Military Wiki
Advertisement
XM307 Advanced Crew Served Weapon
XM307-01
Typical operation routine
Place of origin Flag of the United States United States
Production history
Manufacturer (Prime Contractor) General Dynamics Armament and Technical Products
Variants XM312
Specifications
Mass 50-80* lbs (22.7 kg) (Gun, mount, and fire control)*With ammo
Length 1,326 mm (52.2 in)
Barrel length 638 mm (25.1 in)
Crew 2 men

Caliber 25 x 59 mm
Action Gas operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire 250 rounds per minute
Effective firing range Lethal and Suppressive out to 2,187.2 yd (2,000 m)
Maximum firing range 3,937 yd (3,600 m)
Feed system Weapon-Mountable 31-Round Ammunition Can (Right or Left Feed), belt fed
Sights

Grenade Launcher: computerized with viewfinder

Machine Gun: fixed rear iron

The XM307 Advanced Crew Served Weapon (ACSW) was a developmental 25 mm belt-fed grenade machine gun with smart shell capability. It is the result of the OCSW or Objective Crew Served Weapon project. It is lightweight and designed to be two-man portable, as well as vehicle mounted. The XM307 can kill or suppress human beings out to 2,000 meters (2,187 yd), and destroy lightly armored vehicles, watercraft, and helicopters at 1,000 meters (1,094 yd). The project was canceled in 2007.[1]

Overview[]

The system was under development by General Dynamics Armament and Technical Products for the U.S. Army Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command (TACOM). As a part of the Small Arms Master Plan (SAMP) program, it is intended to either replace or supplement the Mk19 automatic grenade launcher and the M2 heavy machine gun. It fires 25 mm point-detonating and air burst style ammunition, including HE, and HEAT at a cyclic rate of 260 rounds per minute and has an effective range up to 2 kilometers.

The primary feature of the XM307 is its attenuated recoil system. The weapon controls recoil to a degree that a large tripod and heavy sandbags are not required to effectively employ this weapon. Because of its reduced recoil impulse and light weight, other mounting options are possible, such as small unmanned vehicles and aircraft. The XM307's airburst rounds make it much easier to bypass walls protecting enemies that could cause collateral damage if fired upon directly. Operators do not have to shoot through the wall, just through an opening or over the top to kill the people behind the cover, leaving the structure of the building intact. An additional feature of the XM307 is that it can be converted into the XM312, a .50-caliber version for infantry and light anti-armor support in under two minutes (1 minute, 42 seconds).

Specifications[]

System

  • Weight: 50 lb (22.5 kg) (gun, mount, and fire control)
  • Fire Control: full solution, day/night
  • Portability: two-man portable and vehicle mountable
  • Stability: up to 18 inch (457 mm) tripod height
  • Environmental: operationally insensitive to conditions

Gun

  • Dimensions: 9.9 W × 7.2 H × 52.3 L max inches (43.3 L charged) / 251 mm × 183 mm × 1328 mm (1100 mm charged)
  • Rate of Fire: 250 rounds per minute, automatic
  • Dispersion: less than 1.5 mils, one sigma radius
  • Range: lethal and suppressive out to 2,000 m
  • Ammunition: high-explosive airbursting, armor piercing, and training ammunition (HE, AP, TP, TP-S)
  • Feed System: weapon-mountable ammunition can (left feed)

Variants[]

A Remotely Operated Variant (ROV) for the Future Combat Systems family of vehicles is also under development.[2] The weapon system, which would be mounted on the vehicle, will be remotely operated from within the vehicle.

Program status[]

In May 2004, the development phase was funded through FY 2007.[1] In December 2005 funding was granted for a remotely operated vehicle variant.[2] However in 2007 the project canceled due to the low rate of fire of the prototypes.[3]

See also[]

References[]

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at XM307 Advanced Crew Served Weapon and the edit history here.
Advertisement