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This is intended for people interested in the subject of military guns and their ammunition, with emphasis on automatic weapons.
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14-Jan
DavidPawley said:SIG are selling commercial versions of their NGSW candidate.
This begs the question; is this because they won, or because they lost?
It might not mean either.
According to the article, the Army has not yet made a decision.
SIG may simply be trying to profit from commercial sales while waiting for the Army to select a winner.
14-Jan
Its smart way to lobby the army.
In the past many projects US military paid for and never completed , found a second lease of life on the market be it civilian or military only to have US military circle back a couple of years later and buying a modification of an off the shelf system.
14-Jan
Well, both civilian cartridge and rifle have need a full development cycle. SiG decided to develop them independently of final NGSW winner, because they could not it a number of months ago
18-Jan
Havent seen this one before , would be surprised if the plastic case needed to be from 3 parts
18-Jan
The CT-style full loop belt grooves (allows the use of polymer links), on the TV-style case warrants serious investigation as a possibility for True Velocity, I wonder if they're aware of the concept to begin with
18-Jan
Why is the right cartridge labeled "6mm ARC" when the bullet is of the same diameter as that of the 5.56mm Mk262?
18-Jan
Gr1ff1th said:The CT-style full loop belt grooves (allows the use of polymer links), on the TV-style case warrants serious investigation as a possibility for True Velocity,
Using full-loop polymer links does not seem feasible for machine guns that shoot TV ammo.
18-Jan
I guess the Photoshop operator had no idea that Mk262 has a smaller bullet diameter. For purely aesthetic reasons, he chose to give all bullets the same diameter. Clueless marketing people did not see any mistake. Engineers/technicians were of course not in the loop.
18-Jan
JPeelen said:I guess the Photoshop operator had no idea that Mk262 has a smaller bullet diameter.
Well, the "photoshop operator" is probably the one that gives us the superb 3D mechanical rendering of the Textron NGSW weapon (among other things), so I think that this guy knows what he was doing.
EDIT: I think he is even on this forum.