Posted on May 9, 2016
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Their has been many discussions on the effectiveness of this round, what are your thoughts
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Responses: 22
GySgt Bill Smith
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Your talking big money to replace 5.56 round. You would have to replace all M16,M4,M249, mags, and gear. Plus the cost of the ammo its self would be higher.
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LTC Paul Labrador
LTC Paul Labrador
8 y
1LT William Clardy - The conversion from the A1 to the A2 isn't really a good example to use because the A2s (and all subsequent iterations) are fully backwards compatible with the old M193 ammo used in by the A1s. So if you, by some happenstance, were issued old M193 ball for your M4 carbine, you'd be able to shoot it just fine (after you re-zero to take account for the POA/POI shift with the lighter round). In that scenario, you could use up all the old ammo stocks while moving to the newer round, thus those rounds would not go to waste. With a caliber change, you couldn't do that.
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1LT William Clardy
1LT William Clardy
8 y
LTC Paul Labrador, I was referencing the conversion from A1 to A2 as an instance where at least part of the cost of the conversion was at least partially offset by it being done in lieu of already-needed maintenance -- e.g., all those M16A1s (and probably even the M16E1 I was assigned when I was with the 101st) which still had the same barrel they came back from Vietnam with, so the effective cost of the barrel component of the A2 upgrade was really just the delta between what it would have cost to replace all those A1 barrels with new A1 barrels and replacing them with the A2's slightly heavier barrel.

I would also note that the current standard 5.56x45mm ammunition is a truly perverse (at least from a logistician's perspective) combination of being expensive to manufacture as well as being extremely harsh on the weapons. So there are some very valid argument to be made for moving away from it from which make sense even from a strictly cost-effectiveness point of view.
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LTC Paul Labrador
LTC Paul Labrador
8 y
1LT William Clardy - Yes, the upgrade was rolled into the cost of weapon upkeep, but because they didn't change caliber, as I stated, you didn't run into the cost of having to waste already manufactured ammunition, or change out any other parts that would have occurred with a caliber change (magazines, bolts, cleaning equipment, etc). Those costs add up too.
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1LT William Clardy
1LT William Clardy
8 y
I'm not denying that those other costs add up, LTC Paul Labrador, I'm just trying to remind anybody paying attention that some of the costs are going to happen anyway, and that there is a possibility that a change could reduce some of the recurring costs (assuming we aren't typically American and make the new ammo just as expensively exotic, just to prove we can).
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CPT Jack Durish
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I think that the logical place to begin this discussion would be to find agreement on the criteria for selecting the best choice (obviously "perfect" is unattainable). Inasmuch as the vast majority of rounds are expended for purposes other than "kill shots" (fire suppression, recon by fire, etc, etc, etc) we might conclude that two rounds are preferred together with a over/under weapon that fired both. In that way, an infantryman could carry a larger supply of the smaller, lighter ammo to be fired in greater quantity.
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Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
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Debatable.

Advantage of the 5.56 is you get A LOT of them, and the AR15 (M16/M4) platform IS and "everyman" platform. It's dead simple to use. You can carry a lot of rounds, and teach people to use it very quickly. Upping the round size creates a few potential issues. Either we lose out on Weight (less rounds for equal weight, or more weight for equal rounds), less firepower (less rounds per above), massive changes to the logistics chain including Ammo, Parts (barrels, chambers, mag assemblies, etc).

It's all "second order effects."

The "Life cycle" of the AR platform is probably another 15-20 years before we MUST change. At that point we will look at different ammo. Until then, we will adjust our current ammo, but it will still be 5.56.
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Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
8 y
LTC Paul Labrador - Furthermore any conflict we enter makes it to where signatories to the Hague can ignore the conventions, by our very presence. What's worse is that with rifle rounds the tail of the bullet "may" be more important that the tip on some rounds, which HAS falsely classified some of our 7.62 as "hollowpoint" incorrectly.
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LTC Paul Labrador
LTC Paul Labrador
8 y
Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS - Correct. If you want a projectile to yaw consistently and violently upon impact, you need the tail to be where the center of gravity is. With bullets like that, it wants to go tail first as soon as it hits anything denser than air.
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1LT William Clardy
1LT William Clardy
8 y
Moving the center of gravity too far aft reduces the hit probability (or at least the consistency of trajectory), LTC Paul Labrador. For inducing bullet yaw on impact, I thought the Russians produced a typically straightforward technical solution with the shallow asymmetrical cup on the nose of their 5.45mm round -- the cup produces a sideways force on impact, but the bullet's center of mass is still closely aligned with the axis of the bullet (in other words, it still spins smoothly with no erratic wobble).
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Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
8 y
SSG Jason Werstak - That's one specific round where that works, on a Non-Nato round. It affects our supply chain. 2nd order effects. It's great to believe that we can swap out the barrels of 1M~ rifles and that is the only issue. It isn't.
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