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Yes, I have. I hope they have made a hard enough plastic that is lighter than the brass casing. I just don't know how well the extended troop trials have gone. The article doesn't state any failures between rounds.
Matt_Fisher said:Alot of the arguments against a calibre conversion is the high cost of retooling industry and replacing weapons systems. If there is a more effective intermediate calibre which could possibly replace both 5.56 and 7.62 wouldn't the LSAT program be the time and place to do so?
KevinB said:...Then imagine this capability in a lighter ammo...
Petamocto said:Yes, you and I as people involved with guns as the main effort of our work can confidently stand behind most weapon systems and own them as we fire them in terms of stance, but can some scrawny 18 year old who has grown up on video games still easily hit something on rapid rate with it?
I'm not saying it can't be done, of course, and in fact I would like nothing more than for it to be accomplished.
Tango18A said:Hence why we train on weapons, not just give them to troops willy nilly.
The change from traditional ammunition to telescoped ammunition would be the most opportune time to introduce new calibers. But, there would still be significant industrial inertia against such a move as many manufactures would seek to transfer their existing projectile line into the new CTA or CLA production runs. At the same time …Matt_Fisher said:Alot of the arguments against a calibre conversion is the high cost of retooling industry and replacing weapons systems. If there is a more effective intermediate calibre which could possibly replace both 5.56 and 7.62 wouldn't the LSAT program be the time and place to do so?
I agree that we should not be looking for a single common intermediate calibre for the infantry company. However, each of our current small arm & machinegun bullets was arrived at in its own stovepiped development – there is more owed to legacy & historical weapons than to any conscious effort to optimise at the aggregate level.Petamocto said:The core of the argument rests with the "green" army being made up of different but overlapping capabilities, which can do more than an average homogenized mass of people who all have the same kit.
There are very real pros to the 5.56 NATO caliber, and very real pros to the 7.62 caliber. You've heard them all before (less weight vs stopping power, less recoil vs longer range, etc), but with a mixed caliber you begin to lose the benefits of both.
With an intermediate cal (6mm, 6.5, 6.7, 6.8, 7mm, whatever) you (usually*) lose for everything you gain. For every riflemen you give some "oomph" to, you have now made him less accurate on rapid rate close up. Likewise, you have taken away some "oomph" from the GPMGs.
MCG said:Fortunately, SARP II should provide an opportunity to properly make such an assessment.
Lone Wolf AT said:Yes IVI is still used because we are used to it.
Petamocto said:I have not yet seen a lot on the user side that wasn't still IVI, though.