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New weapon - Metal Storm

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4 comments

  • Permanently deleted user
    Actually this concept is not new. The US Army developed the ELECTRICALY fired 20mm back in the late 60.s There were 5 rates rates of fire. Single shot, slow burst of 5, fast burst of 5, slow sustained fire, fast sustained fire, on fast fire, there would be 4 bullets in the barrel at the same time.

    The Vulcan 20mm multi barrel carried on the choppers was of the same concept.

    "A wise man is a man that realizes just how little he knows"
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  • Nighthawk
    Appreciate the info,I learn something every day.

    Best!!

    Rugster
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  • Theguncounterkid
    Saw this one on TechTV. Looks promising for perimeter defense, but not sure it will beat well placed claymores. Hard to say what role it would play on the battlefield. Too big to carry around and would take its own supply vehicle for any extended firing. neat concept though.
    -Kid
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  • seamus
    This weapon actually does involve new and innovative technology, notwithstanding the similarities to older concepts, as correctly mentioned by classic095. I don't pretend to completly understand the weapon, but know that the Phalanx Vulcan Close-In Weapon System (the CWIS gun) has problems with unacceptable round dispersion, apparently caused by oscillations of internal moving parts in its breech assembly. Reportedly, the Metal Storm technology solves that problematic dynamic. Presently, Metal Storm is being developed on 3 different weapon systems - two are for shoulder fired weapons: an advanced sniper rifle designed for use against light armored vehicles, and a rifle with 2 barrels for the soldier in the field. On the latter model, one barrel (in either in 20 or 40mm) uses the Metal Storm technology; the other barrel fires conventional 5.56mm NATO. I'm quite happy with my conventional guns, thank you, but realize that they're based on very old technology. Like it or not, new systems are on their way, big time, and eventually some will impact on the way modern new sporting weapons are designed. I have a photo of the Metal Storm MX5, taken March 2002, and I'll see if I can post it. It's about the size of the CWIS, similar to the configuration used on naval warships. I've not seen the rifle-type configuration.
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