Military

US Special Forces seeking subsonic ammunition for covert missions

US Special Forces seeking subsonic ammunition for covert missions
USAF special forces on a training mission
USAF special forces on a training mission
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USAF special forces on a training mission
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USAF special forces on a training mission

Most people have experienced the sonic boom of a skillfully wielded whip, or the closely related crack of a nearby bolt of lightning. Such sounds have a character that attracts a good deal of attention, which is why the US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) is trying to silence them. The crack of a rifle shot is the sonic boom of a supersonic bullet, making stealthy ground missions difficult to accomplish. To address this need, SOCOM has issued a Small Business Innovation Research request for proposal for a feasibility study of suitable subsonic rounds.

In dry air at 20° C (68° F), the speed of sound is about 343 meters per second (1,125 feet per second). If a bullet moves faster than that, it generates a sonic boom. SOCOM-fielded rifles with standard combat loads have muzzle velocities of between Mach 2 and Mach 3, which rather suggests that producing a reliable subsonic round may be a difficult task, especially since the rifles in which these will be fired are designed for the upper velocity of which their cartridges are capable.

The rise of urban warfare against individuals and small groups suggests that a source of reliable, accurate, and (most of all) quiet subsonic rounds is, to SOCOM, a highly desirable goal. However, to date, subsonic ammunition performs reliably only in small caliber silenced pistols, which are unsuited to many missions for which subsonic ammunition would be favored, even transformational. Favored, perhaps, but not easily achieved.

Past experience with subsonic rounds reveals significant accuracy problems, which drives a considerable reduction in effective range. Achieving subsonic velocities requires igniting a very small propellant charge in a rather large cartridge, leading to unsteady burning and erratic chamber pressure. Small chamber pressure can lead to gas leakage from the chamber, and also to a greatly increased chance of having a bullet become stuck in the barrel, rendering the rifle inoperable. Such low pressures are also insufficient to reliably cycle the action on current gas-operated semi-automatic and automatic rifles, raising a strong possibility of jamming during use.

It seems clear that new cartridge technologies must be invented to satisfy these conditions. These might include polymer-based cartridges for improved gas sealing, and sabots for sealing of the barrel while insuring predictable barrel friction and highly accurate performance. The feasibility study will produce an outline of the general approach to developing subsonic rounds.

In later phases prototypes will be developed that demonstrate the successful implementation of the new technologies. Assuming funding remains available, a transition from the prototype cartridges and manufacturing methods to full production of the subsonic ammunition designs will be carried out. Dual use by law enforcement is an additional SOCOM goal. Programs to develop military subsonic ammunition have previously been fielded with a consistent lack of success. Perhaps the continuing flow of materials science and manufacturing advances will change the odds this time.

Source: USSOCOM via Wired

31 comments
31 comments
flink
I'm curious. Exactly why does any law enforcement officer require sub-sonic ammunition to use against the people it protects and serves?
Sat Nandlall
What about a series of staged ignitions, built into the bullet head, so that the bullet is continuously propelled forward but at a subsonic speed?
Ross Nicholson
Try tiny bullets at much higher speed. That should get them in beneath the human hearing threshold and improve range and accuracy.
Brian Mcc
Why not just use Silencers ? And there ARE Silencers on Guns other than subsonic hand guns.
http://www.silencerresearch.com/sound_suppressors_on_high_powered_rifles.htm

estelja
Flink, nowhere in this article does it mention law enforcement. The article is purely about a military round for Spec Ops use. However, the police could use such a round when doing raids on drug houses, etc. where there are heavily armed potential assailants that could be taken out silently as to not give the other bad guys (victims, as you would probably call them) an audible cue to take up arms. Protect and Serve by taking out or arresting those that do the opposite, i.e. criminals.
Robt
@ Estelja. Re: Nowhere in this article does it mention law enforcement. The last para of the article states: "Dual use by law enforcement is an additional SOCOM goal."
flink
@estelja:
Last paragraph, third sentence:
"Dual use by law enforcement is an additional SOCOM goal."
US LEO has neither a requirement nor the authority to use anything other than flash suppressors. It's not legal to simply shoot a target unless a hostage or other LEO is about to be shoot by said target. I'm not arguing that it wouldn't make things easier, just that it's not legal.
It's not easy to approach a building unseen nowadays. There are dozens of IR surveillance/security cam systems on the market and they're fairly simple to build from scratch.
Covert entry is seldom practiced in a civilian setting unless there are hostages. Entry into most buildings is accomplished with brute force and plenty of noise. There's no way to do it in silence. At best, you might quietly divert the DWV into a bucket in a crawlspace or capture the outflow to the sewer line before entry so that you don't loose evidence. Once the ram hits the door, there's no need for silence.
Stealth is often practiced but seldom used. It's mainly for building clearing when the environment is mixed (target/friendly) or unknown, and then only when a surreptitious entry is possible. A locked and chained door usually makes that impossible. And it's good practice for the period after the entry if you're working a large, multi-floor building. There are few things that suck more than having someone shooting at you through the floor/ceiling.
UK LEO have access, but only because they have so often had to deal with many flavors of terrorist organizations.
Slowburn
If you want it to be effective at long range and subsonic you have to throw a large heavy bullet (I would recommend some on the order of 60cal.) or have an engine on the bullet. (firing little magnesium or white phosphorous fueled ramjets would be cool.
Mark Timon
300 AAC/BLK Does this now with a 220 grain 308 bullet at just over 1000FPS. Works in an M4/AR15 with the swapout of a barrel. Uses standard M4 bolt and magazines. Done
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/300_AAC_Blackout_%287.62%C3%9735mm%29
Will Avent
silencers and suppressors are the same thing. They only mute the sound at the barrel, not the second crack from the supersonic bullet. To be effectively silenced the ammo needs to be subsonic
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