They already have such a thing - an EMP!
Yes they do but much more refined for drones etc. Next year those drones will be ineffective.
We basically reached the level of what is possible with AI, now people are working on as to how to beat it.
They already have such a thing - an EMP!
Someone decided the M16 didn't need to be cleaned and so they didn't issue individual cleaning kits. One cannot imagine a more idiotic idea than the direct impingement M16, which blows gas directly into the BCG and receiver didn't need to be cleaned.I also vaguely recall that the chamber was getting pitted somehow due to the conditions there which made extraction difficult or impossible?
me thinks there may be shenanigans afootthere seems to be a strange ongoing enthusiasm for Sig.
Someone decided the M16 didn't need to be cleaned and so they didn't issue individual cleaning kits. One cannot imagine a more idiotic idea than the direct impingement M16, which blows gas directly into the BCG and receiver didn't need to be cleaned.
Once again, nothing to do with the rifle itself.
Uhhhhhhhh ........ what you talkin bout Willis? The CDN Forces C7 I used 35 years ago was plenty reliable.The Stoner system can be impressively reliable now, although that wasn't the case 60 years ago, or even 20 years ago, when talking mass produced rack grade examples.
Uhhhhhhhh ........ what you talkin bout Willis? The CDN Forces C7 I used 35 years ago was plenty reliable.
The civilian AR15's I have owned for 25+ years have all been reliable. The AR15 has been a reliable system for most of its tenure. If you think not, then what has changed in the design since the 1960's?
The cause of the unreliability during Vietnam was the ammo, specifically the powder that the army chose instead of listening to Stoner. That and the idiot notion the M16 didn't need to be cleaned because it was "self cleaning". These things are totally unrelated to the rifle itself ... which I have now pointed out THREE TIMES in this thread.I guess old wive's tales never die.
Well, what I saw happening was that the US dragged the rest of NATO kicking and screaming* into the adoption of the 5.56 caliber and abandoning the 7.62 calibre every other country liked a lot.Most of the guys I talked to who used them in combat or taught classes where they were being subjected to high rounds count in pre GWOT times say different.
There's a reason why the AR didn't totally dominate the modem rifle market back in the day, despite having a huge head start over the competition, and it wasn't just because of the Vietnam reputation.
Has anyone actually seen the results of a penetration test that shows the 277 Fury penetrating ceramic Lvl 4 plates? I have yet to see any video showing any small arm sized cartridge penetrate a Lvl 4 plate on the first round.Could you apply the same tech from the Sig Fury round to a .223/5.56 size round, and would it still have enough arse behind it to penetrate body armour? Badlands Shell Shock ammo uses a nickel-laced case to increase pressure in the case to get further supersonic distances.
* screaming into their pillows at least.
Agreed on the wear. After all, 6.5 Creedmore wears through barrels through faster then .308. So an intermediate fury upper would still break parts faster, but at least you would have more rounds on you. You could still keep the majority of your forces running standard 5.56, but distribute the Fury uppers to anyone being the tip of the spear against armoured opponents, and maintain the same general manual of arms.Has anyone actually seen the results of a penetration test that shows the 277 Fury penetrating ceramic Lvl 4 plates? I have yet to see any video showing any small arm sized cartridge penetrate a Lvl 4 plate on the first round.
Amping up the 223 or a similar cartridge that can run reliably through an M4 would likely produce the same problems Sig is experiencing. More pressure, more heat, more velocity will result in increased wear and parts breakage. Its just physics.
Could you apply the same tech from the Sig Fury round to a .223/5.56 size round, and would it still have enough arse behind it to penetrate body armour? Badlands Shell Shock ammo uses a nickel-laced case to increase pressure in the case to get further supersonic distances. I know it is in Sig's interest to make new rifles, but they do have a .223/5.56 version of their own pistol gun, so if they could downsize the fury round and maintain the armour penetration, that would allow them to sell new rifles while also allowing the re-barreling of older rifles and the use of existing magazines and other parts, while maintaining the potential for covering fire that is maintained by carrying large amounts of intermediate cartridges and maintaining the relative lightness to carry of an intermediate round rifle.
The 6.8 velocity and weight are calculated such that when "tungsten" bullet is used it would smash ceramic plates. The 6.8 formula is developed by the DoD and they sent "surrogate" bullets to the manufacturers for development. they want that weight and velocity for the Kinectic energy combination.
This is to replace the old M995 and M998. The 5.56 version is not a guarantee against ceramic plates. The US even developed a new sintering process for Tungsten and let the industry use the IP for free.
IMHO, replacing or retrofitting all 7.62 weapon system with 6.8 makes more sense than replacing 5.56 with 7.62. The army M110A1 aka HK417 could be replaced by a 6.8 system, so are all GPMG and mini-guns, and also 5.56 SAW at squad level. Those 7.62 systems have longer barrel already so they can reduce the pressure of 6.8 and achieve the same velocity
Lead and copper projectiles smash ceramic plates and they still don't penetrate Lvl 4, not even with multiple close by hits.The 6.8 velocity and weight are calculated such that when "tungsten" bullet is used it would smash ceramic plates.
Well, what I saw happening was that the US dragged the rest of NATO kicking and screaming* into the adoption of the 5.56 caliber and abandoning the 7.62 calibre every other country liked a lot.
* screaming into their pillows at least.
Lead and copper projectiles smash ceramic plates and they still don't penetrate Lvl 4, not even with multiple close by hits.
Can anyone show an example of 277 Fury penetrating a Lvl 4 plate with a single round?
[excerpt]Why the Army’s new XM7 rifle reignited a debate over volume of fire
An infantry officer’s critique of the XM7 argues that the lower round capacity of the service’s new rifle could put soldiers at risk. An Army general said the rifle’s new ammunition “stops the enemy at one round.”
Patty Nieberg Published May 12, 2025 9:56 AM EDT
An Army captain’s research paper, written at a Marine Corps professional school, criticized the service’s move to a new rifle and reignited a long-standing debate among infantrymen: heavier caliber or more rounds?
In 2018, the Army began developing its Next Generation Squad Weapon rifle, the XM7, as a replacement for the M4A1 carbine. Compared to its predecessor, the Sig Sauer-produced XM7 fires a heavier round that the Army says improves “accuracy, range, signature management, and lethality.”
But the larger 6.8mm round comes with a price: the XM7 can only carry 20 rounds in a magazine, while the M4’s standard load is 30.
Army Capt. Braden Trent argued in a recent academic paper that the lower ammo count was a major flaw. Combat training and marksmanship experts who spoke with Task & Purpose were split.
Brig. Gen. Phil Kinniery, commandant for the Army’s Infantry School and Maneuver Center of Excellence at Fort Benning, Georgia, was adamant that the new XM7 is an improvement on the firearms used by the Army for 20 years of war in the Middle East.
“From having been in several firefights throughout my career and deployments in Afghanistan and in Iraq, that [6.8mm round] round stops the enemy,” Kinniery told Task & Purpose. “What we’re actually bringing to infantry soldiers or, really, the close combat force across the Army, is something that stops the enemy at one round versus having to shoot multiple rounds at the enemy to get them to stop.”
Trent wrote his report as part of a fellowship program at the Marine Corps’ Expeditionary Warfare School. He presented his findings at a Modern Day Marine exhibition in Washington, D.C. April 29, criticizing the Army’s new rifle, specifically its capacity for fewer rounds.
Though he developed the paper as a student at the Marine school, his work was not sponsored or endorsed by the Army, Marine Corps, or Defense Department, according to his paper.
Trent observed a platoon’s live-fire exercise at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, where elements of the 101st Airborne Division have been testing and carrying the rifle for over a year. Trent watched soldiers run “almost completely out of ammunition” in 10 minutes while using XM7s to suppress a simulated enemy as fellow platoonmates made tactical maneuvers. By 15 minutes into the exercise, their situation was even more dire, as soldiers had to retrieve spare magazines from radio operators, medics and platoon leaders.