DaveTooley
Gold $$ Contributor
Just to put things in perspective. 75% of USSOCOM's budget goes to aviation.
The diameter isn't larger enough for special purpose projectiles.A 6mm Creedmoor with a good 100 gr bullet!
I have a sack full of the 5.56 versions. It is a tungsten carbide core. I put them in my leg screws of my base for my rest.If you’re asking about armor piercing bullets it’s not the tip.
Inside the core is a hardened steel miniature bullet shaped piece. That’s what defeats the armor. We were told it was tungsten but I don’t know if it’s true or not.
It is not visible from the outside. They have black paint on the nose of the bullet to identity its armor piercing. Different colors stand for different purposes.
I took a 50 BMG apart ( an AP one) used the steel piece as a center punch. It lasted for years.
On bombs it’s the same with the painted on colors. One yellow ring is TNT . Two rings is comp B. Three is Tritonal.
In 20mm and up it gets more interesting. Since they are all ‘bore safe’ for 30 yards. But a yellow nose (by far the most common) are HEI. (High explosive incindiary.
My info is somewhat dated.
I have some old 30-06 AP rounds I do the same thing.I have a sack full of the 5.56 versions. It is a tungsten carbide core. I put them in my leg screws of my base for my rest.
You are about as likely to know as anyone, but is this why I've never heard anyone kick around the idea of standardizing a 6x45? That cartridge seems to make a ton of sense without a new weapon platform. Bigger case heads equal more bolt thrust, the demise of the AR15 when trying to get more "punch" from the same platform. So, the Grendel based stuff had the pressures lowered, neutering pretty much anything on that case head in the ar platform.The diameter isn't larger enough for special purpose projectiles.
This just my observations.You are about as likely to know as anyone, but is this why I've never heard anyone kick around the idea of standardizing a 6x45? That cartridge seems to make a ton of sense without a new weapon platform. Bigger case heads equal more bolt thrust, the demise of the AR15 when trying to get more "punch" from the same platform. So, the Grendel based stuff had the pressures lowered, neutering pretty much anything on that case head in the ar platform.
Question is, did they ever consider just a 6x45? If so, what would be the problem with it? Thanks Dave!--Mike
Cool! Thanks Dave. I wonder how Sig is working around the bolt thrust issue. Seems inevitable with existing design parameters. Material seems to be the only way. I know there were some "rounded lug" bolt and extensions that helped, though. That looked to have promise but not sure what happened with it. I haven't been keeping up with that stuff much of late.This just my observations.
We know the small frame in it's current configuration has limitations. The 6X45 would be a small, incremental improvement. That would not get them anywhere close to the performance they require. For the length of time it takes from concept to fielding they would be on to something new with the time and money wasted.
Example; the time it took to pick a new sniper rifle. I worked on 2 submissions, years apart for Accuracy International. I almost got to perform the fix when Remington screwed up the second one but it died in a pile. It took 3 tries for them to pick a simple sniper rifle.
Sig has figured out how to manage higher pressures. Lots of things happening that you don't hear about.
Thanks, at least we are the ones. But how can we have better external ballistics and reduced weight without greater mass without defying physics. Seems like a hard goal. Hope it's worth the effort. I'll stick to having the extra weight of good safe ammo.Guys this was driven by the military not private industry. Better external ballistics and reduced ammo weight was the goal. I watched a handful of ammo companies work for years before Sig was selected.
Why can't the front line warfighters move on from 75 year old technologies?
Cost is nothing compared to a new aircraft.
We have Gen 5 fighters and a new and improved one in development.
$20 billion for development and an estimated $300 million per plane.
That's expensive.
Nope you’re not paranoid.It just does not seem right to spend so much money for so little gain. something is not right. Or I'm just paranoid
When we spend all that money on a new airplane I always thought they got heavier not lighter. So why not new ammo that is more powerful. If they want more power than a 556, there will be a price somewhere. I don't see how it's worth it without the weight in the long run.Nope you’re not paranoid.
Your mistake is in thinking there is any gain at all.
Not so sure about that.
Good for you. Glad you are still with us. They sure waited a long time to own that one. To late for most!Not so sure about that.
What we do do is have the last wars generals run the new war. That never works. Then the great politicians. Let’s take the man the man that convinced Henry Ford the Edsel was the way to go. He becomes Secretary of Defense. Authorizes the purchase of who knows how much Colgonite dish detergent. Wants it dumped on the Ho Chi Minh trail. He feels that will cause the VC vehicles to slide off the trail. He actually thought it was similar to an interstate. I also want to thank him for Agent Orange, and the other colors. Never a single thought or care what it would do to American troops. I personally ran my flag to the top of the pole the day he died. My goal is to outlive them all. So far I’m doing ok.
You have experienceNot a chance.
To clarify: Yes you can shoot at the enemy at 600 yards, but you’re not hitting anyone.
You can shoot at the enemy at 1000 yards too . You’re only giving away your position.
Where I was in Vietnam you were lucky if you could see 6 yards.lol
In my time I had both the M-14 and M-16.
Yes there were occasions in the rice paddy’s were maybe tops a 200 yard shot was available. That was rare but the leeches were not.
But I humped that M-14 and ammo and preferred it to the M-16.
I guess I should add I was there early in the war and the issued M-16 (non chrome lined) were garbage. This was corrected by lining the barrel (had the letter C stamped on the receiver.) That was better. Then they realized that a cleaning kit would be nice to issue also.
I’ll share this antidote and it’s absolutely true. The instructor explaining the M-16 went on to talk about what a lethal cartridge this 5.56 was. He went into great detail how, when fired, this bullet tumbled through the air causing enormous wounds.
I might have been a wise assed kid at the time, but I knew this was pure BS . I had been around reloaders since I was 10. End of story.
In retrospect if given the choice of which of the two I don’t want to be shot with, it doesn’t take much thought.
I use the .308/30/06 versions for the same purposeI have a sack full of the 5.56 versions. It is a tungsten carbide core. I put them in my leg screws of my base for my rest.
You might not notice, but the fact is, and it has been proven in tests, that follow up shots are not only quicker but also more accurate in the lower recoiling roundFunny thing. In a fire fight I never noticed the recoil no matter what I was shooting.
Today on a bench with my coffee and donut and no one returning fire (No green tracers) I’m fully aware of recoil in everything I shoot.
