Originally posted by shawnmmcc
I doubt that overpenetration is as big a factor with a grenade launcher in an urban environment - but I could be wrong, the people to ask are the Marines in Iraq right now. If the houses are of frame construction, that could be an issue - except you machine guns will penetrate the walls without too much trouble, and if the grenade penetrates to the next room - it takes out both.
In your brick/concrete environments, I would want the extra explosive power while upgrading munitions for lethality. These newer rounds may take advantage of more modern prefragmentation technology, though frankly I would think the M40 would also be using that. I have no issue with the new weapon itself, but if it had been instead designed for the older 40mm rounds, you could have the best of both worlds. I am assuming that the less flat trajectory of the heavier round would be LESS of a disadvantage with this weapon. However, they wouldn't get all the new ammunition sales, too.
I doubt that overpenetration is as big a factor with a grenade launcher in an urban environment - but I could be wrong, the people to ask are the Marines in Iraq right now. If the houses are of frame construction, that could be an issue - except you machine guns will penetrate the walls without too much trouble, and if the grenade penetrates to the next room - it takes out both.
In your brick/concrete environments, I would want the extra explosive power while upgrading munitions for lethality. These newer rounds may take advantage of more modern prefragmentation technology, though frankly I would think the M40 would also be using that. I have no issue with the new weapon itself, but if it had been instead designed for the older 40mm rounds, you could have the best of both worlds. I am assuming that the less flat trajectory of the heavier round would be LESS of a disadvantage with this weapon. However, they wouldn't get all the new ammunition sales, too.
Like you, I see no reason why this round would have a lethality advantage over the 40mm given that both rounds are put on target. 40mm has been more or less constantly improved over the many years that it has been in service.
The only negative I can see for this weapon is that it now lacks the blooper's capability for indirect fire. Getting an angle for the shrapnel from a 25mm round isn't the same thing as having a larger round capable of high angle fire. In most situations the new weapon will probably be superior, but it doesn't look like it is going to fit into the light mortar nitch.
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