Monday, September 19, 2011

Trimble's back to doing what he does best...

And that would be getting the good stuff before most other aviation writers.  He has a great scoop on some advanced concepts that are being shown at the AFA meeting....check it out here....


Hawk AJTS Overview Video

Royal Marines on patrol...

A Royal Marine from 42 Commando Lima Company based at Checkpoint Zarawar in Helmand, Afghanistan is pictured crossing a waterfilled ditch while on patrol. A Military Working Dog can be seen jumping out of the other side.
42 Commando are currently conducting daily patrols which are helping to provide reassurance for the local Afghan population and weekly shuras which are proving to be an important listening post in the communities.
Photographer: LA(Phot) Dave Hillhouse

A Royal Marine from 42 Commando Lima Company based at Checkpoint Zarawar in Helmand, Afghanistan is pictured on watching for enemy activity while on patrol.
42 Commando are currently conducting daily patrols which are helping to provide reassurance for the local Afghan population and weekly shuras which are proving to be an important listening post in the communities.
Photographer: LA(Phot) Dave Hillhouse

A Royal Marine from 42 Commando Lima Company walks back to his base at Checkpoint Zarawar in Helmand, Afghanistan follwoing an arduous day long patrol.
42 Commando are currently conducting daily patrols which are helping to provide reassurance for the local Afghan population and weekly shuras which are proving to be an important listening post in the communities.
Photographer: LA(Phot) Dave Hillhouse

A Royal Marine from 42 Commando Lima Company based at Checkpoint Zarawar in Helmand, Afghanistan is pictured in a corn field while on patrol.
42 Commando are currently conducting daily patrols which are helping to provide reassurance for the local Afghan population and weekly shuras which are proving to be an important listening post in the communities.
Photographer: LA(Phot) Dave Hillhouse

Textron's Humvee Recap Contender...the video!

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Air Force birthday today????


The Air Force turns 64 today.  Happy birthday!

But a note to all the air guys out there.  Your service is older than 64...stop denying the Army Air Force of old!  You're cutting out a tremendous part of your legacy by not acknowledging the contributions that they made and are placing those guys in a type of nether world of being US Army but not credited with giving birth to the USAF.

An example is that if you used those metrics the USAF would be slightly over 100 years old.  That's more like it....but anyway....happy birthday little brother.

Code One Magazine.

Pic of the day...Air Force edition.

U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Angela Pollard (left), a medic attached to the Laghman Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) and 1st Lt. Scott Adamson, an engineer, secure a bridge in Mehtar Lam in the Laghman province of Afghanistan, Sept. 7, 2011. A civil engineer team from the PRT traveled to the Jugi bridge in Mehtar Lam to asses the structural integrity following its recent completion, ensuring it will withstand the Afghan weather for years to come. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Ryan Crane)

U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Sam Pastor, a vehicle maintainer attached to the Laghman Provincial Reconstruction Team, fires the Mk48 "super SAW" machine gun at the off-base firing range near Forward Operating Base Mehtar Lam on Sept. 10, 2011. Members from the PRT traveled to the range to practice with primary and secondary weapons along with M203 grenade launchers and fragmentation grenades.(U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Ryan Crane)

U.S. Air Force Capt. Jon Polston, the lead engineer attached to the Laghman Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT), leans over a ledge to inspect the underside of a bridge in Mehtar Lam in the Laghman province of Afghanistan, Sept. 7, 2011. The civil engineer team from the PRT traveled to the Jugi bridge in Mehtar Lam to asses the structural integrity following its recent completion, ensuring it will withstand the Afghan weather for years to come. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Ryan Crane)

IAR in the fleet.

via the FireArms Blog
Interesting that the IAR has been down range and no reports on its effectiveness has come out.

Even more interesting is the fact that forward deployed units or units that are soon to be forward deployed (11th MEU) are having discussions on how they will incorporate this weapon into the Infantry units.  Before you ask if I'm speculating, I wrote the 11th MEU and this is the response I got...
There has been discussion about the new automatic rifle within my unit,
but it is my understanding that we will deploy with our current weapons
- M-4, M-4 grenade launcher variant and M249 squad automatic weapon.

We will maintain marksmanship skills with shoots on ship, as well as
train with different militaries throughout the Western Pacific and
Middle East regions.


Very respectfully,

Capt. Roger Hollenbeck
11th MEU public affairs officer
I understand that public affairs officer's have to be cagey in their responses but my take is that this weapon is still in the 'question' mark stage and no guidance has been issued from HQMC on even a recommended usage (of course another option is that HQMC did offer guidance and 11th MEU simply said fuck that and are going to make it work in the field).

But I'm wandering a bit.  Steve at the Fire Arms Blog stated that he thought that this was a back door move by the Marine Corps to get a replacement for the M-16A4 yet be a better performer than the M4.

I shot the idea down at the time but now I wonder if that isn't the way to go.  The stats on the M4 and the M-27 (IAR) are from wikipedia.

Type Infantry automatic weapon
Place of origin  Germany
Service history
In service 2010-present
Used by United States Marine Corps
Production history
Designer Heckler & Koch
Designed 2008
Manufacturer Heckler & Koch
Produced 2010 testing
Number built 450 test weapons
Specifications
Weight 7.9 lb (3.6 kg) empty
Length 36.9 to 33 in (94 to 84 cm) w/ adjustable stock
Barrel length 16.5 in (42 cm)
Width 3.1 in (7.9 cm)
Height 9.4 in (24 cm)

Cartridge 5.56x45mm NATO
Action Gas-operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire 560 to 640 rpm
Feed system 20-round or 30-round STANAG magazine or 100-round Beta C-Mag
Sights flip-up Rear rotary diopter sight and front post, Picatinny rail

and now the M4.

Type Carbine
Place of origin  United States
Service history
In service 1994–present
Used by See Users
Wars
Production history
Manufacturer Colt Defense
Produced 1994–present
Variants M4A1, CQBR (Mk. 18 Mod 0)
Specifications
Weight 6.36 lb (2.88 kg) empty
6.9 lb (3.1 kg) with 30 rounds
Length 33 in (840 mm) (stock extended)
29.75 in (756 mm) (stock retracted)
Barrel length 14.5 in (370 mm)

Cartridge 5.56x45mm NATO
Action Gas-operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire 700-950 round/min cyclic[1]
Muzzle velocity 3,080 ft/s or 939 m/s[1]
Effective range 500 m for a point target and 600 m for an area target[2]
Feed system 30 round box magazine or other STANAG Magazines.
Sights Iron or various optics

Its almost painfully obvious that the M-27 will give the Marines something that we don't currently have.  If the M-27 is adopted as the new Rifle for the Marine Corps then we can standardize on a weapon that isn't as long as the M-16A4, has better range than the M-4 and on top of it all we'll be regaining automatic rifle fire for infantrymen when they're in the assault.

If we're going to stick with the 5.56mm round then it makes sense to issue this weapon to an entire rifle squad..keep the grenade launchers but maybe we could then lose a SAW or two.

Its worth considering especially in light of all the urban fighting thats taken place over the years.  Add to it the optics that are hitting the market and this is a capability thats too good to leave in the hands a single Marine.

Spend the money and spread the wealth.