PEO Soldier unveils lighter, more lethal weapons systems
May
21, 2009
By J.D.
Leipold
By: U.S. Army.
The XM-25 Counter
Defilade Target Engagement System is the Army's first "smart"
shoulder-fired weapon. It launches 25mm dual-warhead, low velocity, flat
trajectory ammunition designed to explode over a target.
WASHINGTON (Army News Service, May 21, 2009)
– Two weapons in development are expected to be more precision-oriented,
lighter and lethal: the laser-sighted XM-25 Counter Defilade Target Engagement
System and the Lightweight .50-Caliber Machine Gun. The XM-25 will undergo
field-testing this summer while the LW50MG is already being tested by Soldiers.
Program Executive Office Soldier at Fort Belvoir, Va., opened its doors earlier
this month to give the media a look at the two weapons and other new gear in
development that will lighten a Soldier’s load yet improve survivability,
lethality and comfort.
XM25: First shoulder-fired ‘smart’ weapon
The semi-automatic, shoulder-fired XM-25 with a five-round magazine of 25mm
dual-warhead ammunition weighs in at about 14 pounds (about the same as an M-16
with a 203 grenade launcher) yet it’s only a few inches longer than an M-4
Carbine with the shoulder stock extended. Decked out in Army Combat Uniform
camouflage, its toy weapon appearance belies its expected lethality.
Richard Audette, deputy program manager for Soldier weapons, said the
technology behind the XM-25 is a leap ahead because it’s the first smart weapon
system with a smart round in small weapons.
“The way a Soldier operates this is you basically find your target, then laze
to it, which gives the range, then you get an adjusted aim point, adjust fire
and pull the trigger,” he said. “Say you’ve lazed out to 543 meters… when you
pull the trigger it arms the round and fires it 543 meters plus or minus a
one-, two- or three-meter increment, then it explodes over the target.” That,
he added, makes it a full-solution fire control weapon.
Audette said the evaluations this summer will test accuracy and effectiveness,
and because it’s a completely different type of weapon system its use will call
for different tactics.
“For example, in Iraq we had many instances where there was a sniper firing
from a rooftop and you have a squad trying to engage that target, but the
Soldiers couldn’t get to him with the weapons they had, so they’d call in the
Air Force to drop a JDAM (joint direct attack munition),” he said. “We can take
out the target at $25 per XM round as opposed to a $20,000 to $50,000 JDAM.”
According to Audette, ranges in Afghanistan are longer than in Iraq. He said
the XM-25 has an effective range of 750 meters, which is longer than an M-16
and M-4 and outperforms the 40mm M-203 grenade-launcher range by more than
double.
LW50MG: Less weight,
better accuracy
The MK-25 doesn’t offer a Soldier any
weight-savings, but the Lightweight .50-Caliber Machine Gun definitely will
coming in with tripod at 64 pounds – half what the M-2 .50- caliber heavy
machine gun weighs.
With the addition of a modified M-145 machine-gun optic, the LW50MG will be
more accurate and quicker to reach its target because it will also have
60-percent less recoil than the M-2, which has been an Army staple in some form
or another since 1921.
Col. Doug Tamilio, program manager for Soldier weapons for Soldier lethality
and weight reduction, said the Army has more than 34,000 of the M-2s, each
weighing in at 128 pounds with 256 moving parts, but the prototype LW50MG has
not only half the weight, it also has only 128 moving parts.
“The M-2 is a great weapons system, but before you fire it, you have to set the
head space and timing and if you want to change a barrel out, you have to
unscrew it, pull it out, then insert and screw in a new barrel; then you have
to open the feed tray cover… if you fail to check it or do something
improperly, you could have an issue with a round going off because it doesn’t
have a safety on it,” he said.
To fix that problem, PEO Soldier developed a quick-change barrel kit which
allows Soldiers to simply pull out the barrel without having to screw in a new
one. They simply insert a new barrel, lock it in place and start firing – the
barrel moves but not the carriage which allows the LW50MG to carry the M-145
machine-gun optic, which is the one used on the 7.62-caliber M-240 medium
machine gun.
“It has a lower cyclic rate, but because it has much less recoil and can fit a
sight, it allows a Soldier to get a hit on a target much quicker and to hold
that target with the sight,” Tamilio said. “It’s still in the development
stage, but it has proven out to be very, very durable and accurate firing the
same .50-caliber rounds the same distance.”
Another plus to the lightweight machine gun low recoil is that the tripod spade
grips won’t have to be slammed into the ground and sandbagged to hold the
weapon in place.