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Big John
January 23rd 06, 06:15 AM
Interesting development in guns.

Big John
``````````````````````````````````````````````


New super-gun to be tested in Feb

By PAMELA HESS
UPI Pentagon Correspondent

WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 (UPI) -- Next month a new high-explosive munition
will be fired in Singapore and then tested again by the U.S. Army,
heralding what may be a sea change in weaponry: a gun that can fire
240,000 rounds per minute.

That's compared to 60 rounds per minute in a standard military machine
gun.

Metal Storm Inc., a munitions company headquartered in Virginia but
with its roots in Australia, has been developing a gun that can shoot
at blistering speeds, albeit in short bursts as each barrel is
reloaded.

A Metal Storm gun of any size -- from a 9 mm hand-gun up to a machine
gun size or a grenade launcher -- has no moving parts other than the
bullets or munition inside the barrel. Rather than chambering a single
slug for each shot - very quickly in the case of machine guns -- the
bullets come pre-stacked inside the barrel and can be shot all at
once, or one at a time, as the shooter decides through the electronic
controls.

Because there are no moving parts, the weapon is less likely to jam,
and will presumably need less maintenance.

Lashing many barrels together increases the number of rounds per
second. Once fired, however, each spent barrel has to be reloaded.

Starting in 2006 the company will demonstrate its prototypes with
applicability that is especially likely to interest the U.S. military.
The weapon system can be mounted on an unmanned ground combat vehicle,
an unmanned aerial vehicle, and might be used as a defense against
rocket-propelled grenades and mortars.

Metal Storm's speed allows it to lay down a blinding wall of slugs
that can intercept and pulverize incoming enemy fire, according to
company CEO David Smith. As long as the grenade or mortar is fired
from outside a range of about 50 meters or 162.5 feet and a Doppler
radar is in use, a Metal Storm system could be an effective defense,
he told UPI.

Closer than that and there is just not time to react.

"But if you are from 50 meters and beyond, if everything can work fast
enough -- the radar -- there is enough time mathematically" to shoot
down incoming fire, Smith said.

At least 153 U.S. troops have been killed in Iraq by enemy rockets and
mortars since the start of the war. Nearly 2,000 have been wounded.

The grenade launcher barrel can also carry less-than-lethal munitions,
like small bean bags, sponge grenades or smoke. On Jan. 16, the Army
awarded Metal Storm a $975,000 contract to further develop its
non-lethal rounds.

"Our so-called competition is (the) Mk19 - grenade machine gun," Smith
said. "It's enormously heavy. It takes six people to carry it into a
battlefield scene. It's not mobile.

"But the military has had this transition out of big system
warfighting into much lighter, higher firepower that can be carried
into battle by individuals or light vehicles. Our guns have no moving
parts -- so they have the same amount of fire power at significantly
reduced weight ratio."

Metal Storm technology has been under development for about a decade,
but a series of small-business innovative research contracts awarded
recently by the Department of Energy and the Army mean prototypes are
now being produced and demonstrated.

"We are to the point we can start providing prototypes. The Army is
very, very parochial in how they buy weapon systems," Smith said. "But
now we can put it into an actual environment."

The company is also studying whether it can mount a Metal Storm weapon
on a small helicopter, particularly looking at the recoil effect from
the gun.

Smith said such a system - deployable down to the squad level -- could
be useful in a place like Iraq, where it's a common tactic for
insurgents to launch a mortar and then run. By the time soldiers on
foot or in a vehicle get to the launch site, the shooters are long
gone. But a UAV quickly launched can see where the shooters run to,
and if a gun is on board, can shoot at them.

The Australian military is testing a Metal Storm gun of its own, the
Advanced Individual Combat Weapon (AICW). The AICW combines both an
assault rifle and a 40 mm grenade launcher in a single unit with a
common trigger, allowing the shooter to choose which munition he wants
to fire without having to refit his weapon. It also allows three
grenades to be fired at once, whereas one is the only option in the
current generation of weapons.

Metal Storm Inc. will demonstrate a high-explosive munition with a
10-meter (32.5 feet) or burst radius in Singapore on Feb. 6, Smith
said, and for the Army's Picatinny Arsenal and Armament Research,
Development and Engineering Center later that month.

© Copyright 2006 United Press International, Inc.

Flyingmonk
January 23rd 06, 06:55 AM
Metal Storm Intro
http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhabrr

Metal Storm Pistol
http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhabfr

Metal Storm UAV
http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhabl4

Metal Storm Area Denial
http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhabv8

Metal Storm Aircraft Pod
http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhac11

Metal Storm Robotic Grenade Launcher
http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhac76

The Monk

kd5sak
January 23rd 06, 07:03 AM
"Big John" > wrote in message
...
> Interesting development in guns.
>
> Big John
> ``````````````````````````````````````````````
>
>
> New super-gun to be tested in Feb
>
> By PAMELA HESS
> UPI Pentagon Correspondent
>
> WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 (UPI) -- Next month a new high-explosive munition
> will be fired in Singapore and then tested again by the U.S. Army,
> heralding what may be a sea change in weaponry: a gun that can fire
> 240,000 rounds per minute.
>
> That's compared to 60 rounds per minute in a standard military machine
> gun.
>

That oughta' be 600 rounds per minute. It's still a lot fewer than the metal
storm, though.

Harold Burton

Morgans
January 23rd 06, 08:27 AM
"Richard Riley" > wrote

> Whether or not MetalStorm is a good concept (and I have doubts)
> they've had remarkable success at getting press. I've been seeing
> them in the general media for about 2 years, with nothing more than a
> few prototypes and a contract for a design study. They all talk about
> how it can fire a million rounds a second. They don't follow up with
> "for 1/100,00th of a second."

Yeah, then heaven forbid the bad guys know we have that, then fire a 2nd,
3rd or 4th round at us. Until the system is reloaded, everyone is standing
around with their pants down around their ankles.

I'll make a bold prediction and say that it never leaves the prototype
stage, except for a few odd applications.
--
Jim in NC

Richard Lamb
January 23rd 06, 09:31 AM
Morgans wrote:

>
> "Richard Riley" > wrote
>
>> Whether or not MetalStorm is a good concept (and I have doubts)
>> they've had remarkable success at getting press. I've been seeing
>> them in the general media for about 2 years, with nothing more than a
>> few prototypes and a contract for a design study. They all talk about
>> how it can fire a million rounds a second. They don't follow up with
>> "for 1/100,00th of a second."
>
>
> Yeah, then heaven forbid the bad guys know we have that, then fire a
> 2nd, 3rd or 4th round at us. Until the system is reloaded, everyone is
> standing around with their pants down around their ankles.
>
> I'll make a bold prediction and say that it never leaves the prototype
> stage, except for a few odd applications.


You are probably right, Jim, but think of the Navy's AGIS.
Close-in high-rate radar-guided anti-air fire.
(A lot of dashes, but you get the drift)

Scale it down for use against ground threats - at a reasonable price -
and you've got youself a market.

It's one of the things they mentioned.


Richard

Morgans
January 23rd 06, 10:28 AM
"Richard Lamb" > wrote

> You are probably right, Jim, but think of the Navy's AGIS.
> Close-in high-rate radar-guided anti-air fire.
> (A lot of dashes, but you get the drift)
\
Yes, but AGIS can shoot off a couple of bursts (maybe more) then put some
more ammo to it and keep going. With this, you change out the whole system,
guns and all. Sounds like a lot more time between being ready for new
threats, and being exposed while reloading, or lots of systems mounted all
at once,
--
Jim in NC

I could see this new system mounted on a hummer or Bradley for RPG
protection, but you shoot one RPG, unload the system, then fire another RPG
and get right through.

Good idea, but I just can't see it being practical.

The best way to use it might be for IED's disposal, mounted on a RC vehicle.
Now if we could just detect them all.....

Matt Whiting
January 23rd 06, 11:23 AM
Richard Riley wrote:
> On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 07:03:47 GMT, "kd5sak" >
> wrote:
>
> :
> :"Big John" > wrote in message
> .. .
> :> Interesting development in guns.
> :>
> :> Big John
> :> ``````````````````````````````````````````````
> :>
> :>
> :> New super-gun to be tested in Feb
> :>
> :> By PAMELA HESS
> :> UPI Pentagon Correspondent
> :>
> :> WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 (UPI) -- Next month a new high-explosive munition
> :> will be fired in Singapore and then tested again by the U.S. Army,
> :> heralding what may be a sea change in weaponry: a gun that can fire
> :> 240,000 rounds per minute.
> :>
> :> That's compared to 60 rounds per minute in a standard military machine
> :> gun.
> :>
> :
> :That oughta' be 600 rounds per minute. It's still a lot fewer than the metal
> :storm, though.
>
> Whether or not MetalStorm is a good concept (and I have doubts)
> they've had remarkable success at getting press. I've been seeing
> them in the general media for about 2 years, with nothing more than a
> few prototypes and a contract for a design study. They all talk about
> how it can fire a million rounds a second. They don't follow up with
> "for 1/100,00th of a second."
>

I'm with you. Looks like more smoke than fire at present.

Matt

Flyingmonk
January 23rd 06, 01:52 PM
It's as good as a shotgun, no?

The Monk

kd5sak
January 23rd 06, 02:14 PM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...
> Richard Riley wrote:
>> On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 07:03:47 GMT, "kd5sak" >
>> wrote:
>>
>> :
>> :"Big John" > wrote in message
>> .. .
>> :> Interesting development in guns.
>> :>
>> Whether or not MetalStorm is a good concept (and I have doubts)
>> they've had remarkable success at getting press. I've been seeing
>> them in the general media for about 2 years, with nothing more than a
>> few prototypes and a contract for a design study. They all talk about
>> how it can fire a million rounds a second. They don't follow up with
>> "for 1/100,00th of a second."
>>
>
> I'm with you. Looks like more smoke than fire at present.
>
> Matt

Would seem to me to have possibilities if clustered and used as a variation
on the principle of the Claymore mine. Would think a Claymore would be more
economical though.

HWB

Rich S.
January 23rd 06, 03:19 PM
"Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
...

> I'm with you. Looks like more smoke than fire at present.

I'd like to have one mounted on my Skycar for to shoot evildoers.

Rich

January 23rd 06, 07:27 PM
On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 00:15:44 -0600, Big John >
wrote:

>
>Metal Storm's speed allows it to lay down a blinding wall of slugs
>that can intercept and pulverize incoming enemy fire, according to
>company CEO David Smith. As long as the grenade or mortar is fired
>from outside a range of about 50 meters or 162.5 feet and a Doppler
>radar is in use, a Metal Storm system could be an effective defense,
>he told UPI.

Just to put things in perspctive, I visited a personal civil war
museum in Atlanta when I was in college. It belonged to the father of
this "blind date" I had and we were at her parents house. She asked
me if I wanted to see the civil war stuff her father had accumulated
and I said sure. This was a double date, so me and my friend with his
date and my blind date went downstairs to see the stuff. I thought to
myself how good could this be? The father just liked scouring battle
fields and picking up stuff.

Well it was actually like a real museum, with many glass cabinets and
LOTS of stuff. In one cabinet were at least three or four lead
bullets that had fused together having met head on during a battle.
The examples were almost perfectly fused, they'd met precisely head
on, and he had three or four examples. Imagine the amount of firing
that had to be going on for that to happen.

Additionally there was a ships binnacle standing in the middle of the
room. It was very large and of wood construction bound in heavy
brass. I walked up to it and it said "USS Constitution" on it.

I turned to my date and asked "where did he get this replica?"

"It isn't a replica", she answered, "it's the first binnacle from the
Constitution". I couldn't believe her, but she told me to check it
out, ask the folks who oversee the Constitution if the binnacle
currently on the ship is the original. You'll find, she said, that it
is not. Years later I did walk through Old Ironsides and asked the
guy who was leading tours if the binnacle was the original. He
replied that he wasn't sure, but he did not think so.

Sorry about the diversion.

Corky Scott

Richard Lamb
January 23rd 06, 08:42 PM
kd5sak wrote:
> "Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>Richard Riley wrote:
>>
>>>On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 07:03:47 GMT, "kd5sak" >
>>>wrote:
>>>
>>>:
>>>:"Big John" > wrote in message
.. .
>>>:> Interesting development in guns.
>>>:>
>>>Whether or not MetalStorm is a good concept (and I have doubts)
>>>they've had remarkable success at getting press. I've been seeing
>>>them in the general media for about 2 years, with nothing more than a
>>>few prototypes and a contract for a design study. They all talk about
>>>how it can fire a million rounds a second. They don't follow up with
>>>"for 1/100,00th of a second."
>>>
>>
>>I'm with you. Looks like more smoke than fire at present.
>>
>>Matt
>
>
> Would seem to me to have possibilities if clustered and used as a variation
> on the principle of the Claymore mine. Would think a Claymore would be more
> economical though.
>
> HWB
>
>

a multi-shot claymore?

kd5sak
January 23rd 06, 10:46 PM
"Richard Lamb" > wrote in message
ink.net...
> kd5sak wrote:
>> "Matt Whiting" > wrote in message
>> ...
>>
>> Would seem to me to have possibilities if clustered and used as a
>> variation
>> on the principle of the Claymore mine. Would think a Claymore would be
>> more
>> economical though.
>>
>> HWB
>
> a multi-shot claymore?

Think of it as a stacked and sequentially fired series of claymore mines.
Guess if you had
a multibarreled unit set for single shots from each barrel it could be set
up as a trail ambush
and fire multishot bursts across a trail each time it was triggered. Nasty
sounding thing, I think.

HWB

Roger
January 27th 06, 06:22 AM
On 22 Jan 2006 22:55:06 -0800, "Flyingmonk" > wrote:

>Metal Storm Intro
>http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhabrr
>
>Metal Storm Pistol
>http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhabfr
>
>Metal Storm UAV
>http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhabl4
>
>Metal Storm Area Denial
>http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhabv8
>
>Metal Storm Aircraft Pod
>http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhac11
>
>Metal Storm Robotic Grenade Launcher
>http://tinypic.com/view/?pic=mhac76
>
>The Monk
All I get off these are a bunch of animated adds in German.

Roger
Roger

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