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Army & Marines Want New Machine Guns To Replace the M240 and ‘Ma Deuce’

NO! Say it ain’t so. The .50 Cal Ma Deuce has been a mainstay in the military for many years. It’s throaty rumble can be recognized from miles away. ‘Ma’ had always brought reassurance to those in need and has served our military forces well.

Source: Military.Com

The Army and Marine Corps are both looking at new medium and heavy machine gun technology to replace the venerable 7.62mm M240 and the .50 caliber “Ma Deuce” M2.

The Marine Corps is working with the Army on its “next generation machine gun” effort, but is also interested in the .338 Norma Magnum machine gun that U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) is developing, said Christopher Woodburn, deputy for the Maneuver Branch at the Capabilities Development Directorate at Marine Corps Combat Development and Integration.

The .338 Norma Magnum round can hit targets out to ranges of 1,500 meters, compared to the M240 machine gun in 7.62 x 51mm, which has an effective range out to approximately 800 meters.

Woodburn added that it could take at least three-to-five years before the Marine Corps is ready to make a fielding decision on the .338 Norma Magnum machine gun effort.

Army maneuver officials at Fort Benning, Georgia, are conducting a Platoon Arms and Ammunition Configuration Study (PAAC) that will help guide decisions about future weapons programs, such as the next generation machine gun effort, said Col. Rhett Thompson, director of the Soldier Requirements Division at Benning.

The PAAC study is scheduled to be complete by early fiscal 2024, Thompson said. Currently, the Army is not evaluating any new machine gun technology for the effort.

Part of the decision to officially pursue a machine gun modernization effort will depend on the outcome of the NGSW effort, said Col. Scott Madore, who runs Project Manager Soldier Lethality.

The Army is currently testing NGSW prototypes from General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems Inc.; Textron Systems; and Sig Sauer Inc. If all goes well, the service hopes to begin fielding a rifle and automatic rifle version of the NGSW, chambered for 6.8mm in late 2022, officials say.

Army & Marines Want New Machine Guns To Replace the M240 and ‘Ma Deuce’

TD

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