War The Army Has Finally Fielded Its Next Generation Squad Weapons - bringing an end to the service's decades-long effort to replace its M4 and M16 family

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The Army has officially fielded its brand-new Next Generation Squad Weapon rifles to its first unit, bringing an end to the service's decades-long effort to replace its M4 and M16 family of military firearms.

Army Futures Command announced Thursday that soldiers from 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, accepted delivery of the XM7 Next Generation Rifle and XM250 Next Generation Automatic Rifle ahead of training in April.

Produced by firearm maker Sig Sauer, the XM7 is intended to replace the M4 carbine in close combat formations, while the XM250 will replace the M249 Squad Automatic Weapon, or SAW. Both new rifles are chambered in 6.8 mm to provide improved range and lethality against enemy body armor.

The Next Generation Squad Weapon series also includes the XM157 Fire Control smart scope, built by Vortex Optics, which integrates advanced technologies such as a laser range finder, ballistic calculator and digital display overlay into a next-generation rifle optic.

The fielding "is a culmination of a comprehensive and rigorous process of design, testing and feedback, all of which were led by soldiers," Col. Jason Bohannon, manager of soldier lethality for the Program Executive Office Soldier project, said in a statement. "As a result, the Army is delivering on its promise to deliver to soldiers the highest-quality, most-capable small-caliber weapons and ammunition."

Based on Sig Sauer's MCX-Spear rifle, the XM7 features a 13-inch barrel, both standard and left-side non-reciprocating charging handles, a collapsible buttstock, a free-floating reinforced M-LOK handguard, and AR-style ergonomics. The XM250, based on Sig's LMG 6.8 mm machine gun, features quick-detach magazines and increased M1913 rail space. Both weapons come with Sig Sauer suppressors designed to reduce the blowback from toxic fumes.

Soldiers should know that the XM7 is noticeably heavier than the M4 carbine -- 9.8 pounds suppressed in a basic combat load compared to the M4's 7.4-pound combat load, per the Army -- and delivers increased recoil compared to the M4 on par with a weapon system chambered in 7.62 mm, according to Sig Sauer officials.

According to the Army's fiscal 2025 budget request, the service has a long-term plan of buying 111,428 XM7 rifles, 13,334 XM250 automatic rifles, and 124,749 XM157 Fire Control devices stretching into the 2030s.

The XM7 and XM250 "ensure increased lethality against a broad spectrum of targets beyond current/legacy weapon capabilities; increased range, accuracy, and probability of hit; reduced engagement time; suppressed flash/sound signature; and improved controllability and mobility," the Army's budget says.

The service has been pushing for a new family of infantry rifles since the mid-1980s when it kicked off the Advanced Combat Rifle, or ACR, program to identify a replacement for the M16 family of assault rifles. The canceled ACR program was followed by the XM29 Objective Individual Combat Weapon program in the 1990s and the XM8 assault rifle effort of the early 2000s, both of which were also abandoned.

The M4/M16 replacement effort took on new urgency during the war in Afghanistan, where American soldiers found that the M16 family of rifles and their standard-issue 5.56 mm ammunition -- designed for the close-quarters combat of Vietnam and well-suited for urban warfare during the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq -- proved ineffective against Afghan insurgents engaged at longer distances amid the country's mountainous terrain, as The Associated Press reported in 2010.

That issue led to the 2010 fielding of the upgraded 5.56 mm cartridge, the M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round, as a temporary solution to bolster U.S. troops' lethality in Afghanistan. Eventually, the Defense Department's 2017 Small Arms Ammunition Configuration Study determined that an intermediate 6.8 mm cartridge would likely outperform both standard-issue 5.56 mm and 7.62 mm rounds, inducing the Army to establish the Next Generation Squad Weapon program in 2018 to replace both the M4 carbine and the M249 in its arsenal.

From there, the Army selected three gunmakers to furnish the service with prototypes of the NGSW-Rifle (the M4 replacement) and the NGSW-Automatic Rifle (the M249 replacement): General Dynamics-OTS Inc., AAI Corporation Textron Systems and Sig Sauer, the last of which had won the Army's Modular Handgun System program contract in 2017 to replace the M9 Beretta across every service in the U.S. armed forces.

Sig Sauer eventually clinched the contract in 2022. Since then, the Army has been conducting ongoing user testing on the rifles, putting them through their paces in extreme environments. In late March, days before revealing the initial fielding to 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, the service announced plans to build a 6.8 mm ammunition plant in Missouri to support the proliferation of the weapons across the force.

According to the Army, soldiers have spent more than 25,000 hours testing the next-gen weapons from initial development to fielding.

"The process of developing and fielding new equipment is never without challenges and setbacks and speed bumps, so we're celebrating the fact that we're delivering on schedule, as promised," Lt. Col. Mark Vidotto, the program lead for the Soldier Lethality Cross-Functional Team at Fort Moore, Georgia, said in a statement.
 
Pictures please
XM7:
xm7.png

XM250:
xm250.png
 
The XM7 has a civilian version known as the MCX-Spear. It has been available for purchase since January 2022.

mcx spear.png

From an old article:
A military non-profit expects to raise some $20,000 by auctioning off the civilian variant of the Army’s Next Generation Squad Weapon next week during the Special Operations Forces Industry Conference in Tampa, Florida. Twenty grand may sound like a lot — especially considering the retail price is listed at $7,999 — but that’s not an unheard-of selling price for the Sig Sauer MCX Spear, if you can find it in stock. Plus, the rifle will be sold as a kit that includes other military hardware like a TANGO6T riflescope and a Sig SLX Suppressor, which together cost roughly $3,000.

The New Hampshire gunmaker donated the rifle package to the Task Force Dagger Foundation, a Florida charity with a stated mission of supporting Special Operations members and their families, alongside a host of companies donating items like guns, blades, and other gear. In all, the organization expects to raise more than $60,000 during the silent auction and raffle. Todd Kelsey, a spokesman for the foundation, called it “one of our primary fundraising events each year.” Bidding for the Sig MCX-Spear Kit starts at $8,400 and the event ends May 17 at 8 p.m. eastern time.

The Sig MCX Spear is in many ways like the NGSW rifle, which has been heralded as the latest and greatest in firearm technology. The most significant difference between the two is the civilian variant – at least the one up for auction – is chambered for 6.8 Creedmoor instead of the Sig’s .277 Fury cartridge. However, it’s a multi-caliber gun, so you can swap the barrel to re-calibrate it. Additionally, the MCX Spear features side non-reciprocating charging handles, a six-position folding stock, ambidextrous controls, a match trigger, an adjustable gas piston, and M-LOK and Picatinny accessory mounting systems.

Sig introduced the civilian Spear in January, ahead of the Army officially picking its designs to replace the M4 carbine and M249 machine gun. The XM5 and the XM250 – the MXC Spear and Sig-LMG, respectively – were selected after 27 months of military testing. Compared to the older weapon systems, Sig’s designs were built to be lightweight, shoot a very high-velocity round, and be suppressor-ready. The Army announced the $20.4 million award in April and is expected to field the weapon systems this summer.
 
The XM7 has a civilian version known as the MCX-Spear. It has been available for purchase since January 2022.
It's a brand new gun patent.
It's going to be absurd until 2042, at which point you'll see clones for $700

What you're much more likely to see in the near-term are AR's chambered in the 6.8
 
Some contractor will get billions of dollars off of this yet Vietnam era weapons are more still more reliable and effective.
The M16 should have been modernized like how the Canadians upped the C7A1 to the C7A2.

Give it an adjustable buttstock.

The XM7 has a civilian version known as the MCX-Spear. It has been available for purchase since January 2022.
IIRC it's chambered in 5.56.

The M16 family is going to piss on the XM7's grave. I can see the XM250 seeing limited use.
Unless the USMC adopts it, it will be limited use since the public isn't in the mood for another 20 year war.

Plus I would not trust any product fron today's D.I.E design teams.
 
What you're much more likely to see in the near-term are AR's chambered in the 6.8.
Less likelihood and more certainty as gun manufacturers all the way down to Bubba's workbenchs already been tinkering with that particular 6.8 cartridge dimensions in ARs. Only reason 6.8 ARs aren't already on the market and same for 6.8 ammunition is Sig and U.S. Army is doing legal fuck-fuck bullshit to protect their decision from competitors.
 
I love how the standard configuration for this is 13" and suppressed.

Lawfare against the NFA can't move quickly enough.
You don't get more "in common use" than standard issue per infantry man.
This gun is never going to be adopted for the average grunt. The thing makes no sense for anyone but designated marksmen. Imagine trying to clear houses with a gun like this, you'll feel like grandpappy in Hue clearing houses with an M14 (which is 160 grams lighter than the XM7 with the suppressor btw).
 
I still wish we got OICW and XM8. All these modern rifles look the same, that includes the new replacements.
If Larry Vickers is to be believed we technically did get the XM8 in the form of MLOK furniture which was inspired by it. There's also that one QTS-11 rifle from China that looks a lot like the old OICW.

Also I can't stand rifles that are all desert/tan colored.
 
The M16 should have been modernized like how the Canadians upped the C7A1 to the C7A2.

Give it an adjustable buttstock.


IIRC it's chambered in 5.56.


Unless the USMC adopts it, it will be limited use since the public isn't in the mood for another 20 year war.

Plus I would not trust any product fron today's D.I.E design teams.
That's what the A5 program was for, VLTOR still produces the original design. (I actually *prefer* the a5 LOP, it's a bit larger than a carbine length buffer tube, given that I'm a larger guy uuuu)

Also why the fuck can't 6.5 Grendel or 6.8 SPC actually be adopted instead, all you'd need is a re barrel.
 
It's a brand new gun patent.
It's going to be absurd until 2042, at which point you'll see clones for $700

What you're much more likely to see in the near-term are AR's chambered in the 6.8
The dimensions of the new round are similar to a .308 so I can definitely see the AR-10 platform enjoying a surge in popularity. I might want to get a bolt and some stripped receivers before the price goes fucking bonkers... well more than gun prices already have.
 
This looks like the generic tactiool slop you use in a Call of Duty game at level 1 before you earn Create a Class, at which point you switch out to something better immediately.
I hope these are more impressive internally than they are looking from the outside. I fail to see why an M4 needs a massive re-work, you would think the HK416 would be accepted instead.
Actually, I just looked it up, they have already
This is what they give to the Marines, and the article states that these guns are given to the Army. How many different M4 clones do we need in our armed forces, again?
 
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