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The M16 (officially Rifle, Caliber 5.56 mm, M16) is the United States military designation of the AR-15. Originally designed at ArmaLite in the late 1950s, the AR-15 was officially adopted by the US Army in 1966 after having been improved by Colt. Since then, the design has undergone several major improvements, and remains in service with all branches of the US military to this day.

Design

The original M16 was a select-fire, 5.56×45mm rifle with a 20-round magazine. Mechanically, it is identical to the original AR-15 models (not modern models however, as modern AR-15s lack select fire), utilizing the direct impingement recoil system and a rotating bolt, except for the location of the charging handle.

As the M16 evolved into the M16A1, there were a number of useful features added to aid the rifle's user friendliness and reliability, most of said features that remained even into the M16A4 and M4 Carbine.

Components

Fire Control Group

Rifles manufactured for export or military sales have the automatic fire control group; the selector switch has options for SAFE, SEMI, and BURST (or AUTO). These weapons are found with the M16 hammer assembly, the M16 disconnector, and a trigger assembly that allows for the auto sear to function as intended in conjunction with the auto selector switch. The M16 lower receiver has a section of its shelf milled lower to accommodate the auto sear, and an additional hole (the sear hole) is drilled into the lower receiver to hold the sear in place.

Bolt

The bolt should be composed of Carpenter 158 (C158) steel for maximum durability, and should be shot peened, tested with a proof load, and MPI tested for cracks and inclusions.[1]

Barrel

In adherence to the TDP (Technical Data Package), the barrel should be hammer forged from 4150 CMV (Chrome-moly Vanadium) steel. This allows the barrel to last a bit longer under the stresses of full auto fire or rapid semi-auto fire, and leaves the barrel less prone to gas port erosion and throat erosion.

The data package calls for a 1:7 twist in the M16s and M4s, which handles the heavier and longer bullets. As with the bolt, the barrel should be tested with a proof load and MPI tested to check for structural deficiencies.

Sights

The iron sights on the M16A1 did not have distance adjustment on the rear sight, only windage. The M16A2 sights have distance settings and windage settings; both are adjustable. The standard distance settings are 300 to 800 meters.

The A2 sights feature a smaller aperture for longer distance shooting, and a larger aperture (labeled as 0-2, for 0-200 meters) for low-light shooting and close-quarters combat.[2] Typically, if the smaller aperture is zeroed for 300 meters, the larger aperture is zeroed for 200 meters.

The standard front sight assembly on all AR-15s is adjustable for elevation.

The standard A2 rifle front sight post is .270 inches tall, and has a square profile. It has four notches around the base of the front sight post, each notch representing 1.25 MOA in elevation.[3]

The standard A1 rifle front sight post is .260 inches tall, and has a tapered round shape. It has five notches around the base of the front sight post, each notch representing 1 MOA of elevation.[4]

The standard A2 carbine front sight post is .270 inches tall, and has a tapered, square profile, to provide a better view of the target. This is due to the fact that the carbine has a shorter sight radius than the rifle; the front sight post appears to cover much more of the target.

Colt makes a front sight post that is .300 inches in height, and Bushmaster makes one that is .310 inches tall, allowing for closer zeroing without the front sight being too far out of the front sight base.[5]

Variants

M16

M16

The M16 with a 20-round magazine

The Colt Model 601, adopted by the United States Air Force in 1959, was the first model M16. Featured a 20-inch barrel with a 1/12 twist and a non-chrome lined stainless steel bore, a fixed polymer stock, a fixed carrying handle, and no forward assist. Early models did not feature a brass deflector. The lower receiver did not feature a rib around the magazine release button. The muzzle for this model was a three-prong open-fronted "duckbill" flash suppressor. The standard M16 fired in full-auto and single shots only.

M16A1

M16A1

The M16A1 with a 20 round magazine

The Colt Model 603, officially adopted by the U.S. Army as the M16A1. Featured a 20-inch barrel with 1/12 twist, and a chrome-lined bore and chamber. A forward assist was included with this model, along with a birdcage flash suppressor, and an external rib around the now larger magazine release. Additionally the stock was shortened and the sling swivels were more outwardly angled to allow better dexterity when slung. The fully automatic fire mode was also changed to a burst fire selector to avoid wasting ammunition during suppressive fire. Otherwise, it was identical to the original M16 rifle. It was adopted by the U.S. Army in 1963 and was in use during the Vietnam war throughout the U.S. military, phasing out the M14.

M16A2

M16A2

The M16A2

The Colt Model 645, adopted by the U.S. military in 1986 as the M16A2, features the A2-style lower with longer buttstock, the round delta ring, round handguards, the heavy "government profile" 20-inch barrel with 1/7 twist, the A2 pistol grip, a fire control group with SAFE, SEMI, and BURST functions, a longer stock, brass deflector and iron sights, with the rear sight being adjustable for windage and range (up to 800 meters). The front sight, as noted earlier, still adjusts for elevation. The buttplate was made longer from top to bottom and 30 round magazines were standard with the A2, unlike prior models.

M16A3

M16A2E3

Receiver closeup of the M16A2E3, which would later be adopted as the M16A3

The Colt Model 646, adopted by the U.S. Navy as the M16A3. This model was essentially an M16A2 converted to fire in full-auto, with no burst-fire provision. Early production models are still marked "M16A2". Later production models, known as the Colt Model 901, featured flat-top receivers.



M16A4

M16A4

The M16A4

The Colt Model 945, adopted by the U.S. military as the M16A4. Introduced in 1996, it is the same as M16A2, but with a flat-top upper receiver suitable for mounting optics. Features a rifle-length KAC (Knight's Armament Company) rail (RIS rail) and a slightly taller front sight block (if the gas block isn't shaved down for optics). This was once the current issue infantry rifle for the United States Marine Corps, however it was more recently phased out of frontline service by the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle. Since then, the M16A4 has come to fill the role that the M14 rifle had when the first M16 was introduced, being used as a training rifle for new recruits to the Corps. These are now also produced by FN, alongside the M4A1.

FN15 Military Collector M16

A civilian semi automatic version of the M16A4 with modernized furniture. Other than the lack of select fire, it is identical to FN's iteration of the M16A4 (Which is most often a more modern looking model with a full rail system on the forward handguard and without a carry handle). This is internally identical to FN's other Military Collector rifle, the M4, the only differences being it is shorter (like an M4A1 is to an M16A4) and has the telescoping buttstock from its military version, said version being also provided by FN, alongside Colt.

Foreign Variants

M16S1

M16S1

The M16S1

The M16S1 was a Singapore-produced version of the M16A1, manufactured by Chartered Industries of Singapore. It was the standard Singaporean service rifle from 1973 to 1999. The M16S1 is now used mostly for ceremonial purposes. It is also held as a reserve weapon.

Model 613P

Export version of the M16A1 produced in the Philippines by Elisco.

Gallery

Videos

Trivia

  • The first-model M16 acquired a number of derogatory nicknames in Vietnam, including "the matte-black mouse gun" (due to its perceived lack of power) and the "Mattel death trap" (due to claims it resembled a toy).
  • Initial M16 rifles in Vietnam have gained a notoriety over their apparent unreliability. Rifles issued to line units in Vietnam would foul up and malfunction repeatedly when fired, due to carbon fouling and lack of lubrication and cleaning. This was further exacerbated by the switching of the powder to increase velocity in the 5.56 NATO cartridge, which in turn had the opposite effect, due to it being slower burning powder more commonly used in full sized rifle rounds.
    • The issue was partially due to issues with design itself (they lacked a chrome-lined barrel and chamber, which left it prone to rust), but more importantly due to attitudes surrounding the weapon. The rifle was touted as "self-cleaning" (though not by the manufacturer), and was not issued with cleaning kits (in reality, the rifle needs lubrication on all surfaces that involve metal-to-metal contact). This caused the government to look more closely at the M16. The blame was cast on the weapon itself rather than the fallacious self-cleaning claims made by individuals who misinterpreted what they heard from the designers and manufacturers.

See also

References

External Links

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