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Science & Technology
Making The M14 Rifle Right For Afghanistan
2011-03-08
Although M14 rifles were pulled from depot storage, fitted with scopes, shipped to Afghanistan and issued to Army and Marine designated riflemen, the guns proved less than ideal for todayÂ’s warfare.

First, their fixed stocks could not be adjusted to fit the length-of-pull needed for todayÂ’s body armor. And second, the 40-year-old rifles could not accommodate modern accessories such as lasers, night vision scopes and lights, which require MIL STD 1913 Picatinny rails.

Fortunately, a solution had already been developed by the U.S. NavyÂ’s Surface Warfare Center at Crane, Ind.

One year before the 2001 terrorist attacks, U.S. Navy SEALs had gone to Crane to request an updated version of the 42-year-old M14. Great believers in the M14Â’s reliability and the 7.62x51 mm NATO cartridgeÂ’s lethality, they wanted a shortened version with a pistol grip and adjustable-length buttstock for close-quarters use.

The design task fell to David Armstrong, an accomplished small arms engineer who previously had developed the well-received SOPMOD (Special Operations Peculiar Modification System) for the M4 carbine. A mechanical engineer, machinist and recreational shooter, Armstrong began by searching for an off-the-shelf collapsible buttstock.

After trying several, he chose a Sage IntÂ’l collapsible, pistol-grip stock made for the Remington Model 870 shotgun. The telescoping design offered five lengths of pull, in 1-inch increments, that worked well with body armor. Armstrong connected the Sage buttstock to the forward section of a modified M14 fiberglass stock. He also replaced the rifleÂ’s standard 22-inch barrel with an 18-inch unit, reducing its overall length by nearly 10 inches, to 35 inches.

The fiberglass stock, however, did not satisfy him. “The [M14] design has always been tough to beat for reliability, but required laborsome bedding and tuning for best accuracy,” he explained. Earlier sniper versions of the M14, especially the M21 Sniper System, which used a resin-impregnated stock with epoxy bedding, proved so temperamental that snipers were instructed not to remove the action from the stock while cleaning it.

Armstrong took the bold step of designing his own chassis stock, machined from aircraft-grade aluminum. Not only would this be more rigid than fiberglass, but it would include an aluminum bedding block and an assortment of Picatinny rails for optical and illumination accessories. The result was a true “drop-in” stock, requiring no bedding or special fitting. “This stock floats the gas system through a replacement operating rod guide screwed to the rigid stock fore-end and a simple spacer replacing the front band,” he said. He also modified the Sage buttstock’s cheek rest to give it 2 inches of vertical adjustment in 1/4-inch increments.

In addition to installing quad Picatinny rails around the fore-end, he attached a short-rail scope mount that replaced the M14Â’s stripper clip guide. The final additions were a more effective flash suppressor, three ambidextrous 1 1/4-inch sling slot locations, and a Harris Engineering S-LM Series S bipod. Patented to the U.S. Navy with Armstrong as its inventor, the chassis stock is now produced under license by Sage IntÂ’l in Oscoda, Mich.

“Simply adding the chassis stock system cut the group size of a basic M14 in half without the need for glass-bedding,” he reports. Firing five-shot groups with M118 ammunition at 600 yards, Naval technicians at Crane recorded 2 to 2.5 minute-of-angle (m.o.a.) extreme spreads—meaning 12 to 18-inch groups. Standard M80 ball ammunition shot nearly as well.

When the U.S. Army and Marine Corps later sought modernized M14s, Armstrong merely switched the NavyÂ’s Mk. 14 Mod 0 rifleÂ’s short barrel for a full-length 22-inch version to create the ArmyÂ’s Enhanced Battle Rifle (EBR) and the MarineÂ’s M39 Enhanced MarksmanÂ’s Rifle (EMR). These versions measure 38.5 inches overall, with the stocks collapsed, and 45 inches when fully extended.

Although 3 pounds heavier than the standard M14, the EBR and EMR compare favorably to AmericaÂ’s current 7.62 mm sniping platforms, such as the ArmyÂ’s M24 and M110, and the Marine CorpsÂ’ M40A3. The Army is issuing two EBRs per infantry squad, while the Marines have placed the EMR at platoon-level.

The Army EBR is fitted with a Leupold 3.5–10X scope, and the USMC’s EMR optic is the Schmidt & Bender M8541 Scout Sniper Day Scope, the same scope used by Marine snipers. Thus equipped, these designated riflemen have the ability to engage enemy personnel to 800 meters.

Each service is now building its own rifles, with Navy Mk. 14 Model 0Â’s being produced at the Crane facility, while Army rifles are assembled at Rock Island Arsenal, Ill., and the USMC version at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va.

Some 5,000 EBRs have been produced at Rock Island Arsenal, with funding for another 1,200. A further 2,000 Sage stocks have reportedly been sold directly to military units and individuals for conversion of M14s. Still more rifles issued to Marines and SEALs suggest that perhaps 10,000 of these modernized M14s are now in service.
Posted by: Anonymoose

#5  http://gdynets.webng.com/EBRs020407%20004.jpg

Picture
Posted by: crosspatch   2011-03-08 21:25  

#4  that shoots twice as far
Posted by: Gloluse B. Hayes9343   2011-03-08 21:13  

#3  Actually, a 7.62x51mm AR is the better weapon to issue - same ergonomics as the M-16 with the range of the M-14. Plus, all of the goodies developed for the M-4 series of rifles fit right onto the A-4 version of 7.62 NATO ARs.
Posted by: Shieldwolf   2011-03-08 21:12  

#2  That's a lot of rework for a 50 year old rifle. Give me a Browning BAR semiauto in .300 Winmag or .338 Winmag twice as far for, I'll bet, a third of the price.
Posted by: Gloluse B. Hayes9343   2011-03-08 21:12  

#1  MCRD San Diego, Edson Range, CamPen, 1969, my first military weapon, and remains the one I believe was the apogee of infantry rifles.
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2011-03-08 18:57  

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