M16 rifle

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Introduced during the Vietnam War, as a derivative of an U.S. Air Force survival rifle, the M16, known commercially as the Armalite or AR-15, is, especially in its evolved version, the standard battle rifle of the United States and much of the world. In the U.S. military, the most common version is a shorter-barreled M4. Both versions will accept a M203 (grenade launcher) mounted below the barrel.

Its ancestor was the AR-5 survival rifle, a small folding weapon chambered for the .22 rimfire cartridge. After it was accepted by the Air Force as the MA-1, its developer, Armalite, then a subsidiary of Fairchild Industries, proposed various battle rifle designs to militaries around the world. The AR-15 design was licensed to Colt Industries.[1]

Based on patents by George Stoner, the M16 broke several traditions in American weapons design, and indeed a number of worldwide assumptions. It is defined as an assault rifle, the most important aspects of which being that it fires an intermediate-power rifle cartridge. A "full-power" rifle cartridge would be a NATO 7.62mm caliber used by the WWII M1 Garand, or the later M14 (rifle) and M60 (machine gun), where submachine guns and some carbines fire a pistol round, such as the 9mm or .45 ACP. 5.56mm rounds for the M16 are at the lower end of caliber (i.e., diameter) for a rifle cartridge, but make up for lower bullet weight by a higher muzzle velocity.

Some of the ideas that went into selecting that cartridge was the assumption that most longer-range engagements are not fought with individual rifles, but with machine guns and artillery, with long-range precision rifle fire only from specialists. The need was to fire many rounds to have the enemy take cover; there was no attempt to have "one bullet, one kill".

The smaller round let all users carry a greater number of rounds of ammunition, but also reduced the size and weight of the rifle, which made it easier for small Asians to use.

Early versions & problems

Unfortunately, the rifle was designed for a particular propelling powder charge, which was not used in the original production ammunition. This ammunition tended to foul the rifle with deposits of poweder residue. Coupled with some less than ideal metal selection of certain internal parts of the rifle, the early model M16's acquired a bad reputation for needing scrupulous maintenance — not always practical in the field — or they might jam.

In contrast, the Soviet counterpart of the time, the AK-47 firing a reduced-power 7.62mm round, was extremely tolerant to dirt and rarely jammed. To make up for the physically larger cartridges, AK-47's had larger magazines than the M16.

Meanwhile, the Armalite Company designed the AR-18 military and AR-180 commercial versions in 1963. While they were cheaper to produce, the M-16 and AK-47 had achieved dominance, and only approximately 20,000 were built.

Evolution

Over time, however, the 5.56mm ammunition was made to appropriate specifications, certain internal parts of the rifle were nickel-plated, and the later M-16s are reliable weapons. A machine gun, the M249 (machine gun) in U.S. service but derived from the Belgian FN Minimi (machine gun) design, fires the same 5.56mm ammunition and became the standard squad automatic weapon. The M249 has replaced the M60 as a squad weapon, giving the logistical advantage of having all primary individual weapons firing the same ammunition.

Armalite subsequently introduced the AR-180B, which has much greater parts interchangeability with the M-16 and AR-15.

Current versions

The U.S. Army standard is the M16A2 and its M4 carbine version.

References

  1. History, Armalite Inc.