Military Defense News: The Army’s New CSASS Sniper Rifle

CSASS

The U.S. Army has chosen Heckler & Koch to make its new Compact Semi-Automatic Sniper System.

The March 31 contract award to Heckler & Koch Defense Inc. – worth up to $44,500,000.00 – allows the Army to purchase a maximum total of 3,643 Compact Semi-Automatic Sniper System (CSASS) units, according to an announcement on FedBizOpps.gov.

In June 2014, the Army released a request for proposal to invite gun companies to build compact versions of the service’s 7.62mm M110 Semi-Automatic Sniper System.

G28E

Part of the goal of the effort was to arm snipers with a rifle that doesn’t stick out to the enemy as a sniper weapon. The M110, made by Knight’s Armament Company, is easy to recognize since its 46.5-inches with suppressor, more than 13 inches longer than the M4.

The CSASS is also intended to provide improved reliability, accuracy and ergonomics, according to the request for proposal. The CSASS is also designed to have reduced felt recoil and better suppressor performance.

The minimum ordering obligation for this contract is 30 CSASS units to be used for production qualification testing and operational testing which is scheduled to take 24 months, according the award announcement.

Read the Original Article at Kit Up Military

Military Weapons From the Past: Integrally Suppressed HK MP5 Sub-Machine Gun

If any of you grew up in the 80’s like me, most all of the military action flicks you watched had this gun in it. Remember Die Hard? Then when you grew up you thought “Why would anybody stake their lives on a glorified 9mm pistol?!” I still feel the same way about small caliber sub-machine guns, buy hey, guns are tools and just like carpentry, every job has to have the right tool to be done right and efficiently. -SF

MP5

In the early 1970s, Heckler & Koch began work on an integrally-suppressed variant of its extremely popular roller-delayed blowback submachine gun, the MP5. The company designated the new suppressed weapon the MP5SD, “SD” meaning Schalldämpfer or “sound suppressor.”

While all MP5s could be fitted with an external suppressor using the quick-detachable tri-lug system, this compromised the handiness of the weapon. With this in mind, H&K decided to develop a dedicated variant. The firm introduced the MP5SD in 1974. It boasts an integral suppressor and includes several other changes — such as a lighter bolt — to ensure reliable cycling.

In 1964 Walther, one of H&K’s main rivals, developed its own suppressors for its MPK submachine gun and P38 pistols. Walther was the first German arms-manufacturer to be granted a special permit for suppressor production. The MPK’s barrel configuration allows the suppressor to be used without impeding the weapon’s sights. These equipped West German intelligence agents — and may also have been issued to U.S. Special Forces stationed in Western Germany.

Unlike Walther’s add-on suppressor, the MP5SD’s integral suppressor minimizes additional length. The MP5SD’s suppressor is aluminum, which helps to keep down its weightand retain the weapon’s previous balance.

The SD’s short barrel featured 30 2.5-millimeter ports in order to bleed off a significant amount of the propellant gases into the expansion chamber of the suppressor. This allows the volume of the gas to expand — and the pressure to drop — before the gas passes through the second chamber, which contains conical baffles and further reduces the weapon’s report.

The MP5SD’s barrel-and-suppressor combination cuts the speed of the round to subsonic velocity. The suppressor reduces peak muzzle noise to approximately 70 decibels, roughly the same intensity as a loud human voice.

HK1

One drawback of H&K’s early SD design was carbon build-up inside the suppressor housing and on the barrel, which — without regularly cleaning — would cause the suppressor to lock up.

The MP5SD quickly gained favor with tier-one special forces units, such as the British Special Air Service and Special Boat Service, U.S. Army Delta Force and the U.S. Navy SEALs — and has been adopted by military and security forces around the world.

Not only does the suppressor reduce the sound of the weapon, it also dissipates muzzle flash. Since its launch in the mid-1970s there have been six incarnations of the SD with various stock setups and trigger groups. The MP5SD continues to be popular with militaries and police forces around the world.

This story originally appeared at Historical Firearms.

Read the Article as it Appears Here at War is Boring