"Sinister" ??, I see no post by this individual in this thread.
He has not replied to anything I've said here... does he work with you?
Bottom line: The US military is bringing more M14s into AFG.
They requested the M14 and they are getting the M14.
WWIII,
Both the AR-10/M110 and the M14 are equally obsolete/viable and both are being used as a stop gap measure until something new is acquired.
We will not see any effort on behalf of the US military to designate the M110 as the official DMS for the US forces.
As I understand things... the role of the M110 is SASS and it's not nearly as well suited to the role of DMR as the M14 is.
The two rifles should work well together and compliment each other.
WWIII,
As I understand things... the role of the M110 is SASS and it's not nearly as well suited to the role of DMR as the M14 is.
Why would that be?
I don't have any battle experience,I am strictly going on what I would rather have in the bush,between the M-16 style and the the M-14, the M-14 is the choice for me.I have handled and shot the M-16 and found it to be a cheap little plastic toy compared to the Garand and M-14 I fired.
The Army has issued out somewhere between 1200 and 2500 M14s from the roughly 98,000 in fieldable stock at Anniston (I had the exact fielded numbers once but would have to google it now). The G3, G4, TRADOC, and the Chief of Infantry non-concurred (disagreed) with the requesting Division Commanders but the Army Chief of Staff said if they're free and available issue them out.
There are no training courses for the M14 available at Fort Benning (the Infantry School) or Aberdeen (the Ordnance School). What you get is what you got. National Guard and Reserve units rely on their former M14 competitors and gunsmiths/armorers with Camp Perry-type experience to keep these weapons tuned and running.
There is no Army effort to refurb these weapons. They are issued with a magazine and a few basic issue items (if you're lucky). Brian Sain and Americansnipers.org solicit and send out parts and accessories to keep many of these weapons running.
A few units are spending their valuable GWOT Supplemental money to get SEI to modify them. These are not rifles being modified by Mother Army.
Army has let a few small contracts for op rods, scope mounts, magazines, and other small repair parts as M14s are otherwise repaired by cannibalization.
The Navy has modified a few weapons using SOCOM (non-service) dollars.
Rock Island submitted two sample rifles at the initial technology review for the XM-110 requirements-drafting board. I was there when they fired them on the range. They failed miserably.
One of the M14s used to document the 2005 Infantry Designated Marksman Doctrine, Operations, Training, Materiel, Leadership and Education, Personnel, and Facilities (DOTMLPF) Strategy review came direct from stocks at Anniston. It was a beautiful rifle that shot 7 minutes of angle.
Kevin, what does the M110 system offer over competing 7.62mm ARs?
(Which 7.62mm AR makers are even competing for contracts? Did DPMS or RRA submit competitors for the program?)
Now that you're in the states, did you end up finding that SR-25 I vaguely recall you looking for on the EE?
To refresh comments made by "Sinister" Dave elsewhere
Sinister said:A few units are spending their valuable GWOT Supplemental money to get SEI to modify them.
These are not rifles being modified by Mother Army.
Rock Island submitted two sample rifles at the initial technology review for the XM-110 requirements-drafting board.
I was there when they fired them on the range. They failed miserably.
As I have mentioned, I have a large collection of M14s.
As I understand things... the role of the M110 is SASS and it's not nearly as well suited to the role of DMR as the M14 is.
What's to let go?
As the title sates: M-14 in Afghanistan ~ The US military requested the M14 and not the M110 for the coming surge in AFG.
Some here think the M110 is the ultimate rifle and take it personally when it doesn't get top billing.
That's possibly a subject for another thread...