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5.56×45mm NATO

The 5.56×45mm NATO (official NATO nomenclature 5.56 NATO, but often pronounced "five-five-six") is a rimless bottlenecked intermediate cartridge family developed in the late 1970s in Belgium by FN Herstal.[5] It consists of the SS109, L110, and SS111 cartridges. On 28 October 1980, under STANAG 4172, it was standardized as the second standard service rifle cartridge for NATO forces as well as many non-NATO countries.[6][7][5] Though they are not entirely identical, the 5.56×45mm NATO cartridge family was derived from and is dimensionally similar to the .223 Remington cartridge designed by Remington Arms in the early 1960s.

5.56×45mm NATO
5.56×45mm NATO with measurement, left to right: projectile, empty case, complete round with projectile in case
TypeRifle, carbine, DMR, and LMG
Place of originBelgium
Service history
In service1980–present
Used byNATO, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Australia, other major non-NATO allies
Production history
DesignerFN Herstal
Designedlate 1970s–1980
Specifications
Parent case.223 Remington (M193)
Case typeRimless tapered, bottleneck
Bullet diameter5.70 mm (0.224 in)
Land diameter5.56 mm (0.219 in)
Neck diameter6.43 mm (0.253 in)
Shoulder diameter9.00 mm (0.354 in)
Base diameter9.58 mm (0.377 in)
Rim diameter9.60 mm (0.378 in)
Rim thickness1.14 mm (0.045 in)
Case length44.70 mm (1.760 in)
Overall length57.40 mm (2.260 in)
Case capacity1.85 cm3 (28.5 gr H2O)
Rifling twist178 mm (1 in 7 in) or 229 mm (1 in 9 in)
Primer typeSmall rifle
Maximum pressure (EPVAT)430.00 MPa (62,366 psi)
Maximum pressure (SCATP 5.56)380.00 MPa (55,114 psi)
Ballistic performance
Bullet mass/type Velocity Energy
3.56 g (55 gr) XM193 FMJBT 993 m/s (3,260 ft/s) 1,755 J (1,294 ft⋅lbf)
4 g (62 gr) SS109 FMJBT 948 m/s (3,110 ft/s) 1,797 J (1,325 ft⋅lbf)
4 g (62 gr) M855A1 FMJBT 961 m/s (3,150 ft/s) 1,859 J (1,371 ft⋅lbf)
4.1 g (63 gr) DM11 FMJBT 856 m/s (2,810 ft/s) 1,796 J (1,325 ft⋅lbf)
4.1 g (63 gr) GP 90 FMJBT 851 m/s (2,790 ft/s) 1,679 J (1,238 ft⋅lbf)
Test barrel length: 508 mm (20.0 in)
Source(s): NATO EPVAT testing, QuickLOAD, SAAMI, C.I.P.[1][2][3][4]

History

 
The 7.62×51mm NATO and 5.56×45mm NATO cartridges compared to an AA battery

In 1954, the larger 7.62×51mm NATO rifle cartridge[8] was selected as the first standard NATO rifle cartridge. At the time of selection there had been criticism that the recoil power of the 7.62×51mm NATO, when fired from a handheld lightweight modern service rifle, did not allow a sufficient automatic rate of fire for modern combat.[9]

The British had extensive evidence through their own experimentation with intermediate cartridges since 1945, and were on the point of adopting the .280 (7 mm) cartridge when the selection of 7.62×51mm (.300) as the NATO standard was made. The FN company had also been involved in the development of the .280 round, including developing a version of the FN FAL in .280.[10] Concerns about the recoil and overall effectiveness of 7.62 mm were overruled by the US, and the other NATO nations accepted that standardization was more important than the selection of a cartridge that was otherwise ideal.[5]

 
Service rifle cartridge cases: (left to right) 7.62×54mmR, 7.62×51mm NATO, 7.62×39mm, 5.56×45mm NATO, 5.45×39mm

The development of the cartridge that eventually became the .223 Remington (from which 5.56mm NATO would eventually be developed) would be intrinsically linked to the development of a new lightweight combat rifle. The cartridge and rifle were developed as one unit by Fairchild Industries, Remington Arms, and several engineers working toward a goal developed by U.S. Continental Army Command (CONARC). Early development work began in 1957. A project to create a small-calibre, high-velocity (SCHV) firearm was created. Eugene Stoner of Armalite was invited to scale down the AR-10 (7.62mm) design. Winchester was also invited to participate.[11][5] The parameters that were requested by CONARC:

Springfield Armory's Earle Harvey lengthened the .222 Remington cartridge case to meet the requirements. It was then known as the .224 Springfield. Concurrently with the SCHV project, Springfield Armory was developing a 7.62mm rifle. Harvey was ordered to cease all work on the SCHV to avoid any competition for resources.

Eugene Stoner of Armalite (a division of Fairchild Industries) had been advised to produce a scaled-down version of the 7.62mm AR-10 design. In May 1957, Stoner gave a live-fire demonstration of the prototype of the AR-15 for General Willard G. Wyman, Commander-in-Chief of CONARC. As a result, CONARC ordered rifles to test. Stoner and Sierra Bullet's Frank Snow began work on the .222 Remington cartridge. Using a ballistic calculator, they determined that a 55-grain bullet would have to be fired at 3,300 ft/s (1,006 m/s) to achieve the 500-yard performance necessary.[5]

Robert Hutton (technical editor of Guns & Ammo magazine) started development of a powder load to reach the 3,300 ft/s (1,006 m/s) goal. He used DuPont IMR4198, IMR3031, and an Olin powder to work up loads. Testing was done with a Remington 722 rifle with a 22-inch Apex barrel. During a public demonstration, the round successfully penetrated the U.S. steel helmet as required. But testing showed chamber pressures to be excessively high.[11][5]

Stoner contacted both Winchester and Remington about increasing the case capacity. Remington created a larger cartridge called the ".222 Special", which was loaded with DuPont IMR4475 powder.[5]

During parallel testing of the T44E4 (future M14) and the AR-15 in 1958, the T44E4 experienced 16 failures per 1,000 rounds fired compared to 6.1 for the AR-15.[5]

Due to several different .222 caliber cartridges being developed for the SCHV project, the 222 Special was renamed .223 Remington in 1959. In May of that year, a report was produced stating that five- to seven-man squads armed with AR-15 rifles had higher hit probabilities than 11-man squads armed with M-14 rifles. At a 4th of July picnic, Air Force General Curtis LeMay fired an AR-15 and was very impressed with it. He ordered a number of them to replace M2 carbines that were in use by the Air Force. By November, testing at Aberdeen Proving Ground showed that the AR-15 failure rate had declined to 2.5 failures per 1,000 rounds, resulting in the M-16 being approved for Air Force Trials.[5]

Marksmanship testing in 1961 comparing the M-16 to the M-14 indicated 43% of M-16 shooters achieved "expert" while only 22% of M-14 shooters did. General LeMay subsequently ordered 80,000 rifles.[5]

In the spring of 1962, Remington submitted the specifications of the .223 Remington to the Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute (SAAMI). In July 1962, operational testing ended with a recommendation for adoption of the M-16 rifle chambered in .223 Remington.[5]

In September 1963, the .223 Remington cartridge was officially accepted and named "Cartridge, 5.56mm ball, M193". The specification includes a Remington-designed bullet and the use of IMR4475 powder which resulted in a muzzle velocity of 3,250 ft/s (991 m/s) and a chamber pressure of 52,000 psi.[5]

In 1970, NATO members signed an agreement to select a second, smaller caliber cartridge to replace the 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge.[12] Of the cartridges tendered, the .223 Remington (M193) was the basis for a new design created by FN Herstal. The FN-created cartridge was named "5.56×45mm NATO" with a military designation of SS109 in NATO and M855 in the U.S.[13] These new SS109 ball cartridges required a 228 mm (1-in-9 inch) twist rate while adequately stabilizing the longer L110 tracer projectile required an even faster, 178 mm (1-in-7 inch), twist rate.[5]

The Belgian 62 gr SS109 round was chosen for standardization as the second NATO standard rifle cartridge which led to the October 1980 STANAG 4172. The SS109 used a 62 gr full metal jacket bullet with a seven grain mild steel tip to move the center of gravity rearward, increasing flight stability and thereby the chances of striking the target tip-first at longer ranges, in part to meet a requirement that the bullet be able to penetrate through one side of a WWII U.S. M1 helmet at 800 meters (which was also the requirement for the 7.62×51mm NATO). An actual helmet was not used for developmental testing, but an SAE 1010 or SAE 1020 mild steel plate, positioned to be struck at exactly 90 degrees. It had a slightly lower muzzle velocity but better long-range performance due to higher sectional density and a superior drag coefficient. This requirement made the SS109 (M855) round less capable of fragmentation than the M193.[citation needed][14]

The .223 Remington cartridge inspired an international tendency toward relatively small-sized, lightweight, high-velocity military service cartridges that allow a soldier to carry more ammunition for the same weight compared to their larger and heavier predecessor cartridges, have favourable maximum point-blank range or "battle zero" characteristics, and produce relatively low bolt thrust and free recoil impulse, favouring lightweight arms design and automatic fire accuracy.[10][15][16] Similar intermediate cartridges were developed and adopted by the Soviet Union in 1974 (5.45×39mm)[17] and by the People's Republic of China in 1987 (5.8×42mm).[citation needed]

Cartridge dimensions

The 5.56×45mm NATO has 1.85 ml (28.5 grains H2O) cartridge case capacity.

 
5.56×45mm NATO cross section

 

5.56×45mm NATO maximum NATO cartridge dimensions. All sizes in millimeters (mm).[18][19]

The rifling twist rate for this cartridge is 177.8 mm (1 in 7 in), 6 grooves right hand twist, Ø lands = 5.56 millimetres (0.219 in), Ø grooves = 5.69 millimetres (0.224 in).[6]

According to STANAG 4172 and the official NATO proofing guidelines the 5.56×45mm NATO case can handle up to 420.0 MPa (60,916 psi) piezo service pressure. In NATO regulated organizations every rifle cartridge combination has to be proofed at 537.5 MPa (77,958 psi) to certify for service issue.[20] STANAG 4172 defines the Belgian ball cartridge SS109 as the NATO reference cartridge and adds a considerable number of technical requirements like a minimum pressure of 88.0 MPa (12,763 psi) at the gas port 280 millimetres (11.0 in) down the 508 millimetres (20.0 in) long standard proof barrel and primer sensitivity that are not defined by civilian C.I.P. and SAAMI ammunition rulings and recommendations.[6]

The NATO military alliance uses a NATO-specific recognized class of procedures to control the safety and quality of firearms ammunition called NATO EPVAT testing. The civilian organisations C.I.P. and SAAMI use less comprehensive test procedures than NATO. The NATO Manual of Proof and Inspection AC/225 (LG/3-SG/1) D/8 stipulates each weapon and component considered vulnerable to the effects of a rapid change in pressure, for example barrels, breech blocks and bolts, will be tested by firing one dry round at a corrected minimum of 25% over pressure and one oiled round at a corrected minimum of 25% over pressure. Over pressure of 25% means 25% in excess of the service pressure resulting for the 5.56×45mm NATO up to 430.0 MPa (62,366 psi) (Pmax) piezo service pressure. The service pressure is defined as the mean pressure generated by the service cartridge at a temperature of 21 °C (70 °F). Such a high pressure proof is conducted with both the weapon and ammunition conditioned to an ambient temperature of 21 °C (70 °F). Each weapon will be individually tested, from an ammunition lot that produces a minimum corrected mean chamber pressure. The corrected proof pressure requirement (service pressure (Pmax) + 25%) for the 5.56×45mm NATO like the STANAG 4172 is 537.3 MPa (77,929 psi) (PE) piezo pressure. This pressure has to be recorded in a NATO-design EPVAT barrel with Kistler 6215 transducer,[21][22] HPI GP6 Transducer[23] or by equipment to C.I.P. requirements.[20]

The US SAAMI lists maximum average pressure (MAP) for the .223 Remington cartridge as 55,000 psi (379.2 MPa) piezo pressure with deviation of up to 58,000 psi (399.9 MPa).[24]

Rifle barrel configurations

When 5.56×45mm NATO was adopted as standard in 1980, NATO chose a 178 mm (1:7) rifling twist rate for the 5.56×45mm NATO chambering to adequately stabilize the relatively long NATO L110/M856 5.56×45mm NATO tracer projectile.[5][25][26] The US at that time converted all rifles in inventory by replacing the barrels and all new US military rifles since have been manufactured with this ratio.[27]

In the US builders of AR type rifles can specify barrels with either .223 Remington, .223 Wylde, 223 Noveske, or 5.56×45mm NATO chambers in lengths from pistol (7.5") to long rifle (24"). These barrels are also available with rifling ranging from 356 mm (1-in-14") to 178 mm (1-in-7"). US makers are moving toward 5.56×45mm NATO and 178 mm (1-in-7"), which will ensure the least liability.[28] Bolt action rifles have few options in this regard.[citation needed] Those chambered for .223 Remington may not have a fast enough rifling to stabilize the longer 5.56×45mm NATO bullets which range up to 77 gr. Some hunting loads of .223 Remington go to 90 grains.[27][29]

Performance

 
5.56mm NATO shown alongside other cartridges and a United States $1 bill
 
5.56×45mm NATO cartridges in a STANAG magazine

The 5.56×45mm NATO SS109/M855 cartridge (NATO: SS109; U.S.: M855) with standard 62 gr. lead core bullets with steel penetrator will penetrate about 38 to 51 cm (15 to 20 in) into soft tissue in ideal circumstances. As with all spitzer shaped projectiles, it is prone to yaw in soft tissue. However, at impact velocities above roughly 762 m/s (2,500 ft/s), it may yaw and then fragment at the cannelure (the crimping groove around the cylinder of the bullet).[30] These fragments can disperse through flesh and bone, inflicting additional internal injuries.[31]

Fragmentation, if and when it occurs, imparts much greater damage to human tissue than bullet dimensions and velocities would suggest. This fragmentation effect is highly dependent on velocity, and therefore barrel length: short-barreled carbines generate less muzzle velocity and therefore lose wounding effectiveness at much shorter ranges than longer-barreled rifles.[32]

Proponents of the hydrostatic shock theory contend that the shockwave from a high-velocity bullet results in wounding effects beyond the tissue directly crushed and torn by the bullet and fragments.[33][34][35] However, others argue that tissue damage from hydrostatic shock is a myth. Critics argue that sonic pressure waves do not cause tissue disruption and that temporary cavity formation is the actual cause of tissue disruption mistakenly attributed to sonic pressure waves.[36]

SS109/M855 NATO ball can penetrate up to 3 mm (0.12 in) of steel at 600 meters.[37] According to Nammo, a Finnish-Norwegian ammunition producer, the 5.56×45mm NATO M995 armour piercing cartridge can penetrate up to 12 mm (0.47 in) of RHA steel at 100 meters.[38]

The US Army's Ballistic Research Laboratory measured a ballistic coefficient (G7 BC) of 0.151 and form factor (G7 i) of 1.172 for the SS109/M855 ball projectile.[39]

The Swedish military has measured the bullet velocities of SS109/M855 military cartridges at 4 m (13.1 ft) from the muzzle fired from differing barrel lengths.

Barrel length SS109/M855 V4 bullet velocity V4 velocity loss
210 mm (8.3 in) 723 m/s (2,372 ft/s) 41 m/s (135 ft/s)
240 mm (9.4 in) 764 m/s (2,507 ft/s) 32 m/s (105 ft/s)
270 mm (10.6 in) 796 m/s (2,612 ft/s) 29 m/s (95 ft/s)
300 mm (11.8 in) 825 m/s (2,707 ft/s) 18 m/s (59 ft/s)
330 mm (13.0 in) 843 m/s (2,766 ft/s) 23 m/s (75 ft/s)
360 mm (14.2 in) 866 m/s (2,841 ft/s) 12 m/s (39 ft/s)
390 mm (15.4 in) 878 m/s (2,881 ft/s) 14 m/s (46 ft/s)
420 mm (16.5 in) 892 m/s (2,927 ft/s) 14 m/s (46 ft/s)
450 mm (17.7 in) 906 m/s (2,972 ft/s) 9 m/s (30 ft/s)
480 mm (18.9 in) 915 m/s (3,002 ft/s) 7 m/s (23 ft/s)
508 mm (20.0 in) 922 m/s (3,025 ft/s) -

Criticism

There has been much debate of the allegedly poor performance of the bullet on target in regard to stopping power, lethality, and range. Some of this criticism has been used to advocate an intermediate-sized cartridge between the 5.56 and 7.62 NATO sizes[40] while criticisms of poor barrier penetration and accuracy have been used to support the M855A1 EPR round.[4] Arguably, the criticisms about range, accuracy, and lethality are related to the change in barrel length and twist between the M16 and M4. The earlier 5.56 rounds (M855/SS109 and the original M193) were optimized for a 20-inch (51 cm) barrel with a 1:12 twist. The shorter 14.5-inch (37 cm) barrel of the M4 carbine (with a 1:7 twist) generates lower muzzle velocity, reducing the likelihood that the bullet will upset (yaw, fragment, or expand) in the target and resulting in less significant wounds.

Combat operations the past few months have again highlighted terminal performance deficiencies with 5.56x45mm 62 gr. M855 FMJ. These problems have primarily been manifested as inadequate incapacitation of enemy forces despite their being hit multiple times by M855 bullets. These failures appear to be associated with the bullets exiting the body of the enemy soldier without yawing or fragmenting. This failure to yaw and fragment can be caused by reduced impact velocities as when fired from short barrel weapons or when the range increases. It can also occur when the bullets pass through only minimal tissue, such as a limb or the chest of a thin, malnourished individual, as the bullet may exit the body before it has a chance to yaw and fragment. In addition, bullets of the SS109/M855 type are manufactured by many countries in numerous production plants. Although all SS109/M855 types must be 62 gr. FMJ bullets constructed with a steel penetrator in the nose, the composition, thickness, and relative weights of the jackets, penetrators, and cores are quite variable, as are the types and position of the cannelures. Because of the significant differences in construction between bullets within the SS109/M855 category, terminal performance is quite variable—with differences noted in yaw, fragmentation, and penetration depths.

[41]

Wound profiles in ballistic gelatin
Note: images are not to same scale
 
M16 M193 5.56×45mm
 
M16A2 SS109/M855 5.56×45mm NATO

If 5.56 mm bullets fail to upset (yaw, fragment, or deform) within tissue, the results are less significant wounds that may not cause adequate blood loss or damage to immediately stop the target's attack or advances. This is true for some 5.56×45mm FMJ bullets at extended ranges. As expected, with decreased wounding effects, rapid incapacitation is unlikely: enemy soldiers may continue to pose a threat to friendly forces and violent suspects can remain a danger to law enforcement personnel and the public. This failure of 5.56×45mm NATO bullets to yaw can be caused by reduced impact velocities as when fired from short-barreled weapons or when the range to the target increases. Failure to yaw and fragment can also occur when the bullets pass through only minimal tissue, such as a limb or the chest of a thin, small statured individual, as the bullet may exit the body before it has a chance to yaw and fragment. Two other yaw issues: Angle-of-Attack (AOA) variations between different projectiles, even within the same lot of ammo, as well as Fleet Yaw variations between different rifles, were elucidated in 2006 by the Joint Service Wound Ballistic Integrated Product Team (JSWB-IPT), which included experts from the military law enforcement user community, trauma surgeons, aero ballisticians, weapon and munitions engineers, and other scientific specialists. These yaw issues were most noticeable at close ranges and were more prevalent with certain calibers and bullet styles—the most susceptible being 5.56×45mm NATO FMJ ammunition like SS109/M855 and M193.

The 5.56×45mm NATO standard SS109/M855 cartridge was designed for maximum performance when fired from a 508 mm (20.0 in) long barrel, as was the original 5.56 mm M193 cartridge. Experiments with longer length barrels up to 610 mm (24.0 in) resulted in no improvement or a decrease in muzzle velocities for the SS109/M855 cartridge. Shorter barrels produce a greater flash and noise signature, and the addition of a suppressor to a short barreled AR family rifle can make it unreliable, as the reduced time for the propellant to burn in the barrel and higher muzzle pressure levels at the suppressor entrance can cause faster cycling and feeding issues. Unless the gas port can be regulated or adjusted for higher pressures, suppressors for short barreled 5.56×45mm NATO firearms must be larger and heavier than models for standard length rifles to function reliably. SS109/M855 cartridges fired from barrels under about 254 mm (10.0 in) in length do not have enough muzzle velocity energy to cause extreme damage that occurs only at terminal velocities of over 750 m/s (2,500 ft/s) on impact, reducing the wounding capacity.[43][44]

Compared to larger calibers, proponents of the 5.56×45mm NATO round contend that animal studies of the wounding effects of the 5.56×45mm NATO round versus the 7.62×39mm have found that the 5.56×45mm NATO round is more damaging, due to the post-impact behavior of the 5.56 mm projectile resulting in greater cavitation of soft tissues.[45] The US Army contended in 2003 that the lack of close range lethality of the 5.56×45mm NATO was more a matter of perception than fact. With controlled pairs and good shot placement to the head and chest, the target was usually defeated without issue. The majority of failures were the result of hitting the target in non-vital areas such as extremities. However, a minority of failures occurred in spite of multiple hits to the chest.[46]

Some have contended that shot placement is the most important parameter in determining the lethality of a bullet. Difficulty with the 5.56×45mm NATO at long ranges has been attributed to training;[47] Swedish ISAF units relied on .50 BMG heavy machine guns for long-range shooting due to resilience to factors such as range and wind drift. Underperformance is thus attributed to errors in range and wind estimation, target lead, firing position, and stress under fire, factors that can be resolved through training.[48][47]

Improvements

Advances have been made in 5.56 mm ammunition. The U.S. military had adopted for limited issue a 77-grain (5.0 g) "Match" bullet, type classified as the Mk 262. The heavy, lightly constructed bullet fragments more violently at short range and also has a longer fragmentation range.[49] Originally designed for use in the Mk 12 SPR, the ammunition has found favor with special forces[50] units who were seeking a more effective cartridge to fire from their M4A1 carbines. Commercially available loadings using these heavier (and longer) bullets can be prohibitively expensive and cost much more than military surplus ammunition. Additionally, these heavy-for-caliber loadings sacrifice some penetrative ability compared to the M855 round (which has a steel penetrator tip). Performance of 5.56×45mm military ammunition can generally be categorized as almost entirely dependent upon velocity in order to wound effectively. Heavy OTM bullets enhance soft tissue wounding ability at the expense of hard-target/barrier penetration.[citation needed]

U.S. Special Forces had sought to create a round that had increased power out of carbine M4 barrels and compact SCAR-L barrels, while increasing hard target performance. Developmental efforts led to the creation of the Mk318. The bullet uses an open-tip design to inflict damage on soft tissue, and has a brass rear to penetrate hard targets. The tip and lead core fragments consistently even when using short barrels, while the rear moves through once the front impacts.[51] It has more consistent performance because it is not yaw-dependent like the M855; the nose fragments upon impact and solid rear penetrator continues to move relatively straight. This makes the Mk318 effective against personnel with or without body armor. The round also increases accuracy, from 3–5 minute of angle (MOA) with the M855 from an M4A1 barrel to 1.71 MOA at 300 yards and 1.67 MOA at 600 yards from a 14 in (360 mm) SCAR-L barrel.[52]

For general issue, the U.S. Army adopted the M855A1 round in 2010 to replace the M855. The primary reason was pressure to use non-lead bullets. The lead slug is replaced by a copper alloy slug in a reverse-drawn jacket, with a hardened steel penetrator extending beyond the jacket, reducing lead contamination to the environment. The M855A1 offers several improvements other than being lead-free. It is slightly more accurate, has better consistency of effect in regards to wounding ability, and has an increased penetrating capability. The 62 grain (4.0 g) projectile can better penetrate steel, brick, concrete, and masonry walls, as well as body armor and sheet metal. It penetrates 38 in (9.5 mm) of mild steel at 350 meters, which the M855 can only do at 160 meters. The propellant burns faster, which decreases the muzzle flash and gives a higher muzzle velocity, an important feature when fired from a short barreled M4 carbine. Though the M855A1 is more expensive to produce, its performance is considered to compensate. One possible danger is that it generates much greater pressure in the chamber when fired, decreasing service life of parts and increasing the risk of catastrophic failure of the weapon (though this has yet to occur).[53][54]

The U.S. Marines adopted the Mk318 in early 2010 due to delays with the M855A1. This was a temporary measure until the M855A1 was available for them, which occurred in mid-2010 when the Army began to receive the rounds. Both the Mk318 and M855A1 weigh the same and have similar performance, and both have better performance than the M855 against all targets. SOCOM spent less money developing the Mk318 and it is marginally better than the M855A1 in some situations, but costs more per round. The Army spent more developing the M855A1 which performs as well or nearly as well as the Mk318, but is cheaper per round and has the advantage of being lead-free. While SOCOM constantly looks for better equipment, the Army and Marines have far more troops to supply and buy more ammunition than SOCOM.[55]

Alternatives

If the 5.56 mm bullet is moving too slowly to reliably yaw, expand, or fragment on impact, the wound size and potential to incapacitate a person is greatly reduced. There have been numerous attempts to create an intermediate cartridge that addresses the complaints of 5.56 NATO's lack of stopping power along with lack of controllability seen in rifles firing 7.62 NATO in full auto. Some alternative cartridges like the 300 AAC Blackout (7.62×35mm) focus on penetration and stopping power at short ranges by sacrificing long-distance performance. These calibers are designed to be interoperable with the 5.56 by maintaining similar dimensions, which allows them to be used in a 5.56-chambered rifle with a simple barrel change.

By late 2004, the 6.8mm Remington SPC (6.8×43mm) was in limited use with U.S. Special Operators.[56] However, it was not adopted for widespread use due to resistance from officials on changing calibers.[57] In 2007, both the U.S. SOCOM and the U.S. Marine Corps decided not to field weapons chambered in 6.8×43mm due to logistical and cost issues.[58]

In April 2022, the U.S. Army selected a new rifle and light machine gun as part of the Next Generation Squad Weapon Program. They will replace 5.56 mm weapons, being chambered in 6.8×51mm Fury that has greater accuracy and range while being more lethal than 5.56×45mm NATO and 7.62×51mm NATO against emerging threats.[59]

5.56mm NATO versus .223 Remington

The exterior dimensions of the 5.56mm NATO and .223 Remington cartridges are identical.[13][60] While the cartridges are identical other than powder load, the chamber leade, i.e. the area where the rifling begins, is cut to a sharper angle on some .223 commercial chambers. Because of this, a cartridge loaded to generate 5.56mm pressures in a 5.56mm chamber may develop pressures that exceed SAAMI limits when fired from a short-leade .223 Remington chamber. As the chambers differ, the head space gauges used for the two chamberings differ.[61]

Brass case

The dimensional specifications of 5.56 NATO and .223 commercial brass cases are identical. The cases tend to have similar case capacity when measured, with variations chiefly due to brand, not 5.56 vs .223 designation. The result of this is that there is no such thing as "5.56 brass" or ".223 brass", the differences in the cartridges lie in pressure ratings and in chamber leade length, not in the shape or thickness of the brass.[62][63]

In July 2012, the US Army made a request for vendors to supply alternative cartridge cases to reduce the weight of an M855A1 5.56 mm round by at least 10 percent, as well as for the 7.62 NATO and .50 BMG rounds. The cartridge cases must maintain all performance requirements when fully assembled, be able to be used by the Lake City Army Ammunition Plant, must be manufactured in quantities totaling approximately 45 million per year. Polymer-cased ammunition is expected as a likely lightweight case technology.[64] A hybrid polymer/metal version of a conventional cartridge case would be thicker than regular cases and reduce the amount of space for the propellant,[65] although certain polymers could be thermodynamically more efficient and not lose energy to the case or chamber when fired.[66]

Pressure

C.I.P. defines the maximum service and proof test pressures of the .223 Remington cartridge equal to the 5.56mm NATO, at 430 MPa (62,366 psi). This differs from the SAAMI maximum pressure specification for .223 Remington of 380 MPa (55,114 psi), due to CIP test protocols measuring pressure using a drilled case, rather than an intact case with a conformal piston, along with other differences.[67] NATO uses NATO EPVAT pressure test protocols for their small arms ammunition specifications.[68][69] Differences in testing methodology have led to widespread confusion, however when measured with identical measuring equipment using identical methodologies, .223 Remington yields peak average pressures about 5,000 psi lower than 5.56 NATO.[70]

Chamber

The 5.56mm NATO chamber, known as a NATO or mil-spec chamber, has a longer leade, which is the distance between the mouth of the cartridge and the point at which the rifling engages the bullet. The .223 Remington chamber, known as SAAMI chamber, is allowed to have a shorter leade, and is only required to be proof tested to the lower SAAMI chamber pressure. To address these issues, various proprietary chambers exist, such as the Wylde chamber (Rock River Arms)[71] or the ArmaLite chamber, which are designed to handle both 5.56×45mm NATO and .223 Remington equally well. The leade of the .223 Remington minimum C.I.P. chamber also differs from the 5.56mm NATO chamber specification. The casings and chambers .223 Remington and 5.56×45mm NATO are virtually the same dimensions, but due to the fact that .223 Remington is designed to handle much lower pressures than the 5.56×45mm NATO the rounds are not completely interchangeable. Firing a 5.56×45mm NATO round out of a rifle chambered in .223 Remington could be injurious or fatal to the user as well as the gun, however .223 Remington ammunition can be fired safely from almost any rifle chambered in 5.56×45mm NATO as the NATO specified rifles can handle much higher chamber pressures than the .223 Remington is capable of producing.[citation needed]

Using commercial .223 Remington cartridges in a 5.56mm NATO chambered rifle should work reliably, but until recently, it was believed this was less accurate than when fired from a .223 Remington chambered gun due to the longer leade.[72] Although that may have been true in the early 1960s when the two rounds were developed, recent testing has shown that with today's ammunition, rifles chambered in 5.56×45mm NATO can also fire .223 ammunition every bit as accurately as rifles chambered in .223 Remington, and the 5.56×45mm NATO chamber has the additional advantage of being able to safely fire both calibers.[73] Using 5.56×45mm NATO mil-spec cartridges (such as the M855) in a .223 Remington chambered rifle can lead to excessive wear and stress on the rifle and even be unsafe, and SAAMI recommends against the practice.[74][75] Some commercial rifles marked as ".223 Remington" are in fact suited for 5.56×45mm NATO, such as many commercial AR-15 variants and the Ruger Mini-14 (marked ".223 cal", except the Mini-14 "Target" model, which only fires .223), but the manufacturer should always be consulted to verify that this is acceptable before attempting it, and signs of excessive pressure (such as flattening or gas staining of the primers) should be looked for in the initial testing with 5.56×45mm NATO ammunition.[76]

The upper receiver (to which the barrel with its chamber are attached) and the lower receiver are entirely separate parts in AR-15 style rifles. If the lower receiver has either .223 or 5.56 stamped on it, it does not guarantee the upper assembly is rated for the same caliber, because the upper and the lower receiver in the same rifle can, and frequently do, come from different manufacturers – particularly with rifles sold to civilians or second-hand rifles that have been repaired with spare parts. Since all parts are interchangeable, a shooter must take great caution to check for markings of 5.56×45mm on the barrel before attempting to fire 5.56×45mm NATO ammunition out of it.[citation needed]

In more practical terms, as of 2010 most AR-15 parts suppliers engineer their complete upper assemblies (not to be confused with stripped uppers where the barrel is not included) to support both calibers in order to satisfy market demand and prevent any potential problems. Some manufacturers have begun offering a hybrid .223 Wylde chamber designed to optimally support both cartridges.[citation needed]

Ammunition capacity for weight comparison

The first confrontations between the AK-47 and the M14 rifle came in the early part of the Vietnam War. Battlefield reports indicated that the M14 was uncontrollable in full-auto and that soldiers could not carry enough ammo to maintain fire superiority over the AK-47.[77] A replacement was needed, as a result, the Army was forced to reconsider a 1957 request by General Willard G. Wyman, commander of the U.S. Continental Army Command (CONARC) to develop a .223 caliber (5.56 mm) select-fire rifle weighing 6 lbs (2.7 kg) when loaded with a 20-round magazine.[citation needed]

 
Colt ArmaLite AR-15 Model 01 with 20-round magazine
 
An M16A1 with 30-round magazine

This request ultimately resulted in the development of a scaled-down version of the Armalite AR-10, called ArmaLite AR-15 rifle.[78][79][80] During testing it was found that a 5- to 7-man team armed with the ArmaLite AR-15s has the same firepower as 11-man team armed with M14s.[81] Also, soldiers armed with ArmaLite AR-15s could carry nearly three times more ammunition as those armed with M14s (649 rounds vs 220 rounds).[81] The ArmaLite AR-15, officially designated Rifle, caliber 5.56 mm, M16, was later adopted by U.S. infantry forces as the standard issue rifle.[10][5]

Here is a table comparing rifles based on a maximum ammunition load in box magazines of 10 kg (22 lb).

Rifle Cartridge Cartridge weight Weight of loaded magazine Max. 10 kilogram ammo load
AK-47 (1949) 7.62×39mm 252 gr (16.3 g) 30 rd mag at 819 g (1.806 lb)[82][83] 12 mags at 9.83 kg (21.7 lb) for 360 rds[84]
M14 (1959) 7.62×51mm NATO 393 gr (25.5 g) 20 rd mag at 750 g (1.65 lb) 13 mags at 9.75 kg (21.5 lb) for 280 rds[84]
M16 (1962) .223 Remington 183 gr (11.9 g) 20 rd mag at 320 g (0.71 lb) 31 mags at 9.92 kg (21.9 lb) for 620 rds[84]
AK-74 (1974) 5.45×39mm 162 gr (10.5 g) 30 rd mag at 545 g (1.202 lb)[83][85] 18 mags at 9.81 kg (21.6 lb) for 540 rds[84]
M16A2 (1982) 5.56×45mm NATO 190 gr (12.3g) 30 rd mag at 490 g (1.08 lb) 20 mags at 9.80 kg (21.6 lb) for 600 rds[84]

5.56mm NATO versus 7.62mm NATO

 
Comparison of 7.62mm NATO, 5.56mm NATO and 9mm Parabellum
Cartridge Model Cartridge size Cartridge weight Bullet weight Velocity Energy
5.56mm NATO M855 5.56mm (5.56 × 45 mm) Ammunition 5.56×45mm 12.31 g (190 gr) 4.02 g (62 gr) 922 m/s (3,025 ft/s) 1,709 J[86]
7.62mm NATO M80 7.62mm (7.62 × 51 mm) Ammunition 7.62×51mm 25.40 g (392 gr) 9.33 g (144 gr) 838 m/s (2,749 ft/s) 3,275 J

Hit probability refers to the ability of a soldier to concentrate on firing in spite of their weapon's recoil and noise, which is noticeably different between the two cartridges. The 7.62 NATO has twice the impact energy of the 5.56 NATO, preferable if a target is protected by higher level armor, especially at "medium" range. If not, both rounds normally penetrate satisfactorily through enemies up to 600 meters, approximately. A 5.56 NATO round fired from a 20 in (510 mm) barrel has a flatter trajectory than a 7.62 NATO round fired from a barrel of equal length, while the 5.56 NATO fired from a 14.5 in (370 mm) barrel has the same trajectory as the 7.62 NATO from a 20 in barrel, as well as the same time of flight. A 7.62 NATO round reaches 50 percent of its velocity within 80 mm (3.1 in) of the barrel when fired, so decreasing the barrel length for close quarters combat results in increased muzzle pressure and greater noise and muzzle flash.[48][47]

Military cartridges

 
Images of U.S. 5.56×45mm NATO ammunition

Australia

  • Cartridge, Ball, F1 (1985-2010?): 5.56×45mm FN SS109 equivalent produced by Thales Australia, formerly Australian Defence Industries (ADI).
  • Cartridge, Ball, F1A1 [Green tip] (2010–present): 5.56×45mm with optimized projectile having a modified boat tail length and meplat diameter, redesigned case thickness, new primer cup design, and AR2210V01 propellant.[87][88] Unlike the F1 cartridge, the F1A1 headstamp has a dimple at 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock. This is a hallmark of the automated SCAMP loading machinery used to make the new cartridges.
  • Cartridge, Blank, F3 [Crimped tip] (1985-1994; 1998–Present): 5.56×45mm Blank cartridge produced by Thales Australia, formerly Australian Defence Industries (ADI). Due to low demand lots are made every three years.

Austria

  • Round, 5.56mm Ball, M193: M193 equivalent produced by Hirtenberger Patronen[89]

Belgium

  • Cartridge, Ball, SS109: 5.56×45mm 61-grain [3.95 g][90] Semi-Armor-Piercing cartridge w/. steel penetrator produced by Fabrique Nationale. Adopted in 1979 as the NATO standard.[12]

Canada

  • Cartridge, Ball, C77: 5.56×45mm FN SS109 equivalent used in the C7, C8 and C9 type weapons. Made by General Dynamics Canada.[91]
  • Cartridge, Tracer, C78: 5.56×45mm FN SS110 equivalent used in the C7, C8 and C9 type weapons. Made by General Dynamics Canada.
  • Cartridge, Blank, C79 [Crimped tip]: 5.56×45mm blank cartridge used in the C7, C8 and C9 type weapons. Also made by General Dynamics Canada.

France

Ammunition made by GIAT.

  • Type O (Ordinaire, "Standard" or "Ball"): A Full-Metal-Jacketed lead-core bullet similar to the US M193. It was used with the FAMAS.
  • Type T (Traçant, "Tracer"): A tracer bullet similar to the US M196.

Germany

  • Patrone AA59, 5.56×45mm, DM11, Weichkern ("Soft-core", or Ball) [Green tip]: 5.56×45mm 4.1 g dual core ball cartridge w/steel core, similar to M855/SS109, produced by RUAG Ammotec.[92]
  • Patrone, 5.56×45mm, DM11 A1, Weichkern [Green tip]: 5.56×45mm 4.0 g (62gr) dual core ball cartridge w/steel core, similar to M855/SS109, designed for and used by the German Bundeswehr with NATO approval (AC/225-125A), produced by Metallwerk Elisenhütte GmbH.[93]
  • Patrone, 5.56×45mm, DM18, Manöver ("Maneuver"): Blanks with brass base, produced by Metallwerk Elisenhütte GmbH.[93]
  • Patrone AA63, 5.56×45mm, DM21, Leuchtspur (Tracer) [Orange tip]: 5.56×45mm tracer complement to DM11, also produced by RUAG Ammotec.
  • Patrone, 5.56×45mm, DM31, Hartkern ("Hard-core", or Armor Piercing): 5.56×45mm 4.0 g (62gr) armor piercing cartridge w/tungsten carbide core, produced by Metallwerk Elisenhütte GmbH.[93]
  • Patrone, 5.56×45mm, DM38, Übung ("Practice"): 5.56×45mm 0.5 g (7.70gr) plastic training cartridge, plastic case cartridge colored light blue with a light 7.7-grain plastic bullet designed for short ranges with a dangerous space under 400-metre, produced by Metallwerk Elisenhütte GmbH.[93]
  • Patrone, 5.56×45mm, DM41 A1, Weichkern: 5.56×45mm 4.0 g (62gr) FMJ cartridge, similar to M855/SS109 but without the steel penetrator tip, produced by Metallwerk Elisenhütte GmbH.[93]
  • Patrone, 5.56×45mm, DM51: 5.56×45mm 3.6 g (55gr) deformation pure copper cartridge designed for high energy transfer to soft targets, produced by Metallwerk Elisenhütte GmbH.[93]

South Africa

  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Ball, R1M1/M2: M193 equivalent with Boxer (R1M1) or Berdan (R1M2) primers produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings (currently a division of Denel) from 1977 to 1983.[94][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Tracer, R1M1/M2: M196 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1979 to 1983.[94][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Drill, R1M1/M2: Drill round produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1978 to 1983.[94][better source needed]
  • Cartridge, 5.56×45mm, Blank, R1M1/M2: M200 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1978 to 1983.[94][better source needed]
  • Cartridge, 5.56×45mm, Rifle Grenade Launching, R1M1: Grenade-launching cartridge produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1979 to 1983.[94][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Proof, R1M1/M2: Proof round produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1979 to 1983, identifiable by honey colouring on the tip and base until 1982 when this was switched to yellow. A warmer round variation exists which is identifiable by purple colouring on the tip, base, or both.[94][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Ball, M1A2/A3/A4: M193 equivalent with Berdan primers produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards.[94][better source needed][95][96]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Tracer, M2A2/A3/A4: M196 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards.[94][better source needed]
  • Cartridge, 5.56×45mm, Blank, M4A2-A7: M200 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards.[94][better source needed][95]
  • Cartridge, 5.56×45mm, Rifle Grenade Launching, M5A1/A2/A3: Grenade-launching cartridge produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards.[94][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, High Pressure Proof, M13A2/A3/A4: Proof round produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards, identifiable by yellow colouring on the tip, base, or both. A warmer round variation exists with purple colouring.[94][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Drill, M14A2/A3/A4: Drill round produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards.[94][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Ball, Manna: M1-type round with thin-walled jacket produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1986 onwards.[94][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Ball, M193: M193 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings for export sales.[95]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Ball, SS109/M855: FN SS109 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings for export sales.[95]
  • Round, 5.56×45mm, Tracer, M196: M196 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings for export sales.[95]
  • Cartridge, 5.56×45mm, Blank, M200: M200 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings for export sales.[95]

Switzerland

  • 5,6mm Gw Pat 90: The 63-grain 5.56×45mm Gewehrpatrone 90 / 5,6mm Gw Pat 90 ("5.6-mm Rifle Cartridge 90") is the Swiss Army's standard 5.56mm Ball round. It is optimized for use with the Sturmgewehr 90 service rifle, both which were adopted in 1987. The Sturmgewehr 90 rifled barrel has 6 right-hand grooves and a Swiss Army specification 254 mm (1:10 in) rifling twist rate. Originally the cartridge had a cupronickel-plated steel-jacketed bullet and Berdan primer, but it now has a tombac-jacketed bullet and lead-free Boxer primer. Since 1997 most components of the round are made in Switzerland.

United Kingdom

  • Round, 5.56mm Ball, M193: M193 equivalent produced by Radway Green (though some quantities of Hirtenberger Patronen-produced rounds were imported)[89][97][98]
  • Round, 5.56mm Ball, L2A1/A2: FN SS109 equivalent produced by Radway Green.[99][97][100][101][102]
  • Round, 5.56mm Tracer, L1A1/A2 [Red tip]: Tracer round complement to L2A1/A2, produced by Radway Green.[99][97][102]
  • Cartridge, 5.56mm Blank, L1A1/A2 [crimped tip]: Blank training round complement to L2A1/A2, produced by Radway Green.[99][97]
  • Round, 5.56mm Ball, L3A1: M193 equivalent produced by Hirtenberger Patronen for use in AR-15 weapons and the L101A1/A2 rifle.[103][better source needed]
  • Round, 5.56mm Ball, L15A1/A2: FN SS109 equivalent produced by Radway Green, optimised for use in AR-15 weapons such as the L119A1/A2 rifle.[104][99][105][106][107]
  • Round, 5.56mm Ball, L17A1/A2: FN SS109 equivalent produced by Radway Green, optimised for use with SA80 weapons.[108][109][104][105]
  • Round, 5.56mm Tracer, L16A1 [Red tip]: Tracer round complement to L15A1/A2 and L17A1/A2, produced by Radway Green.[106]
  • Cartridge, 5.56mm Blank, L18A1 [crimped tip]: Blank training round complement to L17A1/A2, produced by Radway Green.[109]
  • Round, 5.56mm Ball, L31A1: New "Enhanced Performance" design produced by Radway Green since 2016, based on the FN SS109 round but featuring an all-steel bullet for improved penetration and giving similar performance in both AR-15 and SA80 weapons.[110][105]
  • Round, Drill, L1A1 [chromed body]: 5.56×45mm inert training round, produced by Radway Green.

United States

 
M855 and M856 cartridges in an ammunition belt using M27 disintegrating links

Military ammunition was packed exclusively in 20-round cartons from 1963 to 1966. In late 1966 the 10-round stripper clip and magazine-charging adapter were introduced and ammunition began being packed in clips in bandoleers.

US Army

  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Ball, M193: 5.56×45mm 55-grain [3.56 g] ball cartridge. This was type-standardized and designated by the US Army in September, 1963.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Grenade, M195 [Crimped tip with Red lacquer seal]: 5.56×45mm high-pressure grenade-launching blank.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Tracer, M196 [Red or Orange tip]: 5.56×45mm 54-grain [3.43 g] tracer cartridge.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, High Pressure Test (HPT), M197 [stannic-stained or nickel-plated case]: High-pressure Testing cartridge used when proofing weapons during manufacture, test, or repair.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Dummy, M199 [No primer, Fluted case]: 5.56×45mm inert cartridge with fluted indentations in the case. Used for loading and unloading drills during basic training.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Blank, M200 [Crimped tip with Violet lacquer seal]: 5.56×45mm training blank cartridge.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Ball, M202: 5.56×45mm 58-grain FN SSX822 cartridge.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Dummy, M232 [No primer, Black-anodized case and bullet]: 5.56×45mm inert cartridge. Used for testing rifle mechanisms.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Ball, XM287: 5.56×45mm 68-grain ball cartridge produced by Industries Valcartier, Inc. An Improved version was also produced designated XM779.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Tracer, XM288: 5.56×45mm 68-grain tracer cartridge produced by Industries Valcartier, Inc. An Improved version was also produced designated XM780.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Grenade, M755 [Crimped tip with Yellow lacquer seal]: 5.56×45mm grenade launching blank specifically for the 64mm M234 launcher. The original white lacquer seal was discontinued due to excessive bore fouling. Its design is otherwise an exact duplicate of the M195 Grenade cartridge.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Ball, XM777: 5.56×45mm ball cartridge. An attempt to create a 55-grain SS109-style Semi-Armor-Piercing round that weighed the same as the M193 and could use the same US-standard 1-in-12-inch rifling. It replaced the 6×45mm SAW round as the baseline cartridge for the Squad Automatic Weapon trials in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Tracer, XM778: 5.56×45mm tracer cartridge mated with the XM777 Semi-Armor-Piercing cartridge.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Ball, M855 [Green tip]: 5.56×45mm 62-grain FN SS109-equivalent ball cartridge with a steel penetrator tip over a lead core in a full copper jacket.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Ball, M855LF Lead Free [Green tip]: 62-grain bullet with a steel penetrator tip over a tungsten-composite core in a full copper jacket. Primarily used during training in countries with strict lead disposal laws.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Ball, M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round [unpainted steel penetrator tip] (2010–Present): 62-grain bullet w/ a 19-grain steel penetrator tip over a copper alloy core in a partial copper jacket.[111]
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Tracer, M856 [Orange tip]: 5.56×45mm 63.7-grain FN L110 tracer cartridge. Provides red visible light and lacks a steel penetrator.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Tracer, M856A1 [Red tip]: 5.56×45mm 56-grain Lead Free slug (LF) Tracer with similar ballistic performance to the M855A1 and improved 70 to 900 m (77 to 984 yd) visible trace to range consistency.[112][113]
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Plastic, Practice, M862 [Brass primer, Aluminum case and Blue plastic projectile]: Short Range Training Ammo (SRTA) uses a light plastic bullet with a maximum range of just 250 meters. Because the M862 has less energy, the M2 training bolt must be used in the M16 Rifle / M4 Carbine for the weapon to cycle properly. The M2 training bolt and M862 cartridge case use a smaller-than-standard head diameter as a safety feature: this prevents standard ammunition from being able to be chambered or fired. The M862 SRTA is typically used for training on shooting ranges that are limited in size, such as near built-up or populated areas.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Armor Piercing, M995 [Black tip]: 5.56×45mm 52-grain AP cartridge with a tungsten core.
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Tracer, XM996 [Crimson tip]: So-called "Dim Tracer" with reduced effect primarily for use with night vision devices.

US Air Force

  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.64 mm, Ball, MLU-26/P (Munition, Live, Unit #26 / Personnel use)[114] (Federal Stock Number (FSN): 1305-968-5892, DOD Identification Code (DODIC): A066; assigned 1 January 1962): Early USAF designation for a 55-grain 5.56×45mm FMJ Boat-Tailed ball cartridge produced by Remington-Union Metallic Cartridge Company. It was their designation for the commercial 55-grain .223 Remington M.C. ("Metallic-Cased", or Full Metal Jacketed) cartridge, which the Air Force initially designated "5.64 mm" (.222 caliber) rather than 5.56 mm (.218 caliber). The first order in 1963 (headstamped RA 63 or REM-UMC 63) consisted of 8.5 million rounds and was procured for testing, training and unconventional warfare use with the XM16 rifle. The cartridges came packed unclipped in white 20-round commercial ammunition cartons, packed 35 cartons (700 rounds) per M2A1 ammo can, and shipped two M2A1 cans (1400 rounds in total) per wire-bound plywood crate. Until the Army's adoption of the M193 Ball round, this was the only type of military 5.56mm ammunition available in the South-East Asia theater.

US Navy & US Marine Corps

  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Frangible, MK 255 MOD 0 [White Tip]: 5.56×45mm 62-grain Reduced Ricochet Limited Penetration (RRLP) round with copper/polymer composite core for training and operational use.[115]
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm, Special Ball, Long Range, Mk 262 MOD 0/1: 5.56×45mm 77-grain Open-Tipped Match/Hollow-Point Boat-Tail cartridge. MOD 0 features Sierra Matchking bullet, while MOD 1 features either Nosler or Sierra bullet.
  • Cartridge, 5.56×45mm, semi-jacketed Frangible, MK 311 MOD 0 : Reduced Ricochet Limited Penetration (R2LP) round, 50-grain frangible bullet intended for training. Produced by Western Cartridge Company (headstamp: WCC).
  • Cartridge, Caliber 5.56 mm Ball, Enhanced 5.56 mm Carbine, MK318 MOD 0: 5.56×45mm 62-grain Open-Tipped Match Boat-Tail cartridge. Optimized for use with 14-inch barreled weapons like the M4A1 Carbine and MK16 SCAR and designed to penetrate light barriers like windshields or car doors with no loss of accuracy or damage.[116][117] Now designated as Caliber 5.56 mm Ball, Carbine, Barrier.

SS109/M855

In 1970, NATO decided to standardize a second rifle caliber. Tests were conducted from 1977 to 1980 using U.S. XM777 5.56 mm, Belgian SS109 5.56 mm, British 4.85×49mm, and German 4.7×33mm caseless. No weapon could be agreed upon, as many were prototypes, but the SS109 was found to be the best round and standardized on 28 October 1980. The SS109 was developed in the 1970s for the FN FNC rifle and the FN Minimi machine gun. To increase the range of the Minimi, the round was created to penetrate 3.5 mm of steel at 600 meters. The SS109 had a steel tip and lead rear and was not required to penetrate body armor. Barrels required at least a 1:9 in rifle twist, but needed a 1:7 in rifle twist to fire tracer ammunition.[48][47][52] The U.S. designated the SS109 cartridge the M855 and first used it in the M16A2 rifle. The 62-grain round was heavier than the previous 55-grain M193. While the M855 had better armor penetrating ability, it is less likely to fragment after hitting a soft target. This lessens kinetic energy transfer to the target and reduces wounding capability.[118] The M855 is yaw dependent, meaning it depends on the angle upon which it hits the target. If at a good angle, the round turns as it enters soft tissue, breaking apart and transferring its energy to what it hits. If impacting at a bad angle, it could pass through and fail to transfer its full energy.[54] The SS109 was made to pierce steel helmets at long range from the Minimi, not improve terminal performance on soft tissue from rifles or carbines.[42] In Iraq, troops that engaged insurgents at less than 150 yards found that M855 rounds did not provide enough stopping power. In addition to not causing lethal effects with two or more rounds, they did not effectively penetrate vehicle windshields, even with many rounds fired at extremely close range.[119] In Afghanistan, troops found that M855 rounds also suffered at long ranges. Although 5.56 mm rifles have an effective range of 450–600 meters, the M855 bullet's performance falls off sharply beyond 300 meters. The ranges are even shorter for short-barreled carbines. Half of small-arms attacks were launched from 300 to 900 meter ranges.[120] An M855 fired from an M4 Carbine has severely degraded performance beyond 150 meters.[42]

The maximum effective point target range of an M4 carbine with M855 rounds is 500 m (547 yd), with a maximum effective area target range of 600 m (656 yd). These mark the greatest distances the rounds can be expected to accurately hit the target, not the ranges that they have terminal effectiveness against them. Because the M855 is yaw dependent it requires instability in flight to deform upon hitting the target. It is the most stable in flight between 150–350 m (164–383 yd), potentially lessening its effectiveness if it strikes an enemy between those distances. In addition to this, tests have shown that 5.56 mm bullets fragment most reliably when traveling faster than 2,500 ft/s (760 m/s). From full-length 20 in (508 mm) rifle and machine gun barrels, rounds exhibit velocities above 2,500 ft/s (760 m/s) out to 200 m (219 yd). An M855 fired from a shorter barreled M4 carbine exhibits a bullet velocity of 2,522 ft/s (769 m/s) at 150 m (164 yd) range. Even if it impacts at optimum speeds, 70 percent of 5.56 mm bullets will not begin to yaw until 4.7 in (120 mm) of tissue penetration. 15 percent more begin to yaw after that distance, so up to 85 percent of rounds that hit do not start to fragment until nearly 5 in of penetration. Against small statured or thin combatants, the M855 has little chance of yawing before passing through cleanly and leaving a wound cavity no bigger than the bullet itself. The factors of impact angle and velocity, instability distance, and penetration before yaw reduce the round's predictable effectiveness considerably in combat situations.[121]

M855A1

 
M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round and its environmentally friendly (lead-free) projectile

The M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round (EPR) was introduced in June 2010. It features a lead-free 62 grain (4.0 g) projectile with a solid copper core, and is tailored for use in rifles with shorter barrels such as the M4 carbine. It provides more consistent performance compared to the M855.[112]

Deployment

On 24 June 2010, the United States Army announced it began shipping its new 5.56 mm cartridge, the M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round (EPR), to active combat zones. During testing, the M855A1 performed better than M80 7.62×51mm NATO ball ammunition against certain types of targets (particularly hardened steel). However, this was due to the addition of the steel penetrator to the M855A1 projectile compared to the standard lead-alloy core of the M80 projectile and is not an accurate comparison between the two cartridges. The US Army Picatinny Arsenal stated that the new M855A1 offers improved hard target capability, more consistent performance at all distances, enhanced dependability, improved accuracy, reduced muzzle flash, and higher velocity compared to the SS109/M855 round. Further, the Army stated the new M855A1 ammunition is tailored for use in M4 carbines, but should also give enhanced performance in M16 rifles and M249 light machine guns. The new 62-grain (4 g) projectile used in the M855A1 round has a copper core with a 19-grain (1.2 g) steel "stacked-cone" penetrating tip. The M855A1 cartridge is sometimes referred to as "green ammo" because it fires a lead free projectile.[111][112][122][123][124][125] It is not necessarily more lethal than the SS109/M855, but performs more consistently every time it hits a soft target and retains its performance at longer distances. The EPR can penetrate a 38 in (9.5 mm) thick mild steel barrier from an M4 at 350 m (380 yd) and from an M16 at 400 m (440 yd). Compared to the SS109/M855 the M855A1 muzzle velocities are somewhat increased to 3,150 ft/s (960 m/s) (+37 ft/s (11 m/s)) for the M16 and 2,970 ft/s (910 m/s) (+54 ft/s (16 m/s)) for the M4 carbine.[126] Ballistics for both rounds are similar and do not require weapons to be re-zeroed, but if they are the EPR can be slightly more accurate. The steel-tip penetrator of the M855A1 is noticeably separated from the jacket of the bullet and can spin, but this is part of the design and does not affect performance. The M855A1 costs only 5 cents more per round than the M855.[127] The M855A1 bullet has a 18 in (3.2 mm) greater length than the SS109/M855.[128] Because steel and copper are less dense than lead, the bullet is lengthened inside the case to achieve the same weight as its predecessor.[10] The longer bullet and reverse-drawn jacket make it more stable and accurate in-flight. Its steel tip is exposed from the jacket and bronzed for corrosion resistance. The tip is serrated and larger than the M855's steel tip. The M855A1's bullet composition, better aerodynamics, and higher proof pressures give it an extended effective range for penetration and terminal performance.[129] While effectiveness at different ranges is increased, the M855A1 does not increase the effective ranges at which weapons are expected to hit their targets. The Enhanced Performance Round was made to nearly match the trajectory of the M855 to aid in training consistency—the SS109/M855 ballistic coefficient (G7 BC) of 0.151 was improved to 0.152 for the M855A1[130]—but the ranges to get desired effects are greatly extended.[131]

The United States Marine Corps purchased 1.8 million rounds in 2010, with plans to adopt the round to replace the interim MK318 SOST rounds used in Afghanistan when the M855A1 project was delayed.[132] The Marine Corps plans to adopt the M855A1 round in 2018; although testing revealed it caused "some durability issues" with the Marines' M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle, the weapon is still "operationally suitable" when firing the round.[133]

On a media day at Aberdeen Proving Ground on 4 May 2011, reports were given about the M855A1's performance in the field since it was issued 11 months earlier. One primary advantage given by the round is its consistent performance against soft targets. While the older SS109/M855 was yaw-dependent, which means its effectiveness depends on its yaw angle when it hits a target, the M855A1 delivers the same effectiveness in a soft target no matter its yaw angle. The new SMP-842 propellant in the round burns quicker in the shorter M4 carbine barrel, ensuring less muzzle flash and greater muzzle velocity. The M855A1 was able to penetrate 38 inch (9.5 mm) of mild steel plate at 300 m (330 yd). The round even penetrated concrete masonry units, similar to cinder blocks, at 75 m (82 yd) from an M16 and at 50 m (55 yd) from an M4, which the M855 could not do at those ranges. Its accuracy is maintained and sometimes increased, as it was able to shoot a group 2 inches better at 600 m (660 yd). February 2011 was the first time the M855A1 was used more than the M855, and approximately 30 million M855A1 rounds have been fielded from June 2010 to May 2011.[134][135]

The M855A1 was put to the test at the 2012 National Rifle Association's National High-Power Rifle Championship at Camp Perry, Ohio in August 2012. The shooter for the Army was Rob Harbison, a contractor supporting small caliber ammunition capability development at Fort Benning Georgia. This was a special event for the Project Manager for Maneuver Ammunition Systems and the Army's Maneuver Center of Excellence as it was an opportunity to showcase the capabilities of the Enhanced Performance Round. With an M16 loaded with M855A1 ammo, Harbison fired a perfect 200 points in the Coast Guard Trophy Match, which is 20 shots fired from the sitting position at 200 yards, finishing 17th out of 365 competitors. He also scored a perfect 100 on the final string of ten shots during the Air Force Cup Trophy Match, fired at 600 yards from the prone position, which is 10 shots in a row within the 12-inch, 10-point ring at 600 yards with combat ammunition. Harbison was happy with the performance of the EPR, with his scores showing that the Army's newest general purpose round is accurate enough to go toe-to-toe in the competition with the best ammo that can be bought or hand-loaded. Harbison even said, "I don't think I could have scored any higher if I was using match-grade competition ammunition."[136] The M855A1 was not fired from 1:7 in rifled barrels used in standard Army rifles, but special Army Marksmanship Unit (AMU) match-grade 1:8 in rifled barrels, which produce more accurate results when firing 62-grain rounds.[128]

From fielding in June 2010 to September 2012, Alliant Techsystems delivered over 350 million M855A1 Enhanced Performance Rounds.[137]

Since its introduction, the M855A1 has been criticized for its St. Mark's SMP842 propellant causing increased fouling of the gun barrel. Post-combat surveys have reported no issues with the EPR in combat. A series of tests found no significant difference in fouling between the old M855 and the M855A1. However, manufacturers have reported "severe degradation" to barrels of their rifles using the M855A1 in tests.[138] The Army attributes pressure and wear issues with the M855A1 to problems with the primer, which they claim to have addressed with a newly designed primer.[139] It uses a modified four-pronged primer anvil for more reliable powder ignition,[129] with a stab crimp rather than a circumferential crimp to better withstand the new load's higher chamber pressure,[128] increased from 55,000 psi (379.2 MPa) to 62,000 psi (427.5 MPa).[65][140] During Army carbine testing, the round caused "accelerated bolt wear" from higher chamber pressure and increased bore temperatures. Special Operator testing saw cracks appear on locking lugs and bolts at cam pin holes on average at 6,000 rounds, but sometimes as few as 3,000 rounds during intense automatic firing. Firing several thousand rounds with such high chamber pressures can lead to degraded accuracy over time as parts wear out; these effects can be mitigated through a round counter to keep track of part service life. Weapons with barrel lengths shorter than the M4 firing the M855A1 also experience 50 percent higher pressures than a full-length M16 rifle barrel, which can cause port erosion that can boost the automatic fire rate, increasing the likelihood of jams.[128]

From June 2010 to June 2013, issuing of the M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round removed 1,994 metric tons of lead from the waste stream. 2.1 grams (32 gr) of lead are eliminated from each M855A1 projectile.[141]

Mk 262

The Mk 262 is a match-quality round manufactured by Black Hills Ammunition made originally for the Special Purpose Rifle (SPR). It uses a 77-grain (5.0 g) Sierra MatchKing bullet that is more effective at longer ranges than the standard issue M855 round.

In 1999, SOCOM requested Black Hills Ammunition to develop ammunition for the Mk 12 SPR that SOCOM was designing. For the rifle to be accurate out to 700 yards, Black Hills "militarized" a cartridge that used the Sierra 77 grain OTM (Open Tip Match) projectile; it switched from a .223 Remington to 5.56 mm case, increased pressure loading, crimped and sealed the primer, and added a flash retardant to the powder. The Mk 262 MOD 0 was adopted in 2002. Issues came up in development including reliability problems in different temperatures and when the weapon got dirty, and cycling issues in cold weather due to the slightly shorter barrel of the SPR compared to the full-length M16A2 barrel. The problems were addressed with a slower burning powder with a different pressure for use in the barrel, creating the Mk 262 MOD 1 in 2003. During the product improvement stage, the new propellant was found to be more sensitive to heat in weapon chambers during rapid firings, resulting in increased pressures and failure to extract. This was addressed with another powder blend with higher heat tolerance and improved brass. Also during the stage, Black Hills wanted the bullet to be given a cannelure, which had been previously rejected for fear it would affect accuracy. It was eventually added for effective crimping to ensure that the projectile would not move back into the case and cause a malfunction during auto-load feeding. Although the temperature sensitive powder and new bullet changed specifications, the designation remained as the MOD 1.[142]

According to US DoD sources, the Mk 262 round is capable of making kills at 700 meters. Ballistics tests found that the round caused "consistent initial yaw in soft tissue" between 3 and 4 in at ranges from 15 feet to 300 meters. Apparently it is superior to the standard M855 round when fired from an M4 or M16 rifle, increasing accuracy from 3–5 minutes of angle to 2 minute of angle. It possesses superior stopping power, and can allow for engagements to be extended to up to 700 meters when fired from an 18-inch barrel. It appears that this round can drastically improve the performance of any AR-15 weapon chambered to .223/5.56 mm. Superior accuracy, wounding capacity, stopping power and range have made this the preferred round of many special forces operators, and highly desirable as a replacement for the older, Belgian-designed 5.56×45mm SS109/M855 NATO round. In one engagement, a two-man special forces team reported 75 kills with 77 rounds.[143][144] The Mk 262 has a higher ballistic coefficient than the M855 of (G1)0.362 / (G7)0.181, meaning it loses less velocity at long-range.[130]

Mk318

Following early engagements in Afghanistan and Iraq, U.S. Special Operations Forces reported that M855 ammunition used in M4A1 rifles was ineffective. In 2005, the Pentagon issued a formal request to the ammunition industry for "enhanced" ammunition. The only business that responded was the Federal Cartridge Company, owned by Alliant Techsystems. Working with the Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division, the team created performance objectives for the new ammo: increased consistency from shot to shot regardless of temperature changes, accuracy out of an M4A1 better than 2 minute of angle (2 inches at 100 yards, 6.3 inches at 300 yards), increased stopping power after passing through "intermediate barriers" like walls and car windshields, increased performance and decreased muzzle flash out of shorter barrel FN SCAR rifles, and costs close to the M855. The first prototypes were delivered to the government in August 2007. Increased velocity and decreased muzzle flash were accomplished by the type of powder used. The design of the bullet was called the Open Tip Match Rear Penetrator (OTMRP). The front of it is an open tip backed up by a lead core, while the rear half is solid brass. When the bullet hits a hard barrier, the front half of the bullet crushes against the barrier, breaking it so the penetrating half of the bullet can go through and hit the target. With the lead section penetrating the target and the brass section following, it was referred to as a "barrier blind" bullet.[51][145]

Officially designated the Mk318 MOD 0 "Cartridge, Caliber 5.56mm Ball, Carbine, Barrier", and called SOST (Special Operations Science and Technology) ammunition, the 62-grain bullet fragments consistently, even out of a 10.5 in barrel. The lead portion fragments in the first few inches of soft tissue, then the solid copper rear penetrates 18 in of tissue (shown though ballistic gelatin) while tumbling. Out of a 14" in barrel, the Mk318 has a muzzle velocity of 2,925 ft/s (892 m/s).[51][145]

In February 2010, the U.S. Marine Corps adopted the Mk318 for use by infantry. To be fielded by an entire branch of the military, the round is classified as having an "open-tip" bullet, similar to the M118LR 7.62 NATO round. The SOST bullet uses a "reverse drawn" forming process. The base of the bullet is made first, the lead core is placed on top of it, and then the jacketing is pulled up around the lead core from bottom to tip. Conventional, and cheaper, bullets are made with the method of the jacket drawn from the nose to an exposed lead base. The reverse drawn technique leaves an open tip as a byproduct of the manufacturing process, and is not specifically designed for expansion or to affect terminal ballistics. The Pentagon legally cleared the rounds for Marine use in late January. The Marines fielded the Mk318 gradually and in small numbers. Initial studies showed that insurgents hit by it suffered larger exit wounds, although information was limited. SOST rounds were used alongside M855 rounds in situations where the SOST would be more effective.[51][145][146] In July 2010, the Marines purchased 1.8 million M855A1 Enhanced Performance Rounds, in addition to millions of Mk318 rounds in service, as part of its effort to replace its M855 ammo.[147] As of May 2015, Marine combat units still deployed with a mixture of both SOST and M855 rounds.[148]

As the issue of environmentally friendly ammo grew, the Marines looked to see if the Mk318's lead could be replaced while still meeting specifications. They found that by replacing the lead with copper and slightly stretching the jacket around to crimp the nose even more, the bullet's ballistic coefficient increased. To avoid visual confusion with the Mk 262 round, the bullet was entirely nickel-plated for a silver color; the enhanced silver-colored copper jacketed, open tip match, 62-grain projectile was named the Mk318 MOD 1.[149]

5.6mm Gewehr Patrone 90

 
Ready ammunition of the Swiss Army. Soldiers equipped with the SIG 550 assault rifle used to be issued 50 rounds of ammunition in a sealed can, to be opened only upon alert and for use while en route to join their unit. This practice was stopped in 2007.[150]
 
Swiss Army Gw Lsp Pat 90 tracer rounds

The 5.6mm Gewehr Patrone 90 or 5,6mm Gw Pat 90 (5.6 mm Rifle Cartridge 90), is the standard round used by the Swiss military in its rifle, the SIG SG 550. The cartridge is also known as the Cart 5,6mm 90 F (French: Cartouche pour Fusil / Italian: Cartuccia per Fucile) to the French- and Italian-speaking Swiss militiamen. The Swiss refer to the round as the 5.6 mm Gw Pat 90, although it is interchangeable with the 5.56×45mm NATO and .223 Remington round. The Gw Pat 90 round firing a 4.1 g (63 gr) FMJ bullet is optimized for use in 5.56 mm (.223 in) caliber barrels with a 254 mm (1:10 in) twist rate.

The Gw Pat 90 was designed for the SIG SG 550 when it came into production in 1987, replacing the SIG SG 510. Previous experience of a change in standard rifle had proved that changing the distance of fire for the training ranges was more expensive than the design of a new ammunition; this prompted the design of a cartridge nominally capable at 300 meters. The cartridge was also designed to reduce pollution by controlling lead emissions.[151] The bullet was originally clad with a nickel alloy jacket, however, this was found to cause excessive barrel wear, so in 1998 the nickel jackets were replaced with tombac jackets. In addition, in 1999 a copper plug was added to the base of the bullet to address environmental concerns.[151]

The ammunition is currently (2009) produced by RUAG Ammotec, a subsidiary of the RUAG group.[152] The ammunition is manufactured in three variations: the standard FMJ round, the tracer round, and a blank round.

The FMJ cartridge has a Copper-Zinc alloy case and uses a double base propellant. The bullet is a 4.1 g (63 gr) tombac jacketed FMJ projectile with a G1 ballistic coefficient of 0.331 (ICAO) / 0.337 (Army Metro). The projectile contains approximately 95% Pb, 2% Sb, 3% Cu, and was designed for terminal ballistic instability. The required accuracy for Gw Pat 90 ammunition out of factory test barrels is 63 mm (0.72 MOA) for 10 rounds (100% radius measurement method) out to 300 m. The Gw Pat 90 cartridge dimensions are in accordance with the civilian C.I.P. standards for the .223 Remington C.I.P. chambering.[153]

The Gw Pat 90 is used both in the Swiss military and in sport shooting. The very high level of individual training in the Swiss militia (every single soldier bearing a weapon has to shoot in order to maintain his ability once a year; see Gun laws in Switzerland) and the overall use of the Gw Pat 90 by the many Swiss citizens who shoot in competitions and for amusement has resulted in significant input on its usage. Over 1 billion cartridges had been produced as of 2005.

See also

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Further reading

  • Stan Christ, "5.56mm NATO Alternatives", Special Weapons Magazine, Semi-Annual #50 2007, pp. 52–59.

External links

  •   Media related to 5.56 x 45 mm NATO at Wikimedia Commons
  • (PDF). ADI Thales. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 July 2008.
  • DIRECT FIRE AMMUNITION Handbook 2019, Project Manager Maneuver Ammunition Systems 12 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine

45mm, nato, nato, round, redirects, here, larger, cartridge, 51mm, nato, even, larger, 99mm, nato, cartridge, official, nato, nomenclature, nato, often, pronounced, five, five, rimless, bottlenecked, intermediate, cartridge, family, developed, late, 1970s, bel. NATO round redirects here For the larger cartridge see 7 62 51mm NATO For the even larger 12 7 99mm NATO cartridge see 50 BMG The 5 56 45mm NATO official NATO nomenclature 5 56 NATO but often pronounced five five six is a rimless bottlenecked intermediate cartridge family developed in the late 1970s in Belgium by FN Herstal 5 It consists of the SS109 L110 and SS111 cartridges On 28 October 1980 under STANAG 4172 it was standardized as the second standard service rifle cartridge for NATO forces as well as many non NATO countries 6 7 5 Though they are not entirely identical the 5 56 45mm NATO cartridge family was derived from and is dimensionally similar to the 223 Remington cartridge designed by Remington Arms in the early 1960s 5 56 45mm NATO5 56 45mm NATO with measurement left to right projectile empty case complete round with projectile in caseTypeRifle carbine DMR and LMGPlace of originBelgiumService historyIn service1980 presentUsed byNATO Japan South Korea Taiwan Australia other major non NATO alliesProduction historyDesignerFN HerstalDesignedlate 1970s 1980SpecificationsParent case 223 Remington M193 Case typeRimless tapered bottleneckBullet diameter5 70 mm 0 224 in Land diameter5 56 mm 0 219 in Neck diameter6 43 mm 0 253 in Shoulder diameter9 00 mm 0 354 in Base diameter9 58 mm 0 377 in Rim diameter9 60 mm 0 378 in Rim thickness1 14 mm 0 045 in Case length44 70 mm 1 760 in Overall length57 40 mm 2 260 in Case capacity1 85 cm3 28 5 gr H2O Rifling twist178 mm 1 in 7 in or 229 mm 1 in 9 in Primer typeSmall rifleMaximum pressure EPVAT 430 00 MPa 62 366 psi Maximum pressure SCATP 5 56 380 00 MPa 55 114 psi Ballistic performanceBullet mass type Velocity Energy3 56 g 55 gr XM193 FMJBT 993 m s 3 260 ft s 1 755 J 1 294 ft lbf 4 g 62 gr SS109 FMJBT 948 m s 3 110 ft s 1 797 J 1 325 ft lbf 4 g 62 gr M855A1 FMJBT 961 m s 3 150 ft s 1 859 J 1 371 ft lbf 4 1 g 63 gr DM11 FMJBT 856 m s 2 810 ft s 1 796 J 1 325 ft lbf 4 1 g 63 gr GP 90 FMJBT 851 m s 2 790 ft s 1 679 J 1 238 ft lbf Test barrel length 508 mm 20 0 in Source s NATO EPVAT testing QuickLOAD SAAMI C I P 1 2 3 4 Contents 1 History 2 Cartridge dimensions 3 Rifle barrel configurations 4 Performance 4 1 Criticism 4 2 Improvements 4 3 Alternatives 5 5 56mm NATO versus 223 Remington 5 1 Brass case 5 2 Pressure 5 3 Chamber 6 Ammunition capacity for weight comparison 7 5 56mm NATO versus 7 62mm NATO 8 Military cartridges 8 1 Australia 8 2 Austria 8 3 Belgium 8 4 Canada 8 5 France 8 6 Germany 8 7 South Africa 8 8 Switzerland 8 9 United Kingdom 8 10 United States 8 10 1 US Army 8 10 2 US Air Force 8 10 3 US Navy amp US Marine Corps 8 11 SS109 M855 8 12 M855A1 8 12 1 Deployment 8 13 Mk 262 8 14 Mk318 8 15 5 6mm Gewehr Patrone 90 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory Edit The 7 62 51mm NATO and 5 56 45mm NATO cartridges compared to an AA battery In 1954 the larger 7 62 51mm NATO rifle cartridge 8 was selected as the first standard NATO rifle cartridge At the time of selection there had been criticism that the recoil power of the 7 62 51mm NATO when fired from a handheld lightweight modern service rifle did not allow a sufficient automatic rate of fire for modern combat 9 The British had extensive evidence through their own experimentation with intermediate cartridges since 1945 and were on the point of adopting the 280 7 mm cartridge when the selection of 7 62 51mm 300 as the NATO standard was made The FN company had also been involved in the development of the 280 round including developing a version of the FN FAL in 280 10 Concerns about the recoil and overall effectiveness of 7 62 mm were overruled by the US and the other NATO nations accepted that standardization was more important than the selection of a cartridge that was otherwise ideal 5 Service rifle cartridge cases left to right 7 62 54mmR 7 62 51mm NATO 7 62 39mm 5 56 45mm NATO 5 45 39mm The development of the cartridge that eventually became the 223 Remington from which 5 56mm NATO would eventually be developed would be intrinsically linked to the development of a new lightweight combat rifle The cartridge and rifle were developed as one unit by Fairchild Industries Remington Arms and several engineers working toward a goal developed by U S Continental Army Command CONARC Early development work began in 1957 A project to create a small calibre high velocity SCHV firearm was created Eugene Stoner of Armalite was invited to scale down the AR 10 7 62mm design Winchester was also invited to participate 11 5 The parameters that were requested by CONARC 22 caliberBullet exceeding supersonic speed at 500 yards 11 5 Rifle weight of 6 lbsMagazine capacity of 20 roundsSelect fire for both semi automatic and fully automatic usePenetration of US steel helmet through one side at 500 yardsPenetration of 135 inch steel plate at 500 yardsAccuracy and ballistics equal to M2 ball ammunition 30 06 Springfield out to 500 yardsWounding ability equal to M1 carbine 5 Springfield Armory s Earle Harvey lengthened the 222 Remington cartridge case to meet the requirements It was then known as the 224 Springfield Concurrently with the SCHV project Springfield Armory was developing a 7 62mm rifle Harvey was ordered to cease all work on the SCHV to avoid any competition for resources Eugene Stoner of Armalite a division of Fairchild Industries had been advised to produce a scaled down version of the 7 62mm AR 10 design In May 1957 Stoner gave a live fire demonstration of the prototype of the AR 15 for General Willard G Wyman Commander in Chief of CONARC As a result CONARC ordered rifles to test Stoner and Sierra Bullet s Frank Snow began work on the 222 Remington cartridge Using a ballistic calculator they determined that a 55 grain bullet would have to be fired at 3 300 ft s 1 006 m s to achieve the 500 yard performance necessary 5 Robert Hutton technical editor of Guns amp Ammo magazine started development of a powder load to reach the 3 300 ft s 1 006 m s goal He used DuPont IMR4198 IMR3031 and an Olin powder to work up loads Testing was done with a Remington 722 rifle with a 22 inch Apex barrel During a public demonstration the round successfully penetrated the U S steel helmet as required But testing showed chamber pressures to be excessively high 11 5 Stoner contacted both Winchester and Remington about increasing the case capacity Remington created a larger cartridge called the 222 Special which was loaded with DuPont IMR4475 powder 5 During parallel testing of the T44E4 future M14 and the AR 15 in 1958 the T44E4 experienced 16 failures per 1 000 rounds fired compared to 6 1 for the AR 15 5 Due to several different 222 caliber cartridges being developed for the SCHV project the 222 Special was renamed 223 Remington in 1959 In May of that year a report was produced stating that five to seven man squads armed with AR 15 rifles had higher hit probabilities than 11 man squads armed with M 14 rifles At a 4th of July picnic Air Force General Curtis LeMay fired an AR 15 and was very impressed with it He ordered a number of them to replace M2 carbines that were in use by the Air Force By November testing at Aberdeen Proving Ground showed that the AR 15 failure rate had declined to 2 5 failures per 1 000 rounds resulting in the M 16 being approved for Air Force Trials 5 Marksmanship testing in 1961 comparing the M 16 to the M 14 indicated 43 of M 16 shooters achieved expert while only 22 of M 14 shooters did General LeMay subsequently ordered 80 000 rifles 5 In the spring of 1962 Remington submitted the specifications of the 223 Remington to the Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers Institute SAAMI In July 1962 operational testing ended with a recommendation for adoption of the M 16 rifle chambered in 223 Remington 5 In September 1963 the 223 Remington cartridge was officially accepted and named Cartridge 5 56mm ball M193 The specification includes a Remington designed bullet and the use of IMR4475 powder which resulted in a muzzle velocity of 3 250 ft s 991 m s and a chamber pressure of 52 000 psi 5 In 1970 NATO members signed an agreement to select a second smaller caliber cartridge to replace the 7 62 51mm NATO cartridge 12 Of the cartridges tendered the 223 Remington M193 was the basis for a new design created by FN Herstal The FN created cartridge was named 5 56 45mm NATO with a military designation of SS109 in NATO and M855 in the U S 13 These new SS109 ball cartridges required a 228 mm 1 in 9 inch twist rate while adequately stabilizing the longer L110 tracer projectile required an even faster 178 mm 1 in 7 inch twist rate 5 The Belgian 62 gr SS109 round was chosen for standardization as the second NATO standard rifle cartridge which led to the October 1980 STANAG 4172 The SS109 used a 62 gr full metal jacket bullet with a seven grain mild steel tip to move the center of gravity rearward increasing flight stability and thereby the chances of striking the target tip first at longer ranges in part to meet a requirement that the bullet be able to penetrate through one side of a WWII U S M1 helmet at 800 meters which was also the requirement for the 7 62 51mm NATO An actual helmet was not used for developmental testing but an SAE 1010 or SAE 1020 mild steel plate positioned to be struck at exactly 90 degrees It had a slightly lower muzzle velocity but better long range performance due to higher sectional density and a superior drag coefficient This requirement made the SS109 M855 round less capable of fragmentation than the M193 citation needed 14 The 223 Remington cartridge inspired an international tendency toward relatively small sized lightweight high velocity military service cartridges that allow a soldier to carry more ammunition for the same weight compared to their larger and heavier predecessor cartridges have favourable maximum point blank range or battle zero characteristics and produce relatively low bolt thrust and free recoil impulse favouring lightweight arms design and automatic fire accuracy 10 15 16 Similar intermediate cartridges were developed and adopted by the Soviet Union in 1974 5 45 39mm 17 and by the People s Republic of China in 1987 5 8 42mm citation needed Cartridge dimensions EditThe 5 56 45mm NATO has 1 85 ml 28 5 grains H2O cartridge case capacity 5 56 45mm NATO cross section 5 56 45mm NATO maximum NATO cartridge dimensions All sizes in millimeters mm 18 19 The rifling twist rate for this cartridge is 177 8 mm 1 in 7 in 6 grooves right hand twist O lands 5 56 millimetres 0 219 in O grooves 5 69 millimetres 0 224 in 6 According to STANAG 4172 and the official NATO proofing guidelines the 5 56 45mm NATO case can handle up to 420 0 MPa 60 916 psi piezo service pressure In NATO regulated organizations every rifle cartridge combination has to be proofed at 537 5 MPa 77 958 psi to certify for service issue 20 STANAG 4172 defines the Belgian ball cartridge SS109 as the NATO reference cartridge and adds a considerable number of technical requirements like a minimum pressure of 88 0 MPa 12 763 psi at the gas port 280 millimetres 11 0 in down the 508 millimetres 20 0 in long standard proof barrel and primer sensitivity that are not defined by civilian C I P and SAAMI ammunition rulings and recommendations 6 The NATO military alliance uses a NATO specific recognized class of procedures to control the safety and quality of firearms ammunition called NATO EPVAT testing The civilian organisations C I P and SAAMI use less comprehensive test procedures than NATO The NATO Manual of Proof and Inspection AC 225 LG 3 SG 1 D 8 stipulates each weapon and component considered vulnerable to the effects of a rapid change in pressure for example barrels breech blocks and bolts will be tested by firing one dry round at a corrected minimum of 25 over pressure and one oiled round at a corrected minimum of 25 over pressure Over pressure of 25 means 25 in excess of the service pressure resulting for the 5 56 45mm NATO up to 430 0 MPa 62 366 psi Pmax piezo service pressure The service pressure is defined as the mean pressure generated by the service cartridge at a temperature of 21 C 70 F Such a high pressure proof is conducted with both the weapon and ammunition conditioned to an ambient temperature of 21 C 70 F Each weapon will be individually tested from an ammunition lot that produces a minimum corrected mean chamber pressure The corrected proof pressure requirement service pressure Pmax 25 for the 5 56 45mm NATO like the STANAG 4172 is 537 3 MPa 77 929 psi PE piezo pressure This pressure has to be recorded in a NATO design EPVAT barrel with Kistler 6215 transducer 21 22 HPI GP6 Transducer 23 or by equipment to C I P requirements 20 The US SAAMI lists maximum average pressure MAP for the 223 Remington cartridge as 55 000 psi 379 2 MPa piezo pressure with deviation of up to 58 000 psi 399 9 MPa 24 Rifle barrel configurations EditWhen 5 56 45mm NATO was adopted as standard in 1980 NATO chose a 178 mm 1 7 rifling twist rate for the 5 56 45mm NATO chambering to adequately stabilize the relatively long NATO L110 M856 5 56 45mm NATO tracer projectile 5 25 26 The US at that time converted all rifles in inventory by replacing the barrels and all new US military rifles since have been manufactured with this ratio 27 In the US builders of AR type rifles can specify barrels with either 223 Remington 223 Wylde 223 Noveske or 5 56 45mm NATO chambers in lengths from pistol 7 5 to long rifle 24 These barrels are also available with rifling ranging from 356 mm 1 in 14 to 178 mm 1 in 7 US makers are moving toward 5 56 45mm NATO and 178 mm 1 in 7 which will ensure the least liability 28 Bolt action rifles have few options in this regard citation needed Those chambered for 223 Remington may not have a fast enough rifling to stabilize the longer 5 56 45mm NATO bullets which range up to 77 gr Some hunting loads of 223 Remington go to 90 grains 27 29 Performance Edit 5 56mm NATO shown alongside other cartridges and a United States 1 bill 5 56 45mm NATO cartridges in a STANAG magazine The 5 56 45mm NATO SS109 M855 cartridge NATO SS109 U S M855 with standard 62 gr lead core bullets with steel penetrator will penetrate about 38 to 51 cm 15 to 20 in into soft tissue in ideal circumstances As with all spitzer shaped projectiles it is prone to yaw in soft tissue However at impact velocities above roughly 762 m s 2 500 ft s it may yaw and then fragment at the cannelure the crimping groove around the cylinder of the bullet 30 These fragments can disperse through flesh and bone inflicting additional internal injuries 31 Fragmentation if and when it occurs imparts much greater damage to human tissue than bullet dimensions and velocities would suggest This fragmentation effect is highly dependent on velocity and therefore barrel length short barreled carbines generate less muzzle velocity and therefore lose wounding effectiveness at much shorter ranges than longer barreled rifles 32 Proponents of the hydrostatic shock theory contend that the shockwave from a high velocity bullet results in wounding effects beyond the tissue directly crushed and torn by the bullet and fragments 33 34 35 However others argue that tissue damage from hydrostatic shock is a myth Critics argue that sonic pressure waves do not cause tissue disruption and that temporary cavity formation is the actual cause of tissue disruption mistakenly attributed to sonic pressure waves 36 SS109 M855 NATO ball can penetrate up to 3 mm 0 12 in of steel at 600 meters 37 According to Nammo a Finnish Norwegian ammunition producer the 5 56 45mm NATO M995 armour piercing cartridge can penetrate up to 12 mm 0 47 in of RHA steel at 100 meters 38 The US Army s Ballistic Research Laboratory measured a ballistic coefficient G7 BC of 0 151 and form factor G7 i of 1 172 for the SS109 M855 ball projectile 39 The Swedish military has measured the bullet velocities of SS109 M855 military cartridges at 4 m 13 1 ft from the muzzle fired from differing barrel lengths Barrel length SS109 M855 V4 bullet velocity V4 velocity loss210 mm 8 3 in 723 m s 2 372 ft s 41 m s 135 ft s 240 mm 9 4 in 764 m s 2 507 ft s 32 m s 105 ft s 270 mm 10 6 in 796 m s 2 612 ft s 29 m s 95 ft s 300 mm 11 8 in 825 m s 2 707 ft s 18 m s 59 ft s 330 mm 13 0 in 843 m s 2 766 ft s 23 m s 75 ft s 360 mm 14 2 in 866 m s 2 841 ft s 12 m s 39 ft s 390 mm 15 4 in 878 m s 2 881 ft s 14 m s 46 ft s 420 mm 16 5 in 892 m s 2 927 ft s 14 m s 46 ft s 450 mm 17 7 in 906 m s 2 972 ft s 9 m s 30 ft s 480 mm 18 9 in 915 m s 3 002 ft s 7 m s 23 ft s 508 mm 20 0 in 922 m s 3 025 ft s Criticism Edit There has been much debate of the allegedly poor performance of the bullet on target in regard to stopping power lethality and range Some of this criticism has been used to advocate an intermediate sized cartridge between the 5 56 and 7 62 NATO sizes 40 while criticisms of poor barrier penetration and accuracy have been used to support the M855A1 EPR round 4 Arguably the criticisms about range accuracy and lethality are related to the change in barrel length and twist between the M16 and M4 The earlier 5 56 rounds M855 SS109 and the original M193 were optimized for a 20 inch 51 cm barrel with a 1 12 twist The shorter 14 5 inch 37 cm barrel of the M4 carbine with a 1 7 twist generates lower muzzle velocity reducing the likelihood that the bullet will upset yaw fragment or expand in the target and resulting in less significant wounds Combat operations the past few months have again highlighted terminal performance deficiencies with 5 56x45mm 62 gr M855 FMJ These problems have primarily been manifested as inadequate incapacitation of enemy forces despite their being hit multiple times by M855 bullets These failures appear to be associated with the bullets exiting the body of the enemy soldier without yawing or fragmenting This failure to yaw and fragment can be caused by reduced impact velocities as when fired from short barrel weapons or when the range increases It can also occur when the bullets pass through only minimal tissue such as a limb or the chest of a thin malnourished individual as the bullet may exit the body before it has a chance to yaw and fragment In addition bullets of the SS109 M855 type are manufactured by many countries in numerous production plants Although all SS109 M855 types must be 62 gr FMJ bullets constructed with a steel penetrator in the nose the composition thickness and relative weights of the jackets penetrators and cores are quite variable as are the types and position of the cannelures Because of the significant differences in construction between bullets within the SS109 M855 category terminal performance is quite variable with differences noted in yaw fragmentation and penetration depths 41 Wound profiles in ballistic gelatinNote images are not to same scale M16 M193 5 56 45mm M16A2 SS109 M855 5 56 45mm NATO If 5 56 mm bullets fail to upset yaw fragment or deform within tissue the results are less significant wounds that may not cause adequate blood loss or damage to immediately stop the target s attack or advances This is true for some 5 56 45mm FMJ bullets at extended ranges As expected with decreased wounding effects rapid incapacitation is unlikely enemy soldiers may continue to pose a threat to friendly forces and violent suspects can remain a danger to law enforcement personnel and the public This failure of 5 56 45mm NATO bullets to yaw can be caused by reduced impact velocities as when fired from short barreled weapons or when the range to the target increases Failure to yaw and fragment can also occur when the bullets pass through only minimal tissue such as a limb or the chest of a thin small statured individual as the bullet may exit the body before it has a chance to yaw and fragment Two other yaw issues Angle of Attack AOA variations between different projectiles even within the same lot of ammo as well as Fleet Yaw variations between different rifles were elucidated in 2006 by the Joint Service Wound Ballistic Integrated Product Team JSWB IPT which included experts from the military law enforcement user community trauma surgeons aero ballisticians weapon and munitions engineers and other scientific specialists These yaw issues were most noticeable at close ranges and were more prevalent with certain calibers and bullet styles the most susceptible being 5 56 45mm NATO FMJ ammunition like SS109 M855 and M193 Dr Martin Fackler 42 The 5 56 45mm NATO standard SS109 M855 cartridge was designed for maximum performance when fired from a 508 mm 20 0 in long barrel as was the original 5 56 mm M193 cartridge Experiments with longer length barrels up to 610 mm 24 0 in resulted in no improvement or a decrease in muzzle velocities for the SS109 M855 cartridge Shorter barrels produce a greater flash and noise signature and the addition of a suppressor to a short barreled AR family rifle can make it unreliable as the reduced time for the propellant to burn in the barrel and higher muzzle pressure levels at the suppressor entrance can cause faster cycling and feeding issues Unless the gas port can be regulated or adjusted for higher pressures suppressors for short barreled 5 56 45mm NATO firearms must be larger and heavier than models for standard length rifles to function reliably SS109 M855 cartridges fired from barrels under about 254 mm 10 0 in in length do not have enough muzzle velocity energy to cause extreme damage that occurs only at terminal velocities of over 750 m s 2 500 ft s on impact reducing the wounding capacity 43 44 Compared to larger calibers proponents of the 5 56 45mm NATO round contend that animal studies of the wounding effects of the 5 56 45mm NATO round versus the 7 62 39mm have found that the 5 56 45mm NATO round is more damaging due to the post impact behavior of the 5 56 mm projectile resulting in greater cavitation of soft tissues 45 The US Army contended in 2003 that the lack of close range lethality of the 5 56 45mm NATO was more a matter of perception than fact With controlled pairs and good shot placement to the head and chest the target was usually defeated without issue The majority of failures were the result of hitting the target in non vital areas such as extremities However a minority of failures occurred in spite of multiple hits to the chest 46 Some have contended that shot placement is the most important parameter in determining the lethality of a bullet Difficulty with the 5 56 45mm NATO at long ranges has been attributed to training 47 Swedish ISAF units relied on 50 BMG heavy machine guns for long range shooting due to resilience to factors such as range and wind drift Underperformance is thus attributed to errors in range and wind estimation target lead firing position and stress under fire factors that can be resolved through training 48 47 Improvements Edit Advances have been made in 5 56 mm ammunition The U S military had adopted for limited issue a 77 grain 5 0 g Match bullet type classified as the Mk 262 The heavy lightly constructed bullet fragments more violently at short range and also has a longer fragmentation range 49 Originally designed for use in the Mk 12 SPR the ammunition has found favor with special forces 50 units who were seeking a more effective cartridge to fire from their M4A1 carbines Commercially available loadings using these heavier and longer bullets can be prohibitively expensive and cost much more than military surplus ammunition Additionally these heavy for caliber loadings sacrifice some penetrative ability compared to the M855 round which has a steel penetrator tip Performance of 5 56 45mm military ammunition can generally be categorized as almost entirely dependent upon velocity in order to wound effectively Heavy OTM bullets enhance soft tissue wounding ability at the expense of hard target barrier penetration citation needed U S Special Forces had sought to create a round that had increased power out of carbine M4 barrels and compact SCAR L barrels while increasing hard target performance Developmental efforts led to the creation of the Mk318 The bullet uses an open tip design to inflict damage on soft tissue and has a brass rear to penetrate hard targets The tip and lead core fragments consistently even when using short barrels while the rear moves through once the front impacts 51 It has more consistent performance because it is not yaw dependent like the M855 the nose fragments upon impact and solid rear penetrator continues to move relatively straight This makes the Mk318 effective against personnel with or without body armor The round also increases accuracy from 3 5 minute of angle MOA with the M855 from an M4A1 barrel to 1 71 MOA at 300 yards and 1 67 MOA at 600 yards from a 14 in 360 mm SCAR L barrel 52 For general issue the U S Army adopted the M855A1 round in 2010 to replace the M855 The primary reason was pressure to use non lead bullets The lead slug is replaced by a copper alloy slug in a reverse drawn jacket with a hardened steel penetrator extending beyond the jacket reducing lead contamination to the environment The M855A1 offers several improvements other than being lead free It is slightly more accurate has better consistency of effect in regards to wounding ability and has an increased penetrating capability The 62 grain 4 0 g projectile can better penetrate steel brick concrete and masonry walls as well as body armor and sheet metal It penetrates 3 8 in 9 5 mm of mild steel at 350 meters which the M855 can only do at 160 meters The propellant burns faster which decreases the muzzle flash and gives a higher muzzle velocity an important feature when fired from a short barreled M4 carbine Though the M855A1 is more expensive to produce its performance is considered to compensate One possible danger is that it generates much greater pressure in the chamber when fired decreasing service life of parts and increasing the risk of catastrophic failure of the weapon though this has yet to occur 53 54 The U S Marines adopted the Mk318 in early 2010 due to delays with the M855A1 This was a temporary measure until the M855A1 was available for them which occurred in mid 2010 when the Army began to receive the rounds Both the Mk318 and M855A1 weigh the same and have similar performance and both have better performance than the M855 against all targets SOCOM spent less money developing the Mk318 and it is marginally better than the M855A1 in some situations but costs more per round The Army spent more developing the M855A1 which performs as well or nearly as well as the Mk318 but is cheaper per round and has the advantage of being lead free While SOCOM constantly looks for better equipment the Army and Marines have far more troops to supply and buy more ammunition than SOCOM 55 Alternatives Edit If the 5 56 mm bullet is moving too slowly to reliably yaw expand or fragment on impact the wound size and potential to incapacitate a person is greatly reduced There have been numerous attempts to create an intermediate cartridge that addresses the complaints of 5 56 NATO s lack of stopping power along with lack of controllability seen in rifles firing 7 62 NATO in full auto Some alternative cartridges like the 300 AAC Blackout 7 62 35mm focus on penetration and stopping power at short ranges by sacrificing long distance performance These calibers are designed to be interoperable with the 5 56 by maintaining similar dimensions which allows them to be used in a 5 56 chambered rifle with a simple barrel change By late 2004 the 6 8mm Remington SPC 6 8 43mm was in limited use with U S Special Operators 56 However it was not adopted for widespread use due to resistance from officials on changing calibers 57 In 2007 both the U S SOCOM and the U S Marine Corps decided not to field weapons chambered in 6 8 43mm due to logistical and cost issues 58 In April 2022 the U S Army selected a new rifle and light machine gun as part of the Next Generation Squad Weapon Program They will replace 5 56 mm weapons being chambered in 6 8 51mm Fury that has greater accuracy and range while being more lethal than 5 56 45mm NATO and 7 62 51mm NATO against emerging threats 59 5 56mm NATO versus 223 Remington EditThe exterior dimensions of the 5 56mm NATO and 223 Remington cartridges are identical 13 60 While the cartridges are identical other than powder load the chamber leade i e the area where the rifling begins is cut to a sharper angle on some 223 commercial chambers Because of this a cartridge loaded to generate 5 56mm pressures in a 5 56mm chamber may develop pressures that exceed SAAMI limits when fired from a short leade 223 Remington chamber As the chambers differ the head space gauges used for the two chamberings differ 61 Brass case Edit The dimensional specifications of 5 56 NATO and 223 commercial brass cases are identical The cases tend to have similar case capacity when measured with variations chiefly due to brand not 5 56 vs 223 designation The result of this is that there is no such thing as 5 56 brass or 223 brass the differences in the cartridges lie in pressure ratings and in chamber leade length not in the shape or thickness of the brass 62 63 In July 2012 the US Army made a request for vendors to supply alternative cartridge cases to reduce the weight of an M855A1 5 56 mm round by at least 10 percent as well as for the 7 62 NATO and 50 BMG rounds The cartridge cases must maintain all performance requirements when fully assembled be able to be used by the Lake City Army Ammunition Plant must be manufactured in quantities totaling approximately 45 million per year Polymer cased ammunition is expected as a likely lightweight case technology 64 A hybrid polymer metal version of a conventional cartridge case would be thicker than regular cases and reduce the amount of space for the propellant 65 although certain polymers could be thermodynamically more efficient and not lose energy to the case or chamber when fired 66 Pressure Edit C I P defines the maximum service and proof test pressures of the 223 Remington cartridge equal to the 5 56mm NATO at 430 MPa 62 366 psi This differs from the SAAMI maximum pressure specification for 223 Remington of 380 MPa 55 114 psi due to CIP test protocols measuring pressure using a drilled case rather than an intact case with a conformal piston along with other differences 67 NATO uses NATO EPVAT pressure test protocols for their small arms ammunition specifications 68 69 Differences in testing methodology have led to widespread confusion however when measured with identical measuring equipment using identical methodologies 223 Remington yields peak average pressures about 5 000 psi lower than 5 56 NATO 70 Chamber Edit The 5 56mm NATO chamber known as a NATO or mil spec chamber has a longer leade which is the distance between the mouth of the cartridge and the point at which the rifling engages the bullet The 223 Remington chamber known as SAAMI chamber is allowed to have a shorter leade and is only required to be proof tested to the lower SAAMI chamber pressure To address these issues various proprietary chambers exist such as the Wylde chamber Rock River Arms 71 or the ArmaLite chamber which are designed to handle both 5 56 45mm NATO and 223 Remington equally well The leade of the 223 Remington minimum C I P chamber also differs from the 5 56mm NATO chamber specification The casings and chambers 223 Remington and 5 56 45mm NATO are virtually the same dimensions but due to the fact that 223 Remington is designed to handle much lower pressures than the 5 56 45mm NATO the rounds are not completely interchangeable Firing a 5 56 45mm NATO round out of a rifle chambered in 223 Remington could be injurious or fatal to the user as well as the gun however 223 Remington ammunition can be fired safely from almost any rifle chambered in 5 56 45mm NATO as the NATO specified rifles can handle much higher chamber pressures than the 223 Remington is capable of producing citation needed Using commercial 223 Remington cartridges in a 5 56mm NATO chambered rifle should work reliably but until recently it was believed this was less accurate than when fired from a 223 Remington chambered gun due to the longer leade 72 Although that may have been true in the early 1960s when the two rounds were developed recent testing has shown that with today s ammunition rifles chambered in 5 56 45mm NATO can also fire 223 ammunition every bit as accurately as rifles chambered in 223 Remington and the 5 56 45mm NATO chamber has the additional advantage of being able to safely fire both calibers 73 Using 5 56 45mm NATO mil spec cartridges such as the M855 in a 223 Remington chambered rifle can lead to excessive wear and stress on the rifle and even be unsafe and SAAMI recommends against the practice 74 75 Some commercial rifles marked as 223 Remington are in fact suited for 5 56 45mm NATO such as many commercial AR 15 variants and the Ruger Mini 14 marked 223 cal except the Mini 14 Target model which only fires 223 but the manufacturer should always be consulted to verify that this is acceptable before attempting it and signs of excessive pressure such as flattening or gas staining of the primers should be looked for in the initial testing with 5 56 45mm NATO ammunition 76 The upper receiver to which the barrel with its chamber are attached and the lower receiver are entirely separate parts in AR 15 style rifles If the lower receiver has either 223 or 5 56 stamped on it it does not guarantee the upper assembly is rated for the same caliber because the upper and the lower receiver in the same rifle can and frequently do come from different manufacturers particularly with rifles sold to civilians or second hand rifles that have been repaired with spare parts Since all parts are interchangeable a shooter must take great caution to check for markings of 5 56 45mm on the barrel before attempting to fire 5 56 45mm NATO ammunition out of it citation needed In more practical terms as of 2010 update most AR 15 parts suppliers engineer their complete upper assemblies not to be confused with stripped uppers where the barrel is not included to support both calibers in order to satisfy market demand and prevent any potential problems Some manufacturers have begun offering a hybrid 223 Wylde chamber designed to optimally support both cartridges citation needed Ammunition capacity for weight comparison EditThe first confrontations between the AK 47 and the M14 rifle came in the early part of the Vietnam War Battlefield reports indicated that the M14 was uncontrollable in full auto and that soldiers could not carry enough ammo to maintain fire superiority over the AK 47 77 A replacement was needed as a result the Army was forced to reconsider a 1957 request by General Willard G Wyman commander of the U S Continental Army Command CONARC to develop a 223 caliber 5 56 mm select fire rifle weighing 6 lbs 2 7 kg when loaded with a 20 round magazine citation needed Colt ArmaLite AR 15 Model 01 with 20 round magazine An M16A1 with 30 round magazine This request ultimately resulted in the development of a scaled down version of the Armalite AR 10 called ArmaLite AR 15 rifle 78 79 80 During testing it was found that a 5 to 7 man team armed with the ArmaLite AR 15s has the same firepower as 11 man team armed with M14s 81 Also soldiers armed with ArmaLite AR 15s could carry nearly three times more ammunition as those armed with M14s 649 rounds vs 220 rounds 81 The ArmaLite AR 15 officially designated Rifle caliber 5 56 mm M16 was later adopted by U S infantry forces as the standard issue rifle 10 5 Here is a table comparing rifles based on a maximum ammunition load in box magazines of 10 kg 22 lb Rifle Cartridge Cartridge weight Weight of loaded magazine Max 10 kilogram ammo loadAK 47 1949 7 62 39mm 252 gr 16 3 g 30 rd mag at 819 g 1 806 lb 82 83 12 mags at 9 83 kg 21 7 lb for 360 rds 84 M14 1959 7 62 51mm NATO 393 gr 25 5 g 20 rd mag at 750 g 1 65 lb 13 mags at 9 75 kg 21 5 lb for 280 rds 84 M16 1962 223 Remington 183 gr 11 9 g 20 rd mag at 320 g 0 71 lb 31 mags at 9 92 kg 21 9 lb for 620 rds 84 AK 74 1974 5 45 39mm 162 gr 10 5 g 30 rd mag at 545 g 1 202 lb 83 85 18 mags at 9 81 kg 21 6 lb for 540 rds 84 M16A2 1982 5 56 45mm NATO 190 gr 12 3g 30 rd mag at 490 g 1 08 lb 20 mags at 9 80 kg 21 6 lb for 600 rds 84 5 56mm NATO versus 7 62mm NATO Edit Comparison of 7 62mm NATO 5 56mm NATO and 9mm Parabellum Cartridge Model Cartridge size Cartridge weight Bullet weight Velocity Energy5 56mm NATO M855 5 56mm 5 56 45 mm Ammunition 5 56 45mm 12 31 g 190 gr 4 02 g 62 gr 922 m s 3 025 ft s 1 709 J 86 7 62mm NATO M80 7 62mm 7 62 51 mm Ammunition 7 62 51mm 25 40 g 392 gr 9 33 g 144 gr 838 m s 2 749 ft s 3 275 JHit probability refers to the ability of a soldier to concentrate on firing in spite of their weapon s recoil and noise which is noticeably different between the two cartridges The 7 62 NATO has twice the impact energy of the 5 56 NATO preferable if a target is protected by higher level armor especially at medium range If not both rounds normally penetrate satisfactorily through enemies up to 600 meters approximately A 5 56 NATO round fired from a 20 in 510 mm barrel has a flatter trajectory than a 7 62 NATO round fired from a barrel of equal length while the 5 56 NATO fired from a 14 5 in 370 mm barrel has the same trajectory as the 7 62 NATO from a 20 in barrel as well as the same time of flight A 7 62 NATO round reaches 50 percent of its velocity within 80 mm 3 1 in of the barrel when fired so decreasing the barrel length for close quarters combat results in increased muzzle pressure and greater noise and muzzle flash 48 47 Military cartridges EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Images of U S 5 56 45mm NATO ammunition Australia Edit Cartridge Ball F1 1985 2010 5 56 45mm FN SS109 equivalent produced by Thales Australia formerly Australian Defence Industries ADI Cartridge Ball F1A1 Green tip 2010 present 5 56 45mm with optimized projectile having a modified boat tail length and meplat diameter redesigned case thickness new primer cup design and AR2210V01 propellant 87 88 Unlike the F1 cartridge the F1A1 headstamp has a dimple at 3 o clock and 9 o clock This is a hallmark of the automated SCAMP loading machinery used to make the new cartridges Cartridge Blank F3 Crimped tip 1985 1994 1998 Present 5 56 45mm Blank cartridge produced by Thales Australia formerly Australian Defence Industries ADI Due to low demand lots are made every three years Austria Edit Round 5 56mm Ball M193 M193 equivalent produced by Hirtenberger Patronen 89 Belgium Edit Cartridge Ball SS109 5 56 45mm 61 grain 3 95 g 90 Semi Armor Piercing cartridge w steel penetrator produced by Fabrique Nationale Adopted in 1979 as the NATO standard 12 Canada Edit Cartridge Ball C77 5 56 45mm FN SS109 equivalent used in the C7 C8 and C9 type weapons Made by General Dynamics Canada 91 Cartridge Tracer C78 5 56 45mm FN SS110 equivalent used in the C7 C8 and C9 type weapons Made by General Dynamics Canada Cartridge Blank C79 Crimped tip 5 56 45mm blank cartridge used in the C7 C8 and C9 type weapons Also made by General Dynamics Canada France Edit Ammunition made by GIAT Type O Ordinaire Standard or Ball A Full Metal Jacketed lead core bullet similar to the US M193 It was used with the FAMAS Type T Tracant Tracer A tracer bullet similar to the US M196 Germany Edit Patrone AA59 5 56 45mm DM11 Weichkern Soft core or Ball Green tip 5 56 45mm 4 1 g dual core ball cartridge w steel core similar to M855 SS109 produced by RUAG Ammotec 92 Patrone 5 56 45mm DM11 A1 Weichkern Green tip 5 56 45mm 4 0 g 62gr dual core ball cartridge w steel core similar to M855 SS109 designed for and used by the German Bundeswehr with NATO approval AC 225 125A produced by Metallwerk Elisenhutte GmbH 93 Patrone 5 56 45mm DM18 Manover Maneuver Blanks with brass base produced by Metallwerk Elisenhutte GmbH 93 Patrone AA63 5 56 45mm DM21 Leuchtspur Tracer Orange tip 5 56 45mm tracer complement to DM11 also produced by RUAG Ammotec Patrone 5 56 45mm DM31 Hartkern Hard core or Armor Piercing 5 56 45mm 4 0 g 62gr armor piercing cartridge w tungsten carbide core produced by Metallwerk Elisenhutte GmbH 93 Patrone 5 56 45mm DM38 Ubung Practice 5 56 45mm 0 5 g 7 70gr plastic training cartridge plastic case cartridge colored light blue with a light 7 7 grain plastic bullet designed for short ranges with a dangerous space under 400 metre produced by Metallwerk Elisenhutte GmbH 93 Patrone 5 56 45mm DM41 A1 Weichkern 5 56 45mm 4 0 g 62gr FMJ cartridge similar to M855 SS109 but without the steel penetrator tip produced by Metallwerk Elisenhutte GmbH 93 Patrone 5 56 45mm DM51 5 56 45mm 3 6 g 55gr deformation pure copper cartridge designed for high energy transfer to soft targets produced by Metallwerk Elisenhutte GmbH 93 South Africa Edit Round 5 56 45mm Ball R1M1 M2 M193 equivalent with Boxer R1M1 or Berdan R1M2 primers produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings currently a division of Denel from 1977 to 1983 94 better source needed Round 5 56 45mm Tracer R1M1 M2 M196 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1979 to 1983 94 better source needed Round 5 56 45mm Drill R1M1 M2 Drill round produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1978 to 1983 94 better source needed Cartridge 5 56 45mm Blank R1M1 M2 M200 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1978 to 1983 94 better source needed Cartridge 5 56 45mm Rifle Grenade Launching R1M1 Grenade launching cartridge produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1979 to 1983 94 better source needed Round 5 56 45mm Proof R1M1 M2 Proof round produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1979 to 1983 identifiable by honey colouring on the tip and base until 1982 when this was switched to yellow A warmer round variation exists which is identifiable by purple colouring on the tip base or both 94 better source needed Round 5 56 45mm Ball M1A2 A3 A4 M193 equivalent with Berdan primers produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards 94 better source needed 95 96 Round 5 56 45mm Tracer M2A2 A3 A4 M196 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards 94 better source needed Cartridge 5 56 45mm Blank M4A2 A7 M200 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards 94 better source needed 95 Cartridge 5 56 45mm Rifle Grenade Launching M5A1 A2 A3 Grenade launching cartridge produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards 94 better source needed Round 5 56 45mm High Pressure Proof M13A2 A3 A4 Proof round produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards identifiable by yellow colouring on the tip base or both A warmer round variation exists with purple colouring 94 better source needed Round 5 56 45mm Drill M14A2 A3 A4 Drill round produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1983 onwards 94 better source needed Round 5 56 45mm Ball Manna M1 type round with thin walled jacket produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings from 1986 onwards 94 better source needed Round 5 56 45mm Ball M193 M193 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings for export sales 95 Round 5 56 45mm Ball SS109 M855 FN SS109 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings for export sales 95 Round 5 56 45mm Tracer M196 M196 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings for export sales 95 Cartridge 5 56 45mm Blank M200 M200 equivalent produced by Pretoria Metal Pressings for export sales 95 Switzerland Edit 5 6mm Gw Pat 90 The 63 grain 5 56 45mm Gewehrpatrone 90 5 6mm Gw Pat 90 5 6 mm Rifle Cartridge 90 is the Swiss Army s standard 5 56mm Ball round It is optimized for use with the Sturmgewehr 90 service rifle both which were adopted in 1987 The Sturmgewehr 90 rifled barrel has 6 right hand grooves and a Swiss Army specification 254 mm 1 10 in rifling twist rate Originally the cartridge had a cupronickel plated steel jacketed bullet and Berdan primer but it now has a tombac jacketed bullet and lead free Boxer primer Since 1997 most components of the round are made in Switzerland United Kingdom Edit Round 5 56mm Ball M193 M193 equivalent produced by Radway Green though some quantities of Hirtenberger Patronen produced rounds were imported 89 97 98 Round 5 56mm Ball L2A1 A2 FN SS109 equivalent produced by Radway Green 99 97 100 101 102 Round 5 56mm Tracer L1A1 A2 Red tip Tracer round complement to L2A1 A2 produced by Radway Green 99 97 102 Cartridge 5 56mm Blank L1A1 A2 crimped tip Blank training round complement to L2A1 A2 produced by Radway Green 99 97 Round 5 56mm Ball L3A1 M193 equivalent produced by Hirtenberger Patronen for use in AR 15 weapons and the L101A1 A2 rifle 103 better source needed Round 5 56mm Ball L15A1 A2 FN SS109 equivalent produced by Radway Green optimised for use in AR 15 weapons such as the L119A1 A2 rifle 104 99 105 106 107 Round 5 56mm Ball L17A1 A2 FN SS109 equivalent produced by Radway Green optimised for use with SA80 weapons 108 109 104 105 Round 5 56mm Tracer L16A1 Red tip Tracer round complement to L15A1 A2 and L17A1 A2 produced by Radway Green 106 Cartridge 5 56mm Blank L18A1 crimped tip Blank training round complement to L17A1 A2 produced by Radway Green 109 Round 5 56mm Ball L31A1 New Enhanced Performance design produced by Radway Green since 2016 based on the FN SS109 round but featuring an all steel bullet for improved penetration and giving similar performance in both AR 15 and SA80 weapons 110 105 Round Drill L1A1 chromed body 5 56 45mm inert training round produced by Radway Green United States Edit M855 and M856 cartridges in an ammunition belt using M27 disintegrating links Military ammunition was packed exclusively in 20 round cartons from 1963 to 1966 In late 1966 the 10 round stripper clip and magazine charging adapter were introduced and ammunition began being packed in clips in bandoleers US Army Edit Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Ball M193 5 56 45mm 55 grain 3 56 g ball cartridge This was type standardized and designated by the US Army in September 1963 Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Grenade M195 Crimped tip with Red lacquer seal 5 56 45mm high pressure grenade launching blank Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Tracer M196 Red or Orange tip 5 56 45mm 54 grain 3 43 g tracer cartridge Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm High Pressure Test HPT M197 stannic stained or nickel plated case High pressure Testing cartridge used when proofing weapons during manufacture test or repair Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Dummy M199 No primer Fluted case 5 56 45mm inert cartridge with fluted indentations in the case Used for loading and unloading drills during basic training Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Blank M200 Crimped tip with Violet lacquer seal 5 56 45mm training blank cartridge Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Ball M202 5 56 45mm 58 grain FN SSX822 cartridge Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Dummy M232 No primer Black anodized case and bullet 5 56 45mm inert cartridge Used for testing rifle mechanisms Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Ball XM287 5 56 45mm 68 grain ball cartridge produced by Industries Valcartier Inc An Improved version was also produced designated XM779 Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Tracer XM288 5 56 45mm 68 grain tracer cartridge produced by Industries Valcartier Inc An Improved version was also produced designated XM780 Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Grenade M755 Crimped tip with Yellow lacquer seal 5 56 45mm grenade launching blank specifically for the 64mm M234 launcher The original white lacquer seal was discontinued due to excessive bore fouling Its design is otherwise an exact duplicate of the M195 Grenade cartridge Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Ball XM777 5 56 45mm ball cartridge An attempt to create a 55 grain SS109 style Semi Armor Piercing round that weighed the same as the M193 and could use the same US standard 1 in 12 inch rifling It replaced the 6 45mm SAW round as the baseline cartridge for the Squad Automatic Weapon trials in the late 1970s and early 1980s Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Tracer XM778 5 56 45mm tracer cartridge mated with the XM777 Semi Armor Piercing cartridge Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Ball M855 Green tip 5 56 45mm 62 grain FN SS109 equivalent ball cartridge with a steel penetrator tip over a lead core in a full copper jacket Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Ball M855LF Lead Free Green tip 62 grain bullet with a steel penetrator tip over a tungsten composite core in a full copper jacket Primarily used during training in countries with strict lead disposal laws Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Ball M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round unpainted steel penetrator tip 2010 Present 62 grain bullet w a 19 grain steel penetrator tip over a copper alloy core in a partial copper jacket 111 Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Tracer M856 Orange tip 5 56 45mm 63 7 grain FN L110 tracer cartridge Provides red visible light and lacks a steel penetrator Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Tracer M856A1 Red tip 5 56 45mm 56 grain Lead Free slug LF Tracer with similar ballistic performance to the M855A1 and improved 70 to 900 m 77 to 984 yd visible trace to range consistency 112 113 Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Plastic Practice M862 Brass primer Aluminum case and Blue plastic projectile Short Range Training Ammo SRTA uses a light plastic bullet with a maximum range of just 250 meters Because the M862 has less energy the M2 training bolt must be used in the M16 Rifle M4 Carbine for the weapon to cycle properly The M2 training bolt and M862 cartridge case use a smaller than standard head diameter as a safety feature this prevents standard ammunition from being able to be chambered or fired The M862 SRTA is typically used for training on shooting ranges that are limited in size such as near built up or populated areas Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Armor Piercing M995 Black tip 5 56 45mm 52 grain AP cartridge with a tungsten core Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Tracer XM996 Crimson tip So called Dim Tracer with reduced effect primarily for use with night vision devices US Air Force Edit Cartridge Caliber 5 64 mm Ball MLU 26 P Munition Live Unit 26 Personnel use 114 Federal Stock Number FSN 1305 968 5892 DOD Identification Code DODIC A066 assigned 1 January 1962 Early USAF designation for a 55 grain 5 56 45mm FMJ Boat Tailed ball cartridge produced by Remington Union Metallic Cartridge Company It was their designation for the commercial 55 grain 223 Remington M C Metallic Cased or Full Metal Jacketed cartridge which the Air Force initially designated 5 64 mm 222 caliber rather than 5 56 mm 218 caliber The first order in 1963 headstamped RA 63 or REM UMC 63 consisted of 8 5 million rounds and was procured for testing training and unconventional warfare use with the XM16 rifle The cartridges came packed unclipped in white 20 round commercial ammunition cartons packed 35 cartons 700 rounds per M2A1 ammo can and shipped two M2A1 cans 1400 rounds in total per wire bound plywood crate Until the Army s adoption of the M193 Ball round this was the only type of military 5 56mm ammunition available in the South East Asia theater US Navy amp US Marine Corps Edit Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Frangible MK 255 MOD 0 White Tip 5 56 45mm 62 grain Reduced Ricochet Limited Penetration RRLP round with copper polymer composite core for training and operational use 115 Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Special Ball Long Range Mk 262 MOD 0 1 5 56 45mm 77 grain Open Tipped Match Hollow Point Boat Tail cartridge MOD 0 features Sierra Matchking bullet while MOD 1 features either Nosler or Sierra bullet Cartridge 5 56 45mm semi jacketed Frangible MK 311 MOD 0 Reduced Ricochet Limited Penetration R2LP round 50 grain frangible bullet intended for training Produced by Western Cartridge Company headstamp WCC Cartridge Caliber 5 56 mm Ball Enhanced 5 56 mm Carbine MK318 MOD 0 5 56 45mm 62 grain Open Tipped Match Boat Tail cartridge Optimized for use with 14 inch barreled weapons like the M4A1 Carbine and MK16 SCAR and designed to penetrate light barriers like windshields or car doors with no loss of accuracy or damage 116 117 Now designated as Caliber 5 56 mm Ball Carbine Barrier SS109 M855 Edit In 1970 NATO decided to standardize a second rifle caliber Tests were conducted from 1977 to 1980 using U S XM777 5 56 mm Belgian SS109 5 56 mm British 4 85 49mm and German 4 7 33mm caseless No weapon could be agreed upon as many were prototypes but the SS109 was found to be the best round and standardized on 28 October 1980 The SS109 was developed in the 1970s for the FN FNC rifle and the FN Minimi machine gun To increase the range of the Minimi the round was created to penetrate 3 5 mm of steel at 600 meters The SS109 had a steel tip and lead rear and was not required to penetrate body armor Barrels required at least a 1 9 in rifle twist but needed a 1 7 in rifle twist to fire tracer ammunition 48 47 52 The U S designated the SS109 cartridge the M855 and first used it in the M16A2 rifle The 62 grain round was heavier than the previous 55 grain M193 While the M855 had better armor penetrating ability it is less likely to fragment after hitting a soft target This lessens kinetic energy transfer to the target and reduces wounding capability 118 The M855 is yaw dependent meaning it depends on the angle upon which it hits the target If at a good angle the round turns as it enters soft tissue breaking apart and transferring its energy to what it hits If impacting at a bad angle it could pass through and fail to transfer its full energy 54 The SS109 was made to pierce steel helmets at long range from the Minimi not improve terminal performance on soft tissue from rifles or carbines 42 In Iraq troops that engaged insurgents at less than 150 yards found that M855 rounds did not provide enough stopping power In addition to not causing lethal effects with two or more rounds they did not effectively penetrate vehicle windshields even with many rounds fired at extremely close range 119 In Afghanistan troops found that M855 rounds also suffered at long ranges Although 5 56 mm rifles have an effective range of 450 600 meters the M855 bullet s performance falls off sharply beyond 300 meters The ranges are even shorter for short barreled carbines Half of small arms attacks were launched from 300 to 900 meter ranges 120 An M855 fired from an M4 Carbine has severely degraded performance beyond 150 meters 42 The maximum effective point target range of an M4 carbine with M855 rounds is 500 m 547 yd with a maximum effective area target range of 600 m 656 yd These mark the greatest distances the rounds can be expected to accurately hit the target not the ranges that they have terminal effectiveness against them Because the M855 is yaw dependent it requires instability in flight to deform upon hitting the target It is the most stable in flight between 150 350 m 164 383 yd potentially lessening its effectiveness if it strikes an enemy between those distances In addition to this tests have shown that 5 56 mm bullets fragment most reliably when traveling faster than 2 500 ft s 760 m s From full length 20 in 508 mm rifle and machine gun barrels rounds exhibit velocities above 2 500 ft s 760 m s out to 200 m 219 yd An M855 fired from a shorter barreled M4 carbine exhibits a bullet velocity of 2 522 ft s 769 m s at 150 m 164 yd range Even if it impacts at optimum speeds 70 percent of 5 56 mm bullets will not begin to yaw until 4 7 in 120 mm of tissue penetration 15 percent more begin to yaw after that distance so up to 85 percent of rounds that hit do not start to fragment until nearly 5 in of penetration Against small statured or thin combatants the M855 has little chance of yawing before passing through cleanly and leaving a wound cavity no bigger than the bullet itself The factors of impact angle and velocity instability distance and penetration before yaw reduce the round s predictable effectiveness considerably in combat situations 121 M855A1 Edit M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round and its environmentally friendly lead free projectile The M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round EPR was introduced in June 2010 It features a lead free 62 grain 4 0 g projectile with a solid copper core and is tailored for use in rifles with shorter barrels such as the M4 carbine It provides more consistent performance compared to the M855 112 Deployment Edit On 24 June 2010 the United States Army announced it began shipping its new 5 56 mm cartridge the M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round EPR to active combat zones During testing the M855A1 performed better than M80 7 62 51mm NATO ball ammunition against certain types of targets particularly hardened steel However this was due to the addition of the steel penetrator to the M855A1 projectile compared to the standard lead alloy core of the M80 projectile and is not an accurate comparison between the two cartridges The US Army Picatinny Arsenal stated that the new M855A1 offers improved hard target capability more consistent performance at all distances enhanced dependability improved accuracy reduced muzzle flash and higher velocity compared to the SS109 M855 round Further the Army stated the new M855A1 ammunition is tailored for use in M4 carbines but should also give enhanced performance in M16 rifles and M249 light machine guns The new 62 grain 4 g projectile used in the M855A1 round has a copper core with a 19 grain 1 2 g steel stacked cone penetrating tip The M855A1 cartridge is sometimes referred to as green ammo because it fires a lead free projectile 111 112 122 123 124 125 It is not necessarily more lethal than the SS109 M855 but performs more consistently every time it hits a soft target and retains its performance at longer distances The EPR can penetrate a 3 8 in 9 5 mm thick mild steel barrier from an M4 at 350 m 380 yd and from an M16 at 400 m 440 yd Compared to the SS109 M855 the M855A1 muzzle velocities are somewhat increased to 3 150 ft s 960 m s 37 ft s 11 m s for the M16 and 2 970 ft s 910 m s 54 ft s 16 m s for the M4 carbine 126 Ballistics for both rounds are similar and do not require weapons to be re zeroed but if they are the EPR can be slightly more accurate The steel tip penetrator of the M855A1 is noticeably separated from the jacket of the bullet and can spin but this is part of the design and does not affect performance The M855A1 costs only 5 cents more per round than the M855 127 The M855A1 bullet has a 1 8 in 3 2 mm greater length than the SS109 M855 128 Because steel and copper are less dense than lead the bullet is lengthened inside the case to achieve the same weight as its predecessor 10 The longer bullet and reverse drawn jacket make it more stable and accurate in flight Its steel tip is exposed from the jacket and bronzed for corrosion resistance The tip is serrated and larger than the M855 s steel tip The M855A1 s bullet composition better aerodynamics and higher proof pressures give it an extended effective range for penetration and terminal performance 129 While effectiveness at different ranges is increased the M855A1 does not increase the effective ranges at which weapons are expected to hit their targets The Enhanced Performance Round was made to nearly match the trajectory of the M855 to aid in training consistency the SS109 M855 ballistic coefficient G7 BC of 0 151 was improved to 0 152 for the M855A1 130 but the ranges to get desired effects are greatly extended 131 The United States Marine Corps purchased 1 8 million rounds in 2010 with plans to adopt the round to replace the interim MK318 SOST rounds used in Afghanistan when the M855A1 project was delayed 132 The Marine Corps plans to adopt the M855A1 round in 2018 although testing revealed it caused some durability issues with the Marines M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle the weapon is still operationally suitable when firing the round 133 On a media day at Aberdeen Proving Ground on 4 May 2011 reports were given about the M855A1 s performance in the field since it was issued 11 months earlier One primary advantage given by the round is its consistent performance against soft targets While the older SS109 M855 was yaw dependent which means its effectiveness depends on its yaw angle when it hits a target the M855A1 delivers the same effectiveness in a soft target no matter its yaw angle The new SMP 842 propellant in the round burns quicker in the shorter M4 carbine barrel ensuring less muzzle flash and greater muzzle velocity The M855A1 was able to penetrate 3 8 inch 9 5 mm of mild steel plate at 300 m 330 yd The round even penetrated concrete masonry units similar to cinder blocks at 75 m 82 yd from an M16 and at 50 m 55 yd from an M4 which the M855 could not do at those ranges Its accuracy is maintained and sometimes increased as it was able to shoot a group 2 inches better at 600 m 660 yd February 2011 was the first time the M855A1 was used more than the M855 and approximately 30 million M855A1 rounds have been fielded from June 2010 to May 2011 134 135 The M855A1 was put to the test at the 2012 National Rifle Association s National High Power Rifle Championship at Camp Perry Ohio in August 2012 The shooter for the Army was Rob Harbison a contractor supporting small caliber ammunition capability development at Fort Benning Georgia This was a special event for the Project Manager for Maneuver Ammunition Systems and the Army s Maneuver Center of Excellence as it was an opportunity to showcase the capabilities of the Enhanced Performance Round With an M16 loaded with M855A1 ammo Harbison fired a perfect 200 points in the Coast Guard Trophy Match which is 20 shots fired from the sitting position at 200 yards finishing 17th out of 365 competitors He also scored a perfect 100 on the final string of ten shots during the Air Force Cup Trophy Match fired at 600 yards from the prone position which is 10 shots in a row within the 12 inch 10 point ring at 600 yards with combat ammunition Harbison was happy with the performance of the EPR with his scores showing that the Army s newest general purpose round is accurate enough to go toe to toe in the competition with the best ammo that can be bought or hand loaded Harbison even said I don t think I could have scored any higher if I was using match grade competition ammunition 136 The M855A1 was not fired from 1 7 in rifled barrels used in standard Army rifles but special Army Marksmanship Unit AMU match grade 1 8 in rifled barrels which produce more accurate results when firing 62 grain rounds 128 From fielding in June 2010 to September 2012 Alliant Techsystems delivered over 350 million M855A1 Enhanced Performance Rounds 137 Since its introduction the M855A1 has been criticized for its St Mark s SMP842 propellant causing increased fouling of the gun barrel Post combat surveys have reported no issues with the EPR in combat A series of tests found no significant difference in fouling between the old M855 and the M855A1 However manufacturers have reported severe degradation to barrels of their rifles using the M855A1 in tests 138 The Army attributes pressure and wear issues with the M855A1 to problems with the primer which they claim to have addressed with a newly designed primer 139 It uses a modified four pronged primer anvil for more reliable powder ignition 129 with a stab crimp rather than a circumferential crimp to better withstand the new load s higher chamber pressure 128 increased from 55 000 psi 379 2 MPa to 62 000 psi 427 5 MPa 65 140 During Army carbine testing the round caused accelerated bolt wear from higher chamber pressure and increased bore temperatures Special Operator testing saw cracks appear on locking lugs and bolts at cam pin holes on average at 6 000 rounds but sometimes as few as 3 000 rounds during intense automatic firing Firing several thousand rounds with such high chamber pressures can lead to degraded accuracy over time as parts wear out these effects can be mitigated through a round counter to keep track of part service life Weapons with barrel lengths shorter than the M4 firing the M855A1 also experience 50 percent higher pressures than a full length M16 rifle barrel which can cause port erosion that can boost the automatic fire rate increasing the likelihood of jams 128 From June 2010 to June 2013 issuing of the M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round removed 1 994 metric tons of lead from the waste stream 2 1 grams 32 gr of lead are eliminated from each M855A1 projectile 141 Mk 262 Edit The Mk 262 is a match quality round manufactured by Black Hills Ammunition made originally for the Special Purpose Rifle SPR It uses a 77 grain 5 0 g Sierra MatchKing bullet that is more effective at longer ranges than the standard issue M855 round In 1999 SOCOM requested Black Hills Ammunition to develop ammunition for the Mk 12 SPR that SOCOM was designing For the rifle to be accurate out to 700 yards Black Hills militarized a cartridge that used the Sierra 77 grain OTM Open Tip Match projectile it switched from a 223 Remington to 5 56 mm case increased pressure loading crimped and sealed the primer and added a flash retardant to the powder The Mk 262 MOD 0 was adopted in 2002 Issues came up in development including reliability problems in different temperatures and when the weapon got dirty and cycling issues in cold weather due to the slightly shorter barrel of the SPR compared to the full length M16A2 barrel The problems were addressed with a slower burning powder with a different pressure for use in the barrel creating the Mk 262 MOD 1 in 2003 During the product improvement stage the new propellant was found to be more sensitive to heat in weapon chambers during rapid firings resulting in increased pressures and failure to extract This was addressed with another powder blend with higher heat tolerance and improved brass Also during the stage Black Hills wanted the bullet to be given a cannelure which had been previously rejected for fear it would affect accuracy It was eventually added for effective crimping to ensure that the projectile would not move back into the case and cause a malfunction during auto load feeding Although the temperature sensitive powder and new bullet changed specifications the designation remained as the MOD 1 142 According to US DoD sources the Mk 262 round is capable of making kills at 700 meters Ballistics tests found that the round caused consistent initial yaw in soft tissue between 3 and 4 in at ranges from 15 feet to 300 meters Apparently it is superior to the standard M855 round when fired from an M4 or M16 rifle increasing accuracy from 3 5 minutes of angle to 2 minute of angle It possesses superior stopping power and can allow for engagements to be extended to up to 700 meters when fired from an 18 inch barrel It appears that this round can drastically improve the performance of any AR 15 weapon chambered to 223 5 56 mm Superior accuracy wounding capacity stopping power and range have made this the preferred round of many special forces operators and highly desirable as a replacement for the older Belgian designed 5 56 45mm SS109 M855 NATO round In one engagement a two man special forces team reported 75 kills with 77 rounds 143 144 The Mk 262 has a higher ballistic coefficient than the M855 of G1 0 362 G7 0 181 meaning it loses less velocity at long range 130 Mk318 Edit Following early engagements in Afghanistan and Iraq U S Special Operations Forces reported that M855 ammunition used in M4A1 rifles was ineffective In 2005 the Pentagon issued a formal request to the ammunition industry for enhanced ammunition The only business that responded was the Federal Cartridge Company owned by Alliant Techsystems Working with the Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division the team created performance objectives for the new ammo increased consistency from shot to shot regardless of temperature changes accuracy out of an M4A1 better than 2 minute of angle 2 inches at 100 yards 6 3 inches at 300 yards increased stopping power after passing through intermediate barriers like walls and car windshields increased performance and decreased muzzle flash out of shorter barrel FN SCAR rifles and costs close to the M855 The first prototypes were delivered to the government in August 2007 Increased velocity and decreased muzzle flash were accomplished by the type of powder used The design of the bullet was called the Open Tip Match Rear Penetrator OTMRP The front of it is an open tip backed up by a lead core while the rear half is solid brass When the bullet hits a hard barrier the front half of the bullet crushes against the barrier breaking it so the penetrating half of the bullet can go through and hit the target With the lead section penetrating the target and the brass section following it was referred to as a barrier blind bullet 51 145 Officially designated the Mk318 MOD 0 Cartridge Caliber 5 56mm Ball Carbine Barrier and called SOST Special Operations Science and Technology ammunition the 62 grain bullet fragments consistently even out of a 10 5 in barrel The lead portion fragments in the first few inches of soft tissue then the solid copper rear penetrates 18 in of tissue shown though ballistic gelatin while tumbling Out of a 14 in barrel the Mk318 has a muzzle velocity of 2 925 ft s 892 m s 51 145 In February 2010 the U S Marine Corps adopted the Mk318 for use by infantry To be fielded by an entire branch of the military the round is classified as having an open tip bullet similar to the M118LR 7 62 NATO round The SOST bullet uses a reverse drawn forming process The base of the bullet is made first the lead core is placed on top of it and then the jacketing is pulled up around the lead core from bottom to tip Conventional and cheaper bullets are made with the method of the jacket drawn from the nose to an exposed lead base The reverse drawn technique leaves an open tip as a byproduct of the manufacturing process and is not specifically designed for expansion or to affect terminal ballistics The Pentagon legally cleared the rounds for Marine use in late January The Marines fielded the Mk318 gradually and in small numbers Initial studies showed that insurgents hit by it suffered larger exit wounds although information was limited SOST rounds were used alongside M855 rounds in situations where the SOST would be more effective 51 145 146 In July 2010 the Marines purchased 1 8 million M855A1 Enhanced Performance Rounds in addition to millions of Mk318 rounds in service as part of its effort to replace its M855 ammo 147 As of May 2015 Marine combat units still deployed with a mixture of both SOST and M855 rounds 148 As the issue of environmentally friendly ammo grew the Marines looked to see if the Mk318 s lead could be replaced while still meeting specifications They found that by replacing the lead with copper and slightly stretching the jacket around to crimp the nose even more the bullet s ballistic coefficient increased To avoid visual confusion with the Mk 262 round the bullet was entirely nickel plated for a silver color the enhanced silver colored copper jacketed open tip match 62 grain projectile was named the Mk318 MOD 1 149 5 6mm Gewehr Patrone 90 Edit Ready ammunition of the Swiss Army Soldiers equipped with the SIG 550 assault rifle used to be issued 50 rounds of ammunition in a sealed can to be opened only upon alert and for use while en route to join their unit This practice was stopped in 2007 150 Swiss Army Gw Lsp Pat 90 tracer rounds The 5 6mm Gewehr Patrone 90 or 5 6mm Gw Pat 90 5 6 mm Rifle Cartridge 90 is the standard round used by the Swiss military in its rifle the SIG SG 550 The cartridge is also known as the Cart 5 6mm 90 F French Cartouche pour Fusil Italian Cartuccia per Fucile to the French and Italian speaking Swiss militiamen The Swiss refer to the round as the 5 6 mm Gw Pat 90 although it is interchangeable with the 5 56 45mm NATO and 223 Remington round The Gw Pat 90 round firing a 4 1 g 63 gr FMJ bullet is optimized for use in 5 56 mm 223 in caliber barrels with a 254 mm 1 10 in twist rate The Gw Pat 90 was designed for the SIG SG 550 when it came into production in 1987 replacing the SIG SG 510 Previous experience of a change in standard rifle had proved that changing the distance of fire for the training ranges was more expensive than the design of a new ammunition this prompted the design of a cartridge nominally capable at 300 meters The cartridge was also designed to reduce pollution by controlling lead emissions 151 The bullet was originally clad with a nickel alloy jacket however this was found to cause excessive barrel wear so in 1998 the nickel jackets were replaced with tombac jackets In addition in 1999 a copper plug was added to the base of the bullet to address environmental concerns 151 The ammunition is currently 2009 produced by RUAG Ammotec a subsidiary of the RUAG group 152 The ammunition is manufactured in three variations the standard FMJ round the tracer round and a blank round The FMJ cartridge has a Copper Zinc alloy case and uses a double base propellant The bullet is a 4 1 g 63 gr tombac jacketed FMJ projectile with a G1 ballistic coefficient of 0 331 ICAO 0 337 Army Metro The projectile contains approximately 95 Pb 2 Sb 3 Cu and was designed for terminal ballistic instability The required accuracy for Gw Pat 90 ammunition out of factory test barrels is 63 mm 0 72 MOA for 10 rounds 100 radius measurement method out to 300 m The Gw Pat 90 cartridge dimensions are in accordance with the civilian C I P standards for the 223 Remington C I P chambering 153 The Gw Pat 90 is used both in the Swiss military and in sport shooting The very high level of individual training in the Swiss militia every single soldier bearing a weapon has to shoot in order to maintain his ability once a year see Gun laws in Switzerland and the overall use of the Gw Pat 90 by the many Swiss citizens who shoot in competitions and for amusement has resulted in significant input on its usage Over 1 billion cartridges had been produced as of 2005 update See also Edit6mm ARC 6mm Optimum 5 mm caliber Express weaponry Table of handgun and rifle cartridges List of 5 56 45mm NATO firearms List of rifle cartridgesReferences Edit C I P decisions texts and tables free current C I P CD ROM version download ZIP and RAR format Archived from the original on 20 June 2009 Retrieved 17 October 2008 US Mil spec MIL C 9963F dead link M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round EPR LTC Philip Clark Product Manager Small Caliber Ammunition April 2012 Archived 25 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine a b Woods Jeffrey K 4 May 2011 M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round EPR Media Day PDF Archived PDF from the original on 25 February 2017 Retrieved 29 December 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Watters Daniel A 5 56 X 45mm Timeline wayback org Archived from the original on 9 February 2004 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Archived from the original PDF on 17 June 2009 Further reading EditStan Christ 5 56mm NATO Alternatives Special Weapons Magazine Semi Annual 50 2007 pp 52 59 External links Edit Media related to 5 56 x 45 mm NATO at Wikimedia Commons brochure on 5 56mm F1 ball ammunition to NATO STANAG 4172 PDF ADI Thales Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2008 DIRECT FIRE AMMUNITION Handbook 2019 Project Manager Maneuver Ammunition Systems Archived 12 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 5 56 45mm NATO amp oldid 1131591284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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