Colt Canada lightens rifle weight for soldiers and police

Makes you wonder how Canadian soldiers used to carry the FN FAL. Many of those that did still hold that firearm in high favour. Different type of soldier back then?

They knew no different, and was definitely one of the best options at the time. I don't know how many soldiers you know of that complain their rifles aren't heavy enough. But if you're a soldier who's carried a C7 all his career, then is handed a C8A3 that feels heavier while not being dramatically shorter in exchange for benefits they will almost certainly never see, I think that there is legitimate cause for complaint.
 
It's not a machine gun, it's a rifle. I think the profile might even be thicker than the C9. When Canada was looking at the original C7 design someone in DND actually wanted an HBAR because they thought it would be great for accuracy. As I understand it Colt refused because they knew it was a terrible idea for an assault rifle.

The M16/C7 has had a light barrel profile under the hand guards for over 50 years and it works just fine. I've fired in excess of 1000rds out a C7 on more than a few training days and heat was never an issue except for the odd guy who had removed his heat shield.

I for one do not want a C8 that weighs more than a 20" barrelled C7. Soldiers are packing more gear than ever, they need equipment to become lighter, not heavier. Funny how they're claiming to lighten the rifle yet it stills weighs more than a C7A2.

I think they are as thick as the short C9 barrels? C8A3's are almost exactly the same weight as C7A2's and only a little over four inches shorter than their full-length counterparts. Completely illogical ''carbine'' setup. Those original C8's with their pencil barrels were things of beauty.
 
The difference is we're expected to mount lights and IR lasers now. All of this adds up to a rifle that will outweigh a FAL. They also didn't wear flak jackets with ballistic plates back then as standard practice. NVG mounted to your Kevlar helmet, etc.. Technology is fantastic but it has increased the soldiers weight load substantially.
 
The difference is we're expected to mount lights and IR lasers now. All of this adds up to a rifle that will outweigh a FAL. They also didn't wear flak jackets with ballistic plates back then as standard practice. NVG mounted to your Kevlar helmet, etc.. Technology is fantastic but it has increased the soldiers weight load substantially.

Some valid points.
 
The C7 feels heavy until you have to carry the C9. Then the C9 feels heavy until you have to carry the C6. Switching back from a MG to the C7 puts wings on your feet.

Exactly, if you think the C8 is heavy you need to put down your purse.
 
Exactly, if you think the C8 is heavy you need to put down your purse.

It's not that it's heavy. It's that it is heavier than it should/ needs to be.
Every bloody thing that gets issued out now weighs more than it should. Empty ruck sacks that weigh 13-14lbs, compared to the old 64' pattern at 6 ish lbs.
Every piece of electronic crap takes more batteries, and no one will get together and talk, so things can use the same battery. So now you're stuck carrying 2 or 3 different types of spare batteries, so if you need 4 batteries for a 2 day op, you are carrying 6 batteries JIC. It adds up really fast.
Less batteries, less crap, less weight, that's about all anyone I talk to says.
 
I still can't figure out why they don't just do an 18 inch light or medium fluted barrel as a general issue firearm, SF are more than capable of getting their own stuff for special applications.
 
The difference is we're expected to mount lights and IR lasers now. All of this adds up to a rifle that will outweigh a FAL. They also didn't wear flak jackets with ballistic plates back then as standard practice. NVG mounted to your Kevlar helmet, etc.. Technology is fantastic but it has increased the soldiers weight load substantially.

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Yep, all that high speed kit is great until you gotta hump it around. No one ever seems to complain much about the C6's weight though :)
 
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Yep, all that high speed kit is great until you gotta hump it around. No one ever seems to complain much about the C6's weight though :)

The C6 is a heavy pig.

And no ####, when I was doing basic training I was weighting 125 lbs. During ruck sack march I must have had half my weight on my back with all that equipement.
 
The eternal problem of the soldier's load. The lab rats and generals have one idea, but the troops soon learn to discard the non-essential stuff to keep it manageable. Humans have gotten bigger over the decades, but the load grows accordingly.

Maybe we had it right with the old P37 and P51 web systems. You could discard the small pack and strip down to skeleton web or fighting order with rifle and bayonet, 2 basic pouches, a canteen and a mess tin plus grenades and bandoliers of ammo.
 
The C6 is a heavy pig.

And no ####, when I was doing basic training I was weighting 125 lbs. During ruck sack march I must have had half my weight on my back with all that equipement.

Never get caught Doing drills with C6.....cause then you get the whole day doing C7 drills and marches with it I am a short guy so was a fun interesting day wrist hurt like hell holding it like a c7 marching around gagetown all damn day

On Topic I prefer heavier firearms tho C7 weight was good enough for me But i still prefer holding a Mauser love the weight go for a 8hr hike with a mauser last october was good
 
The difference is we're expected to mount lights and IR lasers now. All of this adds up to a rifle that will outweigh a FAL. They also didn't wear flak jackets with ballistic plates back then as standard practice. NVG mounted to your Kevlar helmet, etc.. Technology is fantastic but it has increased the soldiers weight load substantially.

Don't forget the batteries!

Now add an EOTech, magnifier, and suppressor... and you've got yourself a fine boat anchor!
 
My last job in the Reg F was in Clothe The Soldier (CTS) Program. So I was told, the program was created because nobody thought of the soldier as a system. An LCMM would find this great piece of high speed, low drag water bottle but it "only" weighed an extra ounce or so, hey what's an ounce to a soldier? The problem is the procurement was made more or less in isolation and not taking into account the other pieces of high speed, low drag kit that also weighed an extra ounce. Pretty soon those ounces added up to pounds. I'm not excusing any problems CTS may have had, just that the grown ups realized the solider had to be looked at as one system.

Been out of the program for 16 years so I don't know if that philosophy is still around.
 
I still can't figure out why they don't just do an 18 inch light or medium fluted barrel as a general issue firearm, SF are more than capable of getting their own stuff for special applications.

This...

why they stuck to the 20" barrel when they did the last upgrade I'll never understand.



oh and I did my time with the FN.
 
It seems that the soldier carries more and more gear that's getting heavier and heavier, yet there also seems to be little being done about making it lighter.

One of the major selling points of the basic M16/M16A1 was its lightness (approx 6 lbs with an empty mag) versus the M14's 9+lbs (depending on the stock). The Gov't profile barrel and Picatinny rail up top add a substantial amount of weight to what was a lightweight rifle. Now add scopes, lasers, lights, grenade launchers, etc, and you have a small arms system that weighs 12 lbs. Hell, the Enfields our grandfathers carried weighed less.

Is it time to go back to basics? By that I mean teaching the soldier to use his/her iron sights instead of a much heavier scope? Teaching fire control so you don't overheat your barrel (of course, if you really need to do mag dumps to save your asz, it's gotta work then too)?

Back in the day when I carried a C1A1 with pattern 82 gear and a M1 steel pot on marches with a full pack (yes, even us field artillery guys had to do it) it was bad enough. I can't imagine doing the same thing now plus wearing body armor, a tac vest, water bladder, and a Kevlar helmet.
 
It seems that the soldier carries more and more gear that's getting heavier and heavier, yet there also seems to be little being done about making it lighter.

One of the major selling points of the basic M16/M16A1 was its lightness (approx 6 lbs with an empty mag) versus the M14's 9+lbs (depending on the stock). The Gov't profile barrel and Picatinny rail up top add a substantial amount of weight to what was a lightweight rifle. Now add scopes, lasers, lights, grenade launchers, etc, and you have a small arms system that weighs 12 lbs. Hell, the Enfields our grandfathers carried weighed less.

Is it time to go back to basics? By that I mean teaching the soldier to use his/her iron sights instead of a much heavier scope? Teaching fire control so you don't overheat your barrel (of course, if you really need to do mag dumps to save your asz, it's gotta work then too)?

Back in the day when I carried a C1A1 with pattern 82 gear and a M1 steel pot on marches with a full pack (yes, even us field artillery guys had to do it) it was bad enough. I can't imagine doing the same thing now plus wearing body armor, a tac vest, water bladder, and a Kevlar helmet.

Personally, I find it's not the weight that's a big deal, regular trips to the gym resolve that, it's the body armor. Your body literally goes deep into fever territory thanks to the body armor not allowing any heat to escape. It's kind of ironic though, because the more muscle you have to deal with the weight, the more heat you produce exercises, the hotter you get in your body armor. How much water did you normally take on ruck marches? If it's hot out I never set off anywhere without 5 litres minimum, and that's on the condition that we'll get resupply in a couple hours.
 
Drifter Dave, your right, I over reacted. My apologies. I just took it that you were trying to speak on behalf of all soldiers. I'm sure there are guys who like the thicker barrel but that doesn't mean that it's ideal as general issue service rifle. I do like the fact that they lengthened the barrel to increase velocity but I would have made it a 15.7 with the original C8 pencil profile.

I just get worked up about stuff like this because it has an impact on me personally and it can greatly affect my abilities to perform my job. Unfortunately the people who have to use the rifle are often left out of the decision making process. Weapons techs have more input.


I wish we had more input, but we dont. we build our own tools for working on the lav because we need too, the unjaming tool and the muzle break removal tool all devoloped by weapon techs. GDLS wants nothing to do with what we built because it makes them look bad. will post pics after march break.
 
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