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標 題美國新型榴彈槍測試
發信站交大資科_BBS (Tue Oct 11 00:55:57 2005)
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XM-25 Begins Testing Overseas
October 10, 2005: The XM-25 grenade launcher, which began
field testing last May, is now being tested by American
troops in Germany as well. So far, the troops have been
very enthusiastic about the new weapon. Those who have
served in Iraq, say the XM-25 would come in very handy
there, because enemy gunmen often duck behind cars or other
obstacles, and the XM-25 was designed to quickly get at
people behind that kind of cover.
The XM-25 was originally one of two weapons (the other
being a 5.56mm rifle) incorporated in the 18 pound XM-29
OICW. The OICW was developed, in the 1990s, as a replacement
for the 40mm grenade launcher. The 40mm rounds weigh 19
ounces each, the 20mm OICW round weighs half that. But
there were several major problems with the OICW. It was
too heavy and ungainly, and the 20mm "smart shell" it
fired did not appear capable of effectively putting enemy
troops out of action. So, in August, 2003, it was decided
to take the 5.56mm portion of the OICW and develop it as
a separate weapon (the XM-8) and develop the grenade
launcher part that fired the "smart shell" as the XM-25.
But the XM-25 would use a 25mm shell, which would generate
50 percent more fragments (and heavier ones at that) than
the 20mm shell of the OICW. The XM25 is expected to reach
the troops by 2008. But that might happen sooner if the
field testing continues to go well.
The 20mm and 25mm "smart shells" use a computer controlled
fuze. The X M-25 operator can select four different firing
modes via a selector switch on the weapon. The four modes
include "Bursting" (airburst). For this to work, the soldier
first finds the target via the weapons sighting system. The
sight includes a laser range finder and the ability to select
and adjust the range shown in the sight picture. For an air
burst, the soldier aims at an enemy position and fires a
round. The shell is optimized to spray incapacitating (wounding
or killing) fragments in a roughly six meter radius. Thus if
enemy troops are seen moving near trees or buildings at a long
distance (over 500 meters), the weapon has a good chance of
getting them with one shot. M-16s are not very accurate at that
range, and the enemy troops will dive for cover as soon as M-16
bullets hit around them. With smart shells, you get one (or a
few) accurate shots and the element of surprise.
The other modes are "PD" (point detonation, where the round
explodes on contact), PDD (point detonation delay, where the
round detonates immediately after it has gone through a door,
window or thin wall) and "Window", which is used for firing at
enemy troops in a trench, behind a stone wall or inside a room.
The round detonates just beyond the aiming point. For buildings,
this would be a window or door frame, cave entrance or the corner
of a building (to get enemy troops thought to be around the
corner.)
The XM25 is still a heavy weapon, with the final version coming
in at nearly 18 pounds. The 25mm shells weigh over half a pound
each. On the plus side, there is already a 25mm armor piercing
round (using a shaped charge capable of penetrating over 50mm of
armor) available. This makes the X M-25 capable of knocking out
light armored vehicles. The U.S. Army has fired over 30 million
25mm shells from the cannon on its M-2 Bradley armored vehicles
and was satisfied with the lethality of that shell against
infantry.
18磅=8.172公斤
小型油氣彈功能
One of the new options with the XM-25 25mm round is a
fuel-air explosive (or "thermobaric"). Such a shell would cause
greater blast effect in an enclosed space, and actually suck most
of the oxygen out of a cave or closed room long enough to make
surviving troops at least a bit groggy. This gives the attacking
troops an opportunity to rush in and kill the enemy, or take
prisoners. In combat, every little advantage helps.
http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htweap/articles/20051010.aspx
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