The Air Force is arming pilots with this longer-range, stand-off rifle to use if they

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https://www.airforcetimes.com/news/your-air-force/2018/06/28/the-air-force-is-arming-pilots-with-a-longer-range-stand-off-rifle-to-use-if-theyre-ever-shot-down/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=ebb%2029.06.18&utm_term=Editorial%20-%20Early%20Bird%20Brief

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The Air Force is arming pilots with this longer-range, stand-off rifle to use if they’re ever shot down.
The Air Force isn’t necessarily known for its small arms programs, but aircrews are about to get a longer range stand-off rifle to use if they are ever shot down behind enemy lines.

The weapon is officially named the GAU-5A Aircrew Self Defense Weapon. It’s a variant of the M4 carbine with a modified quick-release barrel designed by Cry Havoc, according to Maj. Docleia Gibson, an Air Combat Command spokeswoman.

“The [GAU-5A] and four full magazines, 30 rounds [each], must all fit in the ejection seat survival kit,” Gibson said in an emailed statement. “This has driven the dimension of 16 x 14 x 3.5 inches.”

That design gives pilots 120 rounds — about two magazines shy of a full load-out on a ground troop’s personal kit — during an evasion scenario.

Using a mid-length gas system on an M4A1 carbine extends the life of the weapon system and increases the weapon’s performance over a carbine-length gas system, a study found.

The unique barrel design can reportedly be assembled and fired in 60 seconds with no tools, “even in low light,” according to Cry Havoc’s website.

The assembly does not require a user to line up any tiny, hard-to-find gas access holes with a gas tube on the rifle, nor does it require a twist of the system. The rifle simply has a pair of quick releases where the barrel meets the main assembly.

Like the M4 carbine it is based off, the GAU-5A is a semi-automatic carbine capable of a three-round burst. It uses a standard 5.56mm round with an effective range beyond 200 meters.

“The [GAU-5A] is designed for all combat-coded ejection aircraft,” Gibson said.

That means it will be included in the survival kits of A-10, B-1, B-2, B-52, F-15C, F-15E, F-16 and F-22 aircraft.

The GAU-5A is being built and converted by the U.S. Air Force Gunsmith Shop at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas. In total, 2,137 weapons are expected to be fielded, Gibson said.

The weapon is being produced at a rate of 100 per week, but some weapons are already in use, stowed away on-board aircraft.

Prior to the introduction of this weapon system, pilots who found themselves in a downed-aircraft scenario were forced to rely on their personal sidearm for self defense.

Earlier this year, a Russian pilot’s Sukhoi-25 ground-attack aircraft was shot down over Idlib province in northwestern Syria. The pilot survived ejection, but died in an ensuing ground fight with Syrian rebels.

Such an event is rare given the lack of air-to-ground weapons used by insurgent forces in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, but it does highlight the dangers these conflicts still pose to aircraft providing close-air support, particularly strafing runs, for friendly forces.

That danger was evidenced by a recent Distinguished Flying Cross citation for an A-10 pilot who dodged “accurate surface-to-air fire” while providing close air support for U.S. troops fighting in Syria in January.

As the U.S. military prepares for an era of great power competition with more powerful state-level air forces, like those of Russia and China outlined in the 2018 National Defense Strategy, the threat to aircrews may be returning to the spotlight.

http://cryhavoctac.com/qrb-kit.html
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This thing makes me cringe.

I would rather have a HK MP7 ready to rock with more magazines, over putting stuff together after surviving an ejection and possibly having injuries already.

The only reason they are going this way seems to be a ploy to get around an open RFP and RFB process, so they can buy things right the way as a replacement/repair item of the GAU already in inventory.
 
may as well use the F-35 for something, like dropping pilots behind enemy lines with full kit.

Yea after it basically wipes the battlefield clean with F22s for cover as being by and far the best strike jet around by all accounts not "popular mechanics" or "Toronto Star".

/armchair generals.
/mywheelhouse.
 
This thing makes me cringe.

I would rather have a HK MP7 ready to rock with more magazines, over putting stuff together after surviving an ejection and possibly having injuries already.

The only reason they are going this way seems to be a ploy to get around an open RFP and RFB process, so they can buy things right the way as a replacement/repair item of the GAU already in inventory.

I don't think anyone wants to fight for their life in a desert environment with an MP7
 
they were interviewing Prince Harry in Afganistan.. When they got a call to launch right away..He was tucking a AR into the cockpit

Our helo pilots rock c8s so i don't see why that would be any different for brits rotary wing guys.

I don't think anyone wants to fight for their life in a desert environment with an MP7

Is the mp7 not very reliable in sandy environment?
 
This weapon is for fixed wing pilots. After ejection, it is very probably the pilot will be injured and separated from the rest of the crew. In many cases there won't be help especially flying a single seat jet. For rotary wing pilots, if the pilots can fight this mean the craft has crash landed. So it is possible to retrieve a heavier weapon from the craft, and being super compact is not as important.

MP7 or not, the weapon should be simple and easy to use. Watch the video, if the user has an injured hand or this is happening in some freezing places, this thing will be a major PITA to put together.
 
3 round burst in an m4?

Yup.

After Vietnam, the army realized it was generally a waste of ammo to give the average trooper a full on giggle switch. 3 round bursts have been the standard for decades now, although there is a push to go back to the full-giggle.
 
GAU is an airforce designation for any weapons system that is a firearm, it’s the number after the letter which designates the type
 
Makes sense to me, it's a familiar platform (M4/M16) that everybody joining the UASF will have used before in training.


I think the idea is to give a healthy pilot a better chance at survival in the event of a firefight, we can "what if" any weapon system into irrelevance. What advantage does an MP7 offer over the new weapon beyond not requiring some assembly?
 
Is the mp7 not very reliable in sandy environment?


I'm sure it is, but I'm referring to the caliber it uses and it's effective range (200m) and energy (lower than 9mm). If you're trying to defend yourself in an open environment where your enemy may be a few hundred meters away, a 5.56 round is a whole lot more ideal over a 4.6x30
 
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