M231 Firing Port Weapon

The M231 Firing Port Weapon (FPW) is an adapted version of the M16 assault rifle for shooting from firing ports on the M2 Bradley. The infantry's normal M16s are too long for use in a "buttoned up" APC, so the FPW was developed to provide a suitable weapon for this role. Designed by the Rock Island Arsenal, the M231 FPW remains in service, although all but the rear two firing ports on the Bradley have been removed.

Compact M16, 5.56mm: Port, Firing, M231
M231
TypeFiring port weapon/Assault rifle
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1980–present
Used byUnited States
WarsGulf War, Iraq War
Production history
Designed1979
Produced1980–present
VariantsNone
Specifications
MassEmpty: 7.34 lb (3.33 kg)
w/30-round magazine: 8.34 lb (3.79 kg)
Length28.25 in. (71.76 cm)
Barrel length396 mm (15.6 in)

Cartridge5.56×45mm NATO
ActionGas-operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fireSustained (Short Bursts): 50–60 rounds per minute
Minimum Cyclic: 1225 rds per min
Effective firing range328 yds (300 m)
Feed system30-round STANAG Magazine

History

Work started in 1972 on a dedicated Firing Port Weapon to go along with the Mechanized Infantry Combat Vehicle (MICV) program also started at that time. A requirement for these vehicles was to have firing ports for troops riding inside, and so it was decided that a specific weapon also be developed. The Rock Island Arsenal headed up the project working with the M3 submachine gun (a World War II-era SMG), a Firing Port Weapon created by Heckler & Koch based on the HK33, and a modified M16 rifle pattern weapon. The qualities of the last weapon made it most promising, and by 1974 it had been designated XM231. Colt was given the contract and continued to work on the design, and by 1979 the finalized weapon was adopted as the M231.

Although most of the Bradley AFV's ports have since been removed, these weapons are maintained, and are used by crews for self-defense, close-quarters situations, and for firing from the rear door firing ports as intended.

Specifications

M231 FPW, with wire stock
(Top-right of the image)

The M231 is different in many ways from a standard M16. The original RIA (Rock Island Arsenal) FPW fired from an open bolt, with an extremely high rate of firing (1,050 rpm). The Colt XM231 introduced a special buffer and spring assembly, with three springs nested one within the other. This was done to allow the rate of fire to be lowered to 200 rpm, to prevent the risk for soldiers opening fire from the moving vehicle of exhausting their magazine before the weapon was brought to target. The original RIA FPW had an 11-inch (280 mm) barrel, while the Colt prototypes and the production M231 both had 15.6 inch (396 mm) barrels. Initially the FPWs had no locking mechanism and had flip up sights, along with a metal wire stock akin to that on the M3 submachine gun, to allow the weapon to be used outside of the vehicle more effectively. Later this was dropped, and a new hand-guard introduced with a screw type locking mechanism to fix the weapon into the port. Late XM231s had no rear sights either. By the time the M231 was finalized the wire stock had been done away with as the weapon had a tendency to unfasten itself from the firing port and the stock was deemed to be dangerous in the confines of the vehicle (or, alternately, Army officials omitted the feature to discourage troops from employing the M231 in lieu of the issue M16 rifles). Likewise the intended mechanism to bring down the firing rate had been removed from the design again thus bringing the rate of fire back up to a rate of 1,100-1,200 round/min.

These weapons are only capable of fully automatic fire, with a special side plate mounted inside the lower receiver and a selector that only has "safe" and "auto" positions. These weapons retain a 65% parts commonality with standard M16 rifles. Only the M196 tracer round was authorized for operational use, with the M199 dummy and M200 blank for training use. In an emergency, M193 ball ammunition was to be used. The heavier M855 ball and M856 tracer rounds were never to be used.[1]

Officially the FPW was not to be used detached from the parent vehicle, unless in an emergency. The operator's manual lists four precautions that would have to be taken to utilize the weapon outside of the vehicle. These included a note about the excessive muzzle rise of the weapon during firing, that the barrel collar would become hot when firing and should not be touched, that hearing protection should be worn, and lastly that a brass catching bag or evacuation hose system would have to be installed.[2]

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gollark: If it asks to simplify it, you want the one with fewer terms, so the + 11x one.
gollark: Those are equal. So both.
gollark: You could just write that as mods⊆gay, or ∀mod mod ∈ gay.
gollark: Python's arbitrarily large integers probably do *not* have constant time bitshifting, so I don't think this is actually the complexity you said.

See also

References

Citations

  1. United States, 1997. p. 4-2
  2. United States, 1997. p. 1-1-2

Sources

  • Long, Duncan. The Complete AR-15/M16 Source-book. Boulder, CO: Paladin Press, 2001. ISBN 0-87364-687-8.
  • United States, Headquarters, Department of the Army. TM 9-1005-309-10, Operator's Manual, Sub-machine Gun, 5.56mm: Port, Firing, M231. Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, Department of the Army, 1997.
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