New weapon can fire round corners

Originally posted by privatehudson
Didn't the germans attempt something like this in WWII?

Yes, they also succeded.
mp44.jpg

http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/exhibits/ex-corner.htm
On display in our Second World War gallery, this rifle is the subject of frequent enquiries. Many people have expressed surprise or disbelief that a firearm can be made to shoot around corners; yet this is precisely what the curved barrel attachment enables this weapon to do.

The attachment was the fruit of experiments, carried out in Germany during the early 1940s, with the object of providing a device which would enable troops to shoot from behind cover, without exposing themselves to enemy fire. Various deflecting troughs and curved barrels were tried with a number of infantry weapons, before the combination which we have on display was arrived at. The relatively short bullet fired by the MP44 made it particularly suitable for this rôle. The attachment deflects the flight of the bullet through 30 degrees and, with the aid of the prismatic sight which is fitted, a reasonable degree of accuracy can be attained. A further version of the device was developed which deflected the bullet through 90 degrees. This was intended for use as a close-defence weapon by armoured vehicle crews; however it was found that bullets fired through it generally fragmented due to the stresses involved.
mp44det.jpg

The curved barrel device has proved something of a technological dead-end. By contrast, the rifle itself was of fundamental importance in the development of modern military firearms, being the first "assault rifle" to see widespread use. The assault rifle concept grew from a realization that the ammunition fired by conventional rifles was too powerful for normal combat use. It could kill at over 2000 metres, but First World War experience showed that infantry firefights seldom occurred at ranges in excess of 400 metres. Consequently it was perceived that smaller and less powerful cartridges could be used. Although such thinking was current in several countries, Germany was the first to put it into practical effect.

Using a shortened version of the standard rifle cartridge, the German assault rifle was able to deliver controllable fully-automatic fire against close-range targets, while still offering the possibility of accurate aimed fire out to all normal combat ranges. This development revolutionized the infantryman's armament, rendering conventional rifles and submachine-guns obsolescent. The concept was soon taken up by other nations, most notably by the Soviet Union with the famous Kalashnikov Avtomat (AK47). Assault rifles are now standard equipment in armies throughout the world.

More on the machingun: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturmgewehr_44
SG44.jpg
 
Originally posted by Pontiuth Pilate
Er, Gannon, in case you weren't aware, we train our soldiers to be machines. The first thing you get at Marine boot camp is the "Kill! Kill! Kill!" mantra.

This is the way it's been throughout history! Soldiers HAVE to be impersonal killing machines who don't think about [or hopefully even see] the people they're killing. Otherwise you end up like Kurt Vonnegut or George Orwell. A menace to the American Way.
Good grief, you mean if we trained our soldiers to be thinking people, they might turn their weapons on the Masters of War who are driving them to their deaths and we might get some peace in the world?
 
This thing will become obsolete with the introduction of OICW. But until then, it is very useful for urban combat.
 
Originally posted by jpowers
Wasn't too much of a success at Stalingrad.
Which (42/43) was about two years before this device was developed (late 44).

"Captain, let's synchronize calendars!"


(there was a war where failure to synchornize calendars was a significant factor. In the Ulm/Austerlitz campaign (1805, Germany) The Austirans were on the Gregorian (current) calendar and the Russians on the Julian. The Austrians could not figure out why the Russians were always 10 days late.
 
Er, it's not really anything new. In WW1 they had sniper rifles fitted with periscopes to fire from inside of trenches.

Why bother with it? Give me Land Warrior any day.
 
Back
Top Bottom