options were for someone like me.
He told me that the rifle was made to be ambidex - you just swap the moving parts - but the UK Military never ordered them. Nice.

I never went back. I can't wink with my left eye and I'll be damned if I'm gonna either be shooting wide or wear a pirate eyepatch.
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Old 11-11-2004, 01:25 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by solo2020
What a needlessly complicated gun. Hasn't the AK47,M1,SKS,Enfield,Mauser,M16,M4 and all the other combat guns proven themselves to be: cost efficient, effective, and relatively accurate?
Probably exactly what people said when the first semi-auto was created, and then the first assault rifle...

I don't understand how you can classify any of those weapons in the same group anyways, aside from putting the bolt actions together, and the M16/M4 together.

Kestrel, the other issue with the P90 is that it's a personal defense weapon; not a rifle. There is, however, the FN 2000, which is chambered in 5.56 NATO and is modelled after the P90.

Last edited by Suave; 11-11-2004 at 01:29 AM..
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Old 11-11-2004, 03:44 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by WillyPete
I never went back. I can't wink with my left eye and I'll be damned if I'm gonna either be shooting wide or wear a pirate eyepatch.

HARRR me buckos *burrriiippp* avast there mateys

lol i could just see it now the wacky lefthanded pirate bragaid
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Old 11-11-2004, 10:19 AM   #18 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Suave
Kestrel, the other issue with the P90 is that it's a personal defense weapon; not a rifle. There is, however, the FN 2000, which is chambered in 5.56 NATO and is modelled after the P90.
I took a look at the FN 2000, it looks like it wants to compete with the OICW or replace the M4/M203. Cool looking weapon.
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Old 11-11-2004, 11:01 AM   #19 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by FngKestrel
I took a look at the FN 2000, it looks like it wants to compete with the OICW or replace the M4/M203. Cool looking weapon.



we already have a replacement for the M4, its called the XM8 and the XM8 looks to be quite promising...


the OICW is still a far way off anyways, its gonna take everyone a while to get the weight down to something our soldiers can manage, but in the meantime, the XM* is the first part of the OICW, they'll design the rest of the stuff around the XM8 from what I have been told...



Quote:
Originally Posted by solo2020
What a needlessly complicated gun. Hasn't the AK47,M1,SKS,Enfield,Mauser,M16,M4 and all the other combat guns proven themselves to be: cost efficient, effective, and relatively accurate?


the M16 and the M4 are accurate, but I would'nt rate them anywhere near the AK for reliability....

but yes, those are all very good guns, but what I ask myself is can we make something better, which we can, theres nothing that cannot be improved upon. progress man, its absolutely splendid




Quote:
Originally Posted by Suave
Kestrel, the other issue with the P90 is that it's a personal defense weapon; not a rifle. There is, however, the FN 2000, which is chambered in 5.56 NATO and is modelled after the P90.


the 5.56 has got to have a good hard look, and when it does get that scrutiny, they'll prolly figure out that we need something bigger. the 6.8SPC is a good canidate, more oomph, not as much oomph as the .308, it's a nicely balanced cartridge that would be a welcome change for our soldiers.



the .223 just doesn't cut it to be an effective battle cartiridge, ESPECIALLY now that the M4 is everywhere with that short barrel...
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Old 11-11-2004, 04:57 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Old 11-11-2004, 09:15 PM   #21 (permalink)
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The G-11 is awesome, I have a vid clip of one of the test guns being fired. The main problems were:
1) It was way ahead of its time. Caseless ammo has a lot of advantages, but right now its not used by anyone else so it would be hard/expensive to produce.
2) It was put together like freaking clockwork. Look at the pictures of the interior mechanism of the HK Pro site (an excellent site by the way for everything HK makes) that FngKestrel linked to, no way you could work on cleanin that in a muddy trench.

It was an interesting idea, and it showed that caseless ammunition was atleast feasible if not quite practical.
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Old 11-11-2004, 10:17 PM   #22 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by ziadel
we already have a replacement for the M4, its called the XM8 and the XM8 looks to be quite promising...

the OICW is still a far way off anyways, its gonna take everyone a while to get the weight down to something our soldiers can manage, but in the meantime, the XM* is the first part of the OICW, they'll design the rest of the stuff around the XM8 from what I have been told...
Checked out another site (it's what I do) and that thing looks beautiful. Can't wait to see that integrated into the XM29 and fully streamlined. I watched a demonstration on History Channel and I have to say, it's just not even fair.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ziadel
the 5.56 has got to have a good hard look, and when it does get that scrutiny, they'll prolly figure out that we need something bigger. the 6.8SPC is a good canidate, more oomph, not as much oomph as the .308, it's a nicely balanced cartridge that would be a welcome change for our soldiers.

the .223 just doesn't cut it to be an effective battle cartiridge, ESPECIALLY now that the M4 is everywhere with that short barrel...
What necessitates needing a larger caliber? What kind of enemies are we trying to take down with these types of weapons? Not asking any moral questions here, purely academic.
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Old 11-11-2004, 11:18 PM   #23 (permalink)
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Actually, the 5.56mm is the result of extensive testing during the Korean and Vietnam era. The original idea was that large bullets that shoved a great deal of energy were the ideal; experimental testing revealed that small bullets at high velocities were even more effective. The 5.56mm is stable until it hits the target; then it goes nuts inside. If you look at the wound characteristics, you see a small hole where the bullet goes in and a gaping wound where it goes out.
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Old 11-11-2004, 11:25 PM   #24 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by FngKestrel
What necessitates needing a larger caliber? What kind of enemies are we trying to take down with these types of weapons? Not asking any moral questions here, purely academic.


the enemy of today is islamic fundamentalists...

basically, why I think we need a larger caliber is because the .223 is a varmint cartridge. Every vietnam vet I have talked to basically says the bullet is too small for jungle warfare (the bullet starts tumbling after it hits a leaf, thats not good) while muslim whackos are fer and far between in the jungle, its still good to have a bullet that works everywhere...
its just a lot of reports of people dropping a few rounds into someone and they are still not incapacitated... they are on the ground yeah, but that doesn't mean to me they are out of the fight.


did you see that video of the terrorist guy in Iraq getting hosed with a M249? He took a round in his left side and he didnt even fall to the ground, he just kinda fell on his but (which isn't at all spectacular as he was crouching when he got shot)

theres really a lot more to it than that, but to sum it up, hunters won't dream of shooting a .223 at a deer, because its just not enough. If its not enough for a 150 deer, what makes you think its enough for a person? theres a reason the army went ape-shit trying to keep us from moving to the .223, its just not enough.
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Old 11-11-2004, 11:36 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by DelayedReaction
Actually, the 5.56mm is the result of extensive testing during the Korean and Vietnam era. The original idea was that large bullets that shoved a great deal of energy were the ideal; experimental testing revealed that small bullets at high velocities were even more effective. The 5.56mm is stable until it hits the target; then it goes nuts inside. If you look at the wound characteristics, you see a small hole where the bullet goes in and a gaping wound where it goes out.


see my above post, but from what I have been told, the 5.56's tumbling inside the body characteristic has basially gone out the window now that everyone is shooting the stubby little m4's.


just not enough barrel to get that lil bullet up to speed



also, keep in mine, the 6.8SPC was designed by soldiers who funded the project in the beginning with their own cash... there has to be something seriously wrong with the 5.56 for them to do that...


I don't wanna get on too much of a tangent here because it is considered quite trendy to bash the 5.56 nowadays, but its not a good cartridge for war IMO. Hunting crows yes, hunting terrorists, no.
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Old 11-12-2004, 10:38 AM   #26 (permalink)
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Don't get me wrong and think I'm bashing troops here, but the avg troop knows shit about ballistics. They wouldn't know that a 5.56 tumbled after hitting leaves unless you told them. And then they wouldn't care as long as it was tumbling real fast toward the guy the shot at.

The typical troop wants a weapon that is light, shoots where he aims it and that he can operate in the dark.
It has to hold a decent amount of rounds, 30 min and work under all sorts of crappy conditions without him having to care too much for it. If a 5.56 don't kill it with one hit, why hell, he'll pour 15 more into the same area.

A hunter or sniper worries about a kill with one round. they have to, it's their job. A grunt works with buddies. They move with a lot of noise and their job is to hold strategic ground, fighting for it if they have to. when they shoot, it's for area effect too. The nature of this dictates that the bullets don't have to be wonderstuff, just reliable.
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Old 11-12-2004, 10:50 AM   #27 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by WillyPete
Don't get me wrong and think I'm bashing troops here, but the avg troop knows shit about ballistics. They wouldn't know that a 5.56 tumbled after hitting leaves unless you told them. And then they wouldn't care as long as it was tumbling real fast toward the guy the shot at.

The typical troop wants a weapon that is light, shoots where he aims it and that he can operate in the dark.
It has to hold a decent amount of rounds, 30 min and work under all sorts of crappy conditions without him having to care too much for it. If a 5.56 don't kill it with one hit, why hell, he'll pour 15 more into the same area.

A hunter or sniper worries about a kill with one round. they have to, it's their job. A grunt works with buddies. They move with a lot of noise and their job is to hold strategic ground, fighting for it if they have to. when they shoot, it's for area effect too. The nature of this dictates that the bullets don't have to be wonderstuff, just reliable.

while the 5.56 round may meet all the criteria you just listed, the M16 family of weapons certainly does not
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Old 11-12-2004, 10:55 AM   #28 (permalink)
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True.

Any kalashnikov based rifle appeals to me. with better machining they are just as reliable and more accurate.
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Old 11-12-2004, 11:09 AM   #29 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by WillyPete
True.

Any kalashnikov based rifle appeals to me. with better machining they are just as reliable and more accurate.


the first runs of Kalashnikov's were machined, because the ruskies could'nt get the stamping down...

as soon as their industrial capabilities caught up, they started stamping them so as to gain significant weight savings...
a milled weapon would not be a light one, and thus wouldn't qualify under your criteria


but the new XM8 is a gas operated piston design, ala AK, as opposed to the direct gas impingment (I think thats what its called) of the M-16...
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Old 11-12-2004, 11:30 AM   #30 (permalink)
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like i said, based on the ak mechanism, but with better manufatured working parts.
Better quality materials = stronger and less of them, therefore, lighter.

The swedes, italians, South africans, Isrealis all make their own versions of the basic AK design. Some suck, others work well.
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Old 11-12-2004, 12:48 PM   #31 (permalink)
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The big problem with the .223 is this: it's a great round INSIDE 250 METERS. Inside this envelope, when it hits something, the bullet yaws 90 degrees and then fragments, creating some truly hideous wounds. However, past about 250 meters, the round will neither tumble nor fragment; it punches clean through without dumping much energy as it does so. Without that energy-transfer, it doesn't create the hydrostatic shock needed to incapacitate the enemy. Loads of SF operators in Iraq and Afghanistan have been buying M1-A and FAL rifles in .308 for this express purpose. Another problem is that the shorter barrel of the M4 cuts down the "yaw and fragment" range of the .223 projectile to less than 200 meters.

The .223 is an extremely accurate round, and inside it's range it's a truly hideous thing. However, you have to realize that it was purposely adopted and designed to inflict devastating wounds without actually KILLING the enemy; the idea being that a wounded man ties up more resources than a corpse. However, a wounded man can still shoot back. Worse yet, outside that 250-300 meter range, a man hit by the .223 is going to take a LONG time in dying, because he's just recieved the ballistic equivalent of a hit from a .22 Magnum; painful, probably fatal, but not instantly -incapacitating.-
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Old 11-13-2004, 09:32 PM   #32 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by WillyPete
True.

Any kalashnikov based rifle appeals to me. with better machining they are just as reliable and more accurate.
The 47, at least, is much less accurate than the M-16. It was designed so loosely (for reliability), that you can't get good long-range accuracy out of it. I don't know about the 74, but if it's built on the same principles as the 47, it wouldn't be as accurate as an M-16 either.
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Old 11-14-2004, 12:15 AM   #33 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Suave
The 47, at least, is much less accurate than the M-16. It was designed so loosely (for reliability), that you can't get good long-range accuracy out of it. I don't know about the 74, but if it's built on the same principles as the 47, it wouldn't be as accurate as an M-16 either.



you can get good accuracy out of a loose gun. you just need a good barrel, which the AK's generally do not have.


you can get 1MOA at 100 yards out of a VEPR...
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Old 11-14-2004, 01:27 AM   #34 (permalink)
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Thank you for clarifying.
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Old 11-14-2004, 05:20 PM   #35 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by The_Dunedan
The big problem with the .223 is this: it's a great round INSIDE 250 METERS. Inside this envelope, when it hits something, the bullet yaws 90 degrees and then fragments, creating some truly hideous wounds. However, past about 250 meters, the round will neither tumble nor fragment; it punches clean through without dumping much energy as it does so. Without that energy-transfer, it doesn't create the hydrostatic shock needed to incapacitate the enemy. Loads of SF operators in Iraq and Afghanistan have been buying M1-A and FAL rifles in .308 for this express purpose. Another problem is that the shorter barrel of the M4 cuts down the "yaw and fragment" range of the .223 projectile to less than 200 meters.
Read The Technology of Killing, by Eric Prokosch. They conducted tests that showed the opposite of what you have; at close ranges the higher velocity of the bullet allows it to punch straight through the target, while at longer ranges the bullet fragments and tumbles. Research shows that most combat is at ranges below 300 yards. Other research concluded that most soldiers aren't very accurate beyond 100 yards under battlefield conditions. In other words, the 5.56mm is ideally designed for most battlefield conditions.

Quote:
The .223 is an extremely accurate round, and inside it's range it's a truly hideous thing. However, you have to realize that it was purposely adopted and designed to inflict devastating wounds without actually KILLING the enemy; the idea being that a wounded man ties up more resources than a corpse. However, a wounded man can still shoot back. Worse yet, outside that 250-300 meter range, a man hit by the .223 is going to take a LONG time in dying, because he's just recieved the ballistic equivalent of a hit from a .22 Magnum; painful, probably fatal, but not instantly -incapacitating.-
Honestly, are there any small arm rounds out there that, on average, can kill a man with a single shot? I'm not aware of any.
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Old 11-14-2004, 08:02 PM   #36 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by DelayedReaction
Honestly, are there any small arm rounds out there that, on average, can kill a man with a single shot? I'm not aware of any.
what kind of a single shot are we talking about here? are we talking about an average shot to the center mass, or just an average shot anywhere, like in the foot?


if its just to the center mass, then I'd say .308
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Old 11-14-2004, 09:47 PM   #37 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by ziadel
the OICW is still a far way off anyways, its gonna take everyone a while to get the weight down to something our soldiers can manage, but in the meantime, the XM* is the first part of the OICW, they'll design the rest of the stuff around the XM8 from what I have been told...
They'll probably just end up requiring a constant flow of anabolic steroids through the blood of soldiers so they can carry the OICW. :P
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Old 11-14-2004, 10:08 PM   #38 (permalink)
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According to "Boston's Gun Bible" the issue is stabilization of the round. Inside 300 meters the projectile hasn't stabilized yet, allowing it to yaw/fragment upon impact. Past that range, it's stable and just punches straight through.
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Old 11-15-2004, 06:09 AM   #39 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DelayedReaction
Honestly, are there any small arm rounds out there that, on average, can kill a man with a single shot? I'm not aware of any.
With correct placement, many small arms rounds can kill with one shot. But that's the role of a sniper, not a regular soldier and thus this question falls more within the realm of training and weapons/hunting skill and less within the boundaries of ballistic properties.
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