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m It looks cluttered with the unnessecary headings. Do you have any factual information you would like to contribute or just bicker about style?
this format lets us give further information on variants not notable on their own. oh.... and the heading style makes it more obvious when someone decides to change the official designation of the L86
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==Variants==
==Variants==
The L85A1 was produced in several other variants: the L86A1 LSW light machine gun, the '''L98A1 Cadet GP''' (General Purpose) training rifle and the enhanced '''L85A2''' and '''L86A2 LSW'''.
Modification of the L85A1 resulted in several variants: the '''L86A1 and L86A2 LSW''', the '''L22A1 and L22A2 Carbine''', the '''L98A1 Cadet GP''' (General Purpose) training rifle and the enhanced '''L85A2'''.


=== L85A2 ===
The L86A1 light machine gun features a longer and heavier barrel compared to the base rifle, a different handguard, bipod (mounted to the forward part of the handguard, at the tip of the barrel), an additional rear grip and a shoulder strap.
In 2000, [[Heckler & Koch]], at that time owned by Royal Ordnance, were contracted to upgrade the SA80 family of weapons. Two hundred thousand SA80s were re-manufactured at a cost of £400 each, producing the L85A2 variant (the L86A1 was also upgraded, bringing it up to L86A2 standard). Changes, focused primarily on improving reliability include: a redesigned charging handle, modified bolt, extractor and a redesigned hammer assembly that produces a slight delay in the hammer’s operation in continuous fire mode, improving reliability and stability. The L85A2 can also mount the HK [[AG36]] [[40 mm]] grenade launcher in a configuration similar to the [[M203]]. The addition of the grenade launcher adds another 3.30 lb (1.49 kg) to the L85A2's weight.


=== L86 LSW ===
The [[L98A1 Cadet GP Rifle|L98A1 Cadet GP]] is a manually-operated single-fire version of the L85A1 that lacks a gas system and fire selector. The return mechanism is re-cocked by hand after each shot, using a large cocking handle. This is connected to the bolt by an external rod, and runs on a slide on the side of the body well forward of the working parts and enhances firing in a prone position. The rifle is equipped with iron sights only. After using an adapter kit it can be used to fire .22 LR [[rimfire]] rounds. The L98A1 cannot be used with rifle grenades.
The [[Light Support Weapon]] (LSW) is a magazine-fed automatic weapon originally intended to provide fire support at a [[fireteam]] level. It has a longer barrel than the L85 and a bipod, buttstrap and rear pistol grip, together with a different design of handguard. Its longer barrel gives an increased muzzle velocity thus accuracy and a greater effective range. The weapon is otherwise identical to the basic L85 and the magazines and some internal parts are interchangeable.


The lengthy, free-floating nature of the heavy barrel and the optical performance of the SUSAT gives the weapon excellent accuracy. From its inception, the L86 has been a target of criticism on much the same basis as the L85 with the additional issue of its inability to deliver sustained automatic fire unlike a belt fed weapon.<ref name="grauniad">[http://www.guardian.co.uk/military/story/0,11816,1273304,00.html ''Don't Buy British'', ''Guardian'' Article]</ref> In a tacit acknowledgement of the L86's shortcomings (and advantages), as a Light Support Weapon, and following the introduction of the 5.56 mm [[FN Minimi]] light machine gun (LMG) to the infantry section, the L86 it is now used as a DMR (Designated Marksman Rifle) within the infantry section.{{fact}}<!-- there seems to be a problem with circular references between internet forums and various internet articles here-->
[[Image:UGL.jpg|thumb|L85A2 rifles fitted with the [[under-slung grenade launcher]]s]]


The L86A1 was upgraded to the L86A2 at the same time as L85A1 rifles were upgraded to L85A2 standards, undergoing the same set of modifications.
Based on the L85A1 a compact carbine known as the '''L22A1''' was also developed with a short, 442 mm barrel (the weapon’s weight, with the optical sight – 4.42 kg, length – 709 mm). The forward handguard was replaced with a vertical grip. A smaller version of the SUSAT sight was installed, the difference being the tritium reticule is protruded from the top instead of the bottom like the standard issue SUSAT. The newer '''L22A2''' features a [[Picatinny rail|MIL-STD-1913]] accessory rail instead of the L22A1's fixed front grip. These carbine variants are used in small numbers by vehicle crews, pilots and rear-echelon support personnel.


=== L22 Carbine ===
In 2000, [[Heckler & Koch]], at that time owned by Royal Ordnance, were contracted to upgrade the SA80 family of weapons. Two hundred thousand SA80s were re-manufactured at a cost of £400 each, producing the L85A2 variant (the L86A1 was also upgraded, bringing it up to L86A2 standard). Changes, focused primarily on improving reliability include: a redesigned charging handle, modified bolt, extractor and a redesigned hammer assembly that produces a slight delay in the hammer’s operation in continuous fire mode, improving reliability and stability. The L85A2 can also mount the HK [[AG36]] [[40 mm]] grenade launcher in a configuration similar to the [[M203]]. The addition of the grenade launcher adds another 3.30 lb (1.49 kg) to the L85A2's weight.
Based on the L85A1 a compact carbine known as the '''L22A1''' was also developed with a short, 442 mm barrel (the weapon’s weight, with the optical sight – 4.42 kg, length – 709 mm). The forward handguard was replaced with a vertical grip. A smaller version of the SUSAT sight was installed, with the tritium reticule is protruded from the top instead of the bottom like the standard issue SUSAT. The newer '''L22A2''' features a [[Picatinny rail]] accessory rail instead of the L22A1's fixed front grip. These carbine variants are used in small numbers by vehicle crews, pilots and rear-echelon support personnel.<!-- i can find bugger all sources on these. did these undergo the HK modifications? -->

=== L98A1 Cadet GP ===
{{main|L98A1 Cadet GP Rifle}}
The L98A1 Cadet GP (General Purpose) is a manually-operated single-fire version of the L85A1 that lacks a gas system and fire selector. The rifle is re-cocked by hand after each shot, using a large cocking handle. This is connected to the bolt by an external rod, and runs on a slide on the side of the body well forward of the working parts. This makes it easier to fire from a prone position. The rifle is equipped with iron sights only. With an appropriate adaptor kit it can be used to fire .22 LR [[rimfire]] rounds.

[[Image:UGL.jpg|thumb|L85A2 rifles fitted with the [[under-slung grenade launcher]]s]]


==Deployment==
==Deployment==

Revision as of 07:26, 26 November 2007

SA80
L85A1 with SUSAT sight
TypeAssault rifle
Place of origin United Kingdom
Service history
In service1985–present
Used byUnited Kingdom, Jamaica, Zimbabwe
WarsNorthern Ireland, 1991 Persian Gulf War, Afghanistan, Iraq War
Production history
Designed1980s
ManufacturerRoyal Small Arms Factory, Royal Ordnance
Produced1985–1994, revamped from 2000
No. builtapprox. 350,000
VariantsL85A1, L85A2, L86A1 LSW (Light Support Weapon), L22A1, L22A2, L98A1 CGP
Specifications
Mass4.98 kg loaded (L85A1)
6.58 kg loaded (L86A1 LSW)
4.42 kg loaded (L22A1)
Length785 mm (L85A1)
900 mm (L86A1 LSW)
709 mm (L22A1)
Barrel length518 mm (L85A1)
646 mm (L86A1 LSW)
442 mm (L22A1)

Cartridge5.56x45mm NATO
ActionGas-operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire610-775 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity940 m/s (L85A1)
970 m/s (L86A1 LSW)
Feed system30-round STANAG magazines
SightsTelescopic SUSAT, aperture iron sights

The SA80 (Small Arms for the 1980s) is a family of 5.56 mm small arms designed and produced (until 1988) by the Royal Small Arms Factory at Enfield Lock. In 1988 production of the rifle was transferred to the Royal Ordnance’s Nottingham Small Arms Facility (formerly British Aerospace's Royal Ordnance, now BAE Systems Land Systems Munitions & Ordnance).

Development

The rifle’s history dates back to the late 1940s, when an ambitious program to develop a new cartridge and new class of rifle was launched in the United Kingdom based on combat experience drawn from World War II. Two 7 mm prototypes were built in the in a “bullpup” configuration, designated the EM-1 and EM-2. When NATO adopted the 7.62x51mm rifle cartridge as the standard caliber for its service rifles, further development of these rifles was discontinued (the British Army chose to adopt the 7.62 mm L1A1 SLR automatic rifle, which is a license-built version of the Belgian FN FAL).

A Royal Marine with an L85A1 fitted with a blank firing adapter

In 1969 the Enfield company began work on a brand new family of weapons, chambered in a newly designed British 4.85x49mm intermediate cartridge. The system was to be composed of two weapons: an individual weapon, the XL64E5 rifle and a light support weapon known as the XL65E4 light machine gun. Both firearms were designed based on the 5.56 mm AR-18 assault rifle, which was manufactured in Britain by Sterling Armament Company.

In 1976 the prototypes were ready to be trialled, however after NATO’s decision to standardize ammunition among its members, Enfield engineers re-chambered the rifles to the American 5.56x45mm M193 cartridge. The newly redesigned 5.56 mm version of the XL64E5 became the XL70E3. The left-handed XL68 was also rechambered in 5.56x45mm as the XL78. The 5.56mm Light Support Weapon variant, the XL73E3, developed from the XL65E4, was noted for the full length receiver extension with the bipod under the muzzle now indicative of the type.[1] In this configuration both weapons underwent a series of evaluations, with a small batch of pre-production weapons being used by British soldiers during the Falklands conflict.

Further development out of the initial so-called "Phase A"[1] pre-production prototypes led to the XL85 and XL86. While the XL85E1 and XL86E1 were ultimately adopted as the L85 and L86 respectively, a number of additional test models were produced. The XL85E2 and XL86E2 were designed to an alternate build standard with 12 components different from E1 variants, including parts of the gas system, bolt, and magazine catch. Three series of variants were created for "Environmental User Trials." XL85E3 and XL86E3 variants were developed with 24 modified parts, most notably a plastic safety plunger. The E4's had 21 modified parts, no modification to the pistol grip, and an aluminium safety plunger, unlike the E3 variants. Lastly, the E5 variants had 9 modified parts in addition to those from the E3/E4 variants.[1]

After receiving feedback from users, addressing concerns and incorporating the several design changes noted, including adopting the rifle for use with the heavier Belgian SS109 version of the 5.56x45mm cartridge and improving reliability, the rifle was accepted into service with the British Army in 1985, designated the SA80 (Small Arms for the 1980s). The SA80 family consists of the L85A1 IW (Individual Weapon) and the L86A1 LSW (Light Support Weapon).

In 1994 production was officially completed. Over 350,000 L85A1 rifles and L86A1 light machine guns had been manufactured for the United Kingdom. They are also in use with the armed forces of Jamaica.

Design details

The L85A1 is a selective-fire gas-operated assault rifle that uses ignited powder gases bled through a gas port above the barrel to provide the weapon’s automation. The rifle uses a short stroke gas piston system (the piston travels inside a gas tube located above the barrel) and a three-position adjustable gas regulator; the first gas setting is used for normal operation, the second – for use in difficult environmental conditions and the third setting is used to propel rifle grenades. The weapon uses a rotating cylindrical bolt that contains 7 radially-mounted locking lugs, an extractor and casing ejector. The bolt’s rotation is controlled via a cam pin that slides inside a camming guide machined into the bolt carrier. The weapon fires from a closed bolt.

An L85A1 field stripped

The rifle is fed from a curved box magazine with a 30-round capacity. The magazine release button was placed above the magazine housing, at the left side of the receiver.

The L85A1 is equipped with a hammer striking mechanism and a trigger mechanism with a fire-control selector that enables semi-automatic fire and fully automatic fire (the fire selector lever is located at the left side of the receiver, just aft of the magazine). A cross-bolt type safety that prevents accidental firing is located above the trigger; the “safe” setting disables the trigger. When the last cartridge is fired from the magazine the bolt and bolt carrier assembly lock to the rear.

The rifle features a barrel with a slotted flash suppressor, which also serves as the base for attaching and launching rifle grenades and mounting a bayonet.

The rifle is built in a “bullpup” configuration, with a forward mounted pistol grip. The rifle was designed to be used exclusively by right-handed shooters since the ejection port and cocking handle (reciprocates during firing) are found at the right side of the receiver.

Soldiers of the Brigade of Gurkhas equipped with the L85 rifle and L86 LSW with yellow blank-firing attachment

L85A1 rifles used by the Royal Marines, infantry and the RAF Regiment are equipped with a SUSAT (Sight Unit Small Arms, Trilux) optical sight, with a fixed 4x magnification and an illuminated aiming pointer powered by a variable tritium light source (as of 2006 almost all British Army personnel deploying on operations have been issued SUSATs). Mounted on the SUSAT’s one-piece, pressure die-cast aluminum body is a mechanical back-up iron sight that consists of a front post and small rear aperture. Rifles used with other branches of the armed forces when not on operations are configured with fixed iron sights, consisting of a flip rear aperture (housed inside a carry handle, mounted to the top of the receiver, replacing the SUSAT sight) and a forward post, installed on a bracket above the gas block. The rear sight can be adjusted for windage, and the foresight – elevation. In place of the SUSAT a passive night vision CWS scope can be used, and also – independent of the SUSAT – a laser pointer can be mounted.

The L85A1 comes equipped with: a sling, blank firing adapter, cleaning kit and a blade-type bayonet, which coupled with the sheath can double as a wire cutter (the sheath contains a small saw). The rifle can be adopted to use .22 LR ammunition with a special conversion kit. The rifle can also accommodate a 40 mm under-barrel grenade launcher.

The weapon’s receiver is made from stamped steel, reinforced with welded and riveted machined steel inserts. Synthetics were also used (i.e. the handguards, pistol grip, butt pad and cheek rest were all fabricated from nylon).

Variants

Modification of the L85A1 resulted in several variants: the L86A1 and L86A2 LSW, the L22A1 and L22A2 Carbine, the L98A1 Cadet GP (General Purpose) training rifle and the enhanced L85A2.

L85A2

In 2000, Heckler & Koch, at that time owned by Royal Ordnance, were contracted to upgrade the SA80 family of weapons. Two hundred thousand SA80s were re-manufactured at a cost of £400 each, producing the L85A2 variant (the L86A1 was also upgraded, bringing it up to L86A2 standard). Changes, focused primarily on improving reliability include: a redesigned charging handle, modified bolt, extractor and a redesigned hammer assembly that produces a slight delay in the hammer’s operation in continuous fire mode, improving reliability and stability. The L85A2 can also mount the HK AG36 40 mm grenade launcher in a configuration similar to the M203. The addition of the grenade launcher adds another 3.30 lb (1.49 kg) to the L85A2's weight.

L86 LSW

The Light Support Weapon (LSW) is a magazine-fed automatic weapon originally intended to provide fire support at a fireteam level. It has a longer barrel than the L85 and a bipod, buttstrap and rear pistol grip, together with a different design of handguard. Its longer barrel gives an increased muzzle velocity thus accuracy and a greater effective range. The weapon is otherwise identical to the basic L85 and the magazines and some internal parts are interchangeable.

The lengthy, free-floating nature of the heavy barrel and the optical performance of the SUSAT gives the weapon excellent accuracy. From its inception, the L86 has been a target of criticism on much the same basis as the L85 with the additional issue of its inability to deliver sustained automatic fire unlike a belt fed weapon.[2] In a tacit acknowledgement of the L86's shortcomings (and advantages), as a Light Support Weapon, and following the introduction of the 5.56 mm FN Minimi light machine gun (LMG) to the infantry section, the L86 it is now used as a DMR (Designated Marksman Rifle) within the infantry section.[citation needed]

The L86A1 was upgraded to the L86A2 at the same time as L85A1 rifles were upgraded to L85A2 standards, undergoing the same set of modifications.

L22 Carbine

Based on the L85A1 a compact carbine known as the L22A1 was also developed with a short, 442 mm barrel (the weapon’s weight, with the optical sight – 4.42 kg, length – 709 mm). The forward handguard was replaced with a vertical grip. A smaller version of the SUSAT sight was installed, with the tritium reticule is protruded from the top instead of the bottom like the standard issue SUSAT. The newer L22A2 features a Picatinny rail accessory rail instead of the L22A1's fixed front grip. These carbine variants are used in small numbers by vehicle crews, pilots and rear-echelon support personnel.

L98A1 Cadet GP

The L98A1 Cadet GP (General Purpose) is a manually-operated single-fire version of the L85A1 that lacks a gas system and fire selector. The rifle is re-cocked by hand after each shot, using a large cocking handle. This is connected to the bolt by an external rod, and runs on a slide on the side of the body well forward of the working parts. This makes it easier to fire from a prone position. The rifle is equipped with iron sights only. With an appropriate adaptor kit it can be used to fire .22 LR rimfire rounds.

File:UGL.jpg
L85A2 rifles fitted with the under-slung grenade launchers

Deployment

The SA80 gained an initial poor reputation among soldiers and marines as being unreliable and fragile, a fact picked up by the UK media,[2] and entertainment industry.[3] The writer Andy McNab said in his book Bravo Two Zero, that the British Army procured a "Rolls-Royce in the SA80, albeit a prototype Rolls-Royce."

Some of the rifle's problems were corrected though modifications (e.g. the magazine release guard) but complaints over reliability in service continued.[2] The British Ministry of Defence describes the L85A2 revision as "modified in light of operational experience... the most reliable weapons of their type in the world".[4] Army trials had indicated extremely good reliability over a range of climates for various operational scenarios, though with a decline in reliability in hot, and especially hot and dry conditions.[5] Reports by HK suggested that over-zealous cleaning had a detrimental effect on the rifle.[citation needed] This includes using abrasives on parts not suited to them, as well as simple over-cleaning.

The rifle's export sales were largely a failure, which critics attribute to its reputation for poor performance.[citation needed] To date, the only other nations to use the SA80 are Jamaica, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, all of whom received quantities of the SA80 as foreign aid.[citation needed] In the mid-90s Venezuela purchased a small lot of these weapons for use by their Special Forces, with the possibility of replacing the aging FN FALs of the entire Armed Forces with the SA80. General discontent with the design and alleged reliability problems, particularly in jungle settings, quickly led to the dismissal of this weapon from all active service within Venezuela.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c "The 5.56 X 45mm: 1974-1985 - A Chronology of Development". Daniel Watters, The Gun Zone. Retrieved 2007-05-05. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |name= ignored (help)
  2. ^ a b c d Don't Buy British, Guardian Article Cite error: The named reference "grauniad" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ for example the Bremner, Bird and Fortune satirical comedy documentary Between Iraq and a Hard Place included the line: "The SA80 is a lethal weapon, especially for the person trying to fire it," stolen from a description of the Vietnam War era M16.
  4. ^ UK Ministry of Defence (Army) - SA80 A2 Individual Weapon and Underslung Grenade Launcher (UGL)
  5. ^ [1], mirrored at [2]

External links

See also