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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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12/1/21
Armies seem to agree more with 'my' definition - it explains better why dedicated PDW aren't nearly as widespread as pistols and submachine guns for the role.
12/1/21
renatohm said:Armies seem to agree more with 'my' definition - it explains better why dedicated PDW aren't nearly as widespread as pistols and submachine guns for the role.
It is mostly a matter of no one having made a decent PDW and armies being conservative in regards to retaining 9 mm. The real attempt at PDWs were the P90 and the MP7 and neither have had a lot of success. The AK74u is the closest thing to a proper PDW from that time because it used rifle ammo.
12/1/21
smg762 said:Like I said the practical hit probability at 300m, for typical PDW-type personell, is zero. You could change that by squeezing in a longer 12 inch barrel with reverse feeding. If you Downsized the caliber, the saved weight could be spent on an integrated optic with a long 4x zoom. Then it would be a 300m gun
If we look at how the M16A2 did with trained Infantry soldiers in the ACR rifle trials, it was a 0.3 hit probability at 300m:
Thats a full size rifle with trained infantry shooters, firing not under serious stress (ie no one was trying to kill them.)
Trying to make a 300m PDW, when full size Assault Rifles are already only 0.3 effective at 300m, seems dubious. Especially when you consider that the PDW equipped soldier has both less training and less shooting-combat experience then a typical rifleman.
And of course it faces the brutal PDW paradox - the closer the PDW becomes in performance to a rifle, the more it begins to carry like a rifle due to increases in size and weight. At which point, why are they not carrying rifles? Or carrying a rifle caliber PDW (SBR ala Krinkov, etc.)
13/1/21
renatohm said:Armies seem to agree more with 'my' definition...
Can you name any armies that issue PDWs to cooks, clerks, or other REMFs?
I've seen German tankers with Uzi SMGs, Polish tankers with wz63 SMGs, Russian pilots with APS machine pistols, Dutch pilots with MP9 SMGs, German and American special forces with MP7 SMGs, American pilots with GAU-5A carbines. All are combat personnel.
I have yet to see cooks or clerks armed with any of those PDWs.
13/1/21
AM I THE ONLY ONE WHO IS INTERESTED IN HOW THIS THING SUPPOSED TO WORKS??
I'm trying to figure out how the internal mechanism works, if the chamber is on top of the magazine then how does the hammer, assuming it was in the bottom of the mag, can reach the firing pin, or does this thing use striker mechanism?
13/1/21
I wonder if a variation of the SS90 with this specs:
* < 22 grains
* front plastic core, tip exposed
* steel base
* Vo > 900 m/s
Would deliver enough quickly energy after impact against an unprotected target in order to create much bigger temporary wound channel and maintaining a P90-sized-and-weight type PDW controllable by a not so much trained user
what do you think?
13/1/21
I have no idea how to predict the terminal behavior of a hypothetical projectile. I think it would be necessary to manufacture a quantity of such bullets, load them into cartridges cases, and fire them into ordnance gelatin, to see what wound channel they would produce.
14/1/21
poliorcetes said:I wonder if a variation of the SS90 with this specs: * < 22 grains * front plastic core, tip exposed * steel base * Vo > 900 m/s Would deliver enough quickly energy after impact against an unprotected target in order to create much bigger temporary wound channel and maintaining a P90-sized-and-weight type PDW controllable by a not so much trained user what do you think?
Problem is likely penetration in flesh / ballistic gelatin.
The 27gr SS195/SS198 projectile used in the current 5.7 loads never seems to penetrate more the ~9". Thats even with impact velocities exceeding 2400fps.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8YylhQWcpE
Once you get to 32-40gr, it starts to easily make 12" of penetration.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=fsQoP3pZnDI
Now, some could argue that the 12" penetration minimum established by the FBI was for handgun projectiles, and that due to the 'rifle like effects' of rifle rounds, 12" is not necessary. I generally would fall into that category for a larger round (ie a fragmenting 7.62x51 that penetrates 10" is likely plenty effective.)
But for military adoption, I think their unlikely to go for any round that doesn't make the 12" penetration, as thats become such an ingrained metric.
14/1/21
gatnerd said:Thats a full size rifle with trained infantry shooters, firing not under serious stress (ie no one was trying to kill them.) Trying to make a 300m PDW, when full size Assault Rifles are already only 0.3 effective at 300m, seems dubious. Especially when you consider that the PDW equipped soldier has both less training and less shooting-combat experience then a typical rifleman. And of course it faces the brutal PDW paradox - the closer the PDW becomes in performance to a rifle, the more it begins to carry like a rifle due to increases in size and weight. At which point, why are they not carrying rifles? Or carrying a rifle caliber PDW (SBR ala Krinkov, etc.)
Hmm, 2 points here
So this thing would be bulky, since the mag would have to be thicker, but otherwise? Should carry like a 44 Magnum and shoot nicer.
I get that 300m might be pushing it, but in competent hand it could do it and otherwise it's a nice powerful cartridge for shorter range.