In 1948, the U.S. Army established
the Operations Research Office (ORO) to analytically
study a number of problems associated with ground
weapons in the nuclear era.
One of ORO's early
projects was ALCLAD, a search for better infantry body
armor. During this search, the ORO discovered just how
little was known about how individuals were wounded in
combat. ORO looked into several questions regarding the
manner in which soldiers were struck by rifle
projectiles and shell fragments, including:
-
frequency and
distribution of such hits
-
the types of
wounds incurred in combat and
-
the average
ranges at which wounds were inflicted
Answers to these
questions were obtained by evaluating over three million
casualty reports for World Wars I and II, as well as
data from the Korean conflict.
ORO's
investigations revealed that in the overall picture,
aimed fire did not seem to have any more important role
in creating casualties than randomly fired shots.
Marksmanship was not as important as volume. Fire was
seldom effectively used beyond 300 meters due to terrain
(WWII, Korea) although sharpshooters in WWI frequently
saw 1200m shots, and it discovered that most kills occur
at 100 meters or less.
From this data,
ORO concluded that what the Army needed was a low recoil
weapon firing a number of small projectiles so in 1957
the United States Army Continental Army Command (CONARC)
sought commercial assistance in the development of a
5.56mm military rifle.
CONARC sponsored
the development of a .22 military rifle and asked
Winchester and Armalite to come up with designs for a
high-velocity, full and semi auto fire, 20 shot
magazine, 6lbs loaded, able to penetrate both sides of a
standard Army helmet at 500 meters rifle. The competing
rifles were:
-
Winchester
- .224 Lightweight Military Rifle - patterned
after M1 and M1 Carbine
-
Springfield Armory - an Ordnance Corps facility,
was forbidden to enter its rifle by those opposed to
small caliber concept, but it too had a .224 model
based on the M14
-
Armalite
AR-15 -
The Armalite
Division of the Fairchild Engine and Airplane
Corporation, Costa Mesa, CA was established in 1954 for
the sole purpose of developing military firearms using
the latest in plastics and non-ferrous materials. It's
team of Eugene M. Stoner - key designer, Robert Fremont
- prototype manufacturing supervisor, and L. James
Sullivan - who oversaw drafting work had been they key
developers of the AR-15.
Prior to the
AR-15, Armalite had developed:
AR-1 -
7.62 NATO parasniper rifle, extremely lightweight,
using Mauser-type bolt action; only prototypes built
in 1954
AR-3 -
7.62 NATO self-loader using aluminum receiver,
fiberglass stock, and multiple lug locking system
similar to the one later incorporated into the AR-10
AR-5 - .22
Hornet survival rifle developed for US Air Force and
officially designated the MA-1
AR-7 - .22
long rifle self-loader, receiver and barrel store in
plastic stock. (1959-1960)
AR-9 - 12
gauge self-loading shotgun with aluminum barrel and
receiver (5lbs) 1955
AR-10 -
7.62 NATO auto-loader, aluminum receivers, led to
AR-15 design
The AR-15,
designed around slightly enlarged version of the .222
case firing a 55gr projectile at 3300fps, and weighing
in at 6.7lbs, took some of the best features from
earlier designs:
-
locking
system similar to Johnson Automatic Rifle
-
gas system
from Swedish Ljungman AG42B
-
in-line stock
to help with manageability during auto fire
-
hinged
upper/lower from FN-FAL
-
rear sight in
carry handle like British EM2
-
ejector port
cover from MP44
Project SALVO, a
number of studies conducted by the Operations Research
Office at Johns Hopkins University and supported by
several contractors chose the AR-15 as the best small
caliber weapon and it was adopted as the M16. The AR-15
had met all of the CONARC requirements, and AR-15
production could be highly automated, making it
inexpensive to manufacture. It's 5.56mm cartridge fired
a small 55gr bullet at nearly 3000fps, and it was
accurate and effective to 350 yards. That small
cartridge combined with the buffer system and inline
stock made it far more controllable in automatic fire
than the M14.