Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)

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nelson38899

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #360 em: Junho 03, 2010, 10:26:52 pm »
italia

desfile de tropas

http://www.megavideo.com/?v=JIVUJZNB

http://www.megavideo.com/?v=94VOL3Z0

se virem o desfile, poderão ver os países amigos de Itália. Irão ter uma surpresa agradável! :twisted:

Posso-vos dizer que Portugal é! E até desfila. Ao minuto 31 podem ouvir e ver os países amigos.
"Que todo o mundo seja «Portugal», isto é, que no mundo toda a gente se comporte como têm comportado os portugueses na história"
Agostinho da Silva
 

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nelson38899

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #361 em: Junho 05, 2010, 09:50:56 pm »
"Que todo o mundo seja «Portugal», isto é, que no mundo toda a gente se comporte como têm comportado os portugueses na história"
Agostinho da Silva
 

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #362 em: Junho 11, 2010, 05:31:27 pm »
Citação de: "lazaro"
Citação de: "Cabeça de Martelo"
Li num outro fórum que a IDF vai substituir as M-4 das suas unidades de infantaria pela Micro-Tavor, sim a Micro-Tavor e não pela Tavor que já estava a equipar algumas brigadas. :shock: ... f***** vai lá vai ... :shock:
7. Todos os animais são iguais mas alguns são mais iguais que os outros.

 

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Camuflage

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #363 em: Junho 11, 2010, 10:06:42 pm »
O desfile finlandês pareceu tão pobrezinho, então e os aviões e a restante tropa?
 

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lazaro

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #364 em: Junho 12, 2010, 08:23:31 am »
Citação de: "Cabeça de Martelo"
Citação de: "lazaro"
Citação de: "Cabeça de Martelo"
Li num outro fórum que a IDF vai substituir as M-4 das suas unidades de infantaria pela Micro-Tavor, sim a Micro-Tavor e não pela Tavor que já estava a equipar algumas brigadas. :shock: ... f***** vai lá vai ... :shock:
Onde está a fonte dessa noticia?
 

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #365 em: Junho 12, 2010, 10:37:57 am »
Vai por MP.
7. Todos os animais são iguais mas alguns são mais iguais que os outros.

 

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #366 em: Junho 12, 2010, 02:41:45 pm »
Citação de: "Vitor"
:arrow:  http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2010/02/marine_SOST_ammo_021510w/

Corps to use more lethal ammo in Afghanistan

By Dan Lamothe - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Feb 16, 2010 9:29:10 EST

The Marine Corps is dropping its conventional 5.56mm ammunition in Afghanistan in favor of new deadlier, more accurate rifle rounds, and could field them at any time.

The open-tipped rounds until now have been available only to Special Operations Command troops. The first 200,000 5.56mm Special Operations Science and Technology rounds are already downrange with Marine Expeditionary Brigade-Afghanistan, said Brig. Gen. Michael Brogan, commander of Marine Corps Systems Command. Commonly known as “SOST” rounds, they were legally cleared for Marine use by the Pentagon in late January, according to Navy Department documents obtained by Marine Corps Times.

SOCom developed the new rounds for use with the Special Operations Force Combat Assault Rifle, or SCAR, which needed a more accurate bullet because its short barrel, at 13.8 inches, is less than an inch shorter than the M4 carbine’s. Using an open-tip match round design common with some sniper ammunition, SOST rounds are designed to be “barrier blind,” meaning they stay on target better than existing M855 rounds after penetrating windshields, car doors and other objects.

Compared to the M855, SOST rounds also stay on target longer in open air and have increased stopping power through “consistent, rapid fragmentation which shortens the time required to cause incapacitation of enemy combatants,” according to Navy Department documents. At 62 grains, they weigh about the same as most NATO rounds, have a typical lead core with a solid copper shank and are considered a variation of Federal Cartridge Co.’s Federal Trophy Bonded Bear Claw round, which was developed for big-game hunting and is touted in a company news release for its ability to crush bone.

The Corps purchased a “couple million” SOST rounds as part of a joint $6 million, 10.4-million-round buy in September — enough to last the service several months in Afghanistan, Brogan said. Navy Department documents say the Pentagon will launch a competition worth up to $400 million this spring for more SOST ammunition.

“This round was really intended to be used in a weapon with a shorter barrel, their SCAR carbines,” Brogan said. “But because of its blind-to-barrier performance, its accuracy improvements and its reduced muzzle flash, those are attractive things that make it also useful to general purpose forces like the Marine Corps and Army.”
M855 problems

The standard Marine round, the M855, was developed in the 1970s and approved as an official NATO round in 1980. In recent years, however, it has been the subject of widespread criticism from troops, who question whether it has enough punch to stop oncoming enemies.

In 2002, shortcomings in the M855’s performance were detailed in a report by Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane, Ind., according to Navy Department documents. Additional testing in 2005 showed shortcomings. The Pentagon issued a request to industry for improved ammunition the following year. Federal Cartridge was the only company to respond.

Brogan said the Corps has no plans to remove the M855 from the service’s inventory at this time. However, the service has determined it “does not meet USMC performance requirements” in an operational environment in which insurgents often lack personal body armor, but engage troops through “intermediate barriers” such as windshields and car doors at security checkpoints, according to a Jan. 25 Navy Department document clearing Marines to use the SOST round.

The document, signed by J.R. Crisfield, director of the Navy Department International and Operational Law Division, is clear on the recommended course of action for the 5.56mm SOST round, formally known as MK318 MOD 0 enhanced 5.56mm ammunition.

“Based on the significantly improved performance of the MK318 MOD 0 over the M855 against virtually every anticipated target array in Afghanistan and similar combat environments where increased accuracy, better effects behind automobile glass and doors, consistent terminal performance and reduced muzzle flash are critical to mission accomplishment, USMC would treat the MK318 MOD 0 as its new 5.56mm standard issue cartridge,” Crisfield wrote.

The original plan called for the SOST round to be used specifically within the M4 carbine, which has a 14½-inch barrel and is used by tens of thousands of Marines in military occupational specialties such as motor vehicle operator where the M16A4’s longer barrel can be cumbersome. Given its benefits, however, Marine officials decided also to adopt SOST for the M16A4, which has a 20-inch barrel and is used by most of the infantry.
Incorporating SOST

In addition to operational benefits, SOST rounds have similar ballistics to the M855 round, meaning Marines will not have to adjust to using the new ammo, even though it is more accurate.

“It does not require us to change our training,” Brogan said. “We don’t have to change our aim points or modify our training curriculum. We can train just as we have always trained with the 855 round, so right now, there is no plan to completely remove the 855 from inventory.”

Marine officials in Afghanistan could not be reached for comment, but Brogan said commanders with MEB-A are authorized to issue SOST ammo to any subordinate command. Only one major Marine 5.56mm weapon system downrange will not use SOST: the M249 squad automatic weapon. Though the new rounds fit the SAW, they are not currently produced in the linked fashion commonly employed with the light machine gun, Brogan said.

SOCom first fielded the SOST round in April, said Air Force Maj. Wesley Ticer, a spokesman for the command. It also fielded a cousin — MK319 MOD 0 enhanced 7.62mm SOST ammo — designed for use with the SCAR-Heavy, a powerful 7.62mm battle rifle. SOCom uses both kinds of ammunition in all of its geographic combatant commands, Ticer said.

The Corps has no plans to buy 7.62mm SOST ammunition, but that could change if operational commanders or infantry requirements officers call for it in the future, Brogan said.

It is uncertain how long the Corps will field the SOST round. Marine officials said last summer that they took interest in it after the M855A1 lead-free slug in development by the Army experienced problems during testing, but Brogan said the service is still interested in the environmentally friendly round if it is effective. Marine officials also want to see if the price of the SOST round drops once in mass production. The price of an individual round was not available, but Brogan said SOST ammo is more expensive than current M855 rounds.

“We have to wait and see what happens with the Army’s 855LFS round,” he said. “We also have to get very good cost estimates of where these [SOST] rounds end up in full-rate, or serial production. Because if it truly is going to remain more expensive, then we would not want to buy that round for all of our training applications.”
Legal concerns

Before the SOST round could be fielded by the Corps, it had to clear a legal hurdle: approval that it met international law of war standards.

The process is standard for new weapons and weapons systems, but it took on added significance because of the bullet’s design. Open-tip bullets have been approved for use by U.S. forces for decades, but are sometimes confused with hollow-point rounds, which expand in human tissue after impact, causing unnecessary suffering, according to widely accepted international treaties signed following the Hague peace conventions held in the Netherlands in 1899 and 1907.

“We need to be very clear in drawing this distinction: This is not a hollow-point round, which is not permitted,” Brogan said. “It has been through law of land warfare review and has passed that review so that it meets the criteria of not causing unnecessary pain and suffering.”

The open-tip/hollow-point dilemma has been addressed several times by the military, including in 1990, when the chief of the Judge Advocate General International Law Branch, now-retired Marine Col. W. Hays Parks, advised that the open-tip M852 Sierra MatchKing round preferred by snipers met international law requirements. The round was kept in the field.

In a 3,000-word memorandum to Army Special Operations Command, Parks said “unnecessary suffering” and “superfluous injury” have not been formally defined, leaving the U.S. with a “balancing test” it must conduct to assess whether the usage of each kind of rifle round is justified.

“The test is not easily applied,” Parks said. “For this reason, the degree of ‘superfluous injury’ must … outweigh substantially the military necessity for the weapon system or projectile.”

John Cerone, an expert in the law of armed conflict and professor at the New England School of Law, said the military’s interpretation of international law is widely accepted. It is understood that weapons cause pain in war, and as long as there is a strategic military reason for their employment, they typically meet international guidelines, he said.

“In order to fall within the prohibition, a weapon has to be designed to cause unnecessary suffering,” he said.

Sixteen years after Parks issued his memo, an Army unit in Iraq temporarily banned the open-tip M118 long-range used by snipers after a JAG officer mistook it for hollow-tip ammunition, according to a 2006 Washington Times report. The decision was overturned when other Army officials were alerted.
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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #367 em: Junho 18, 2010, 11:35:00 am »
Citação de: "Bolovo"
L129A1, adquirido pelo Exército Britânico, já está no Afeganistão.


 :arrow: http://www.army.mod.uk/equipment/suppor ... 18827.aspx
7. Todos os animais são iguais mas alguns são mais iguais que os outros.

 

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ACADO

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #368 em: Junho 18, 2010, 09:19:04 pm »
Citação de: "Cabeça de Martelo"
Citação de: "Vitor"
:twisted:

http://www.forumdefesa.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=9115&start=0
The way of the Warrior(s) - www.warriors.pt:
" Only fools and dead Men don´t change their minds. Fools won´t and dead Men can´t !! "
 

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ACADO

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #369 em: Junho 18, 2010, 09:29:26 pm »
Citação de: "Cabeça de Martelo"
Citação de: "Bolovo"
L129A1, adquirido pelo Exército Britânico, já está no Afeganistão.


 :arrow: http://www.army.mod.uk/equipment/suppor ... 18827.aspx

Parece que os Britanicos Renderam-se às "AR10" !!!

http://www.lewismachine.net/store.php?cid=12&session="%20.$session%20.%20"

http://landcombatcb.blogspot.com/2010/05/lewis-machine-tools-lmt-l-129a1.html

The way of the Warrior(s) - www.warriors.pt:
" Only fools and dead Men don´t change their minds. Fools won´t and dead Men can´t !! "
 

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #370 em: Junho 19, 2010, 11:27:29 am »
A SAS, SBS e os Precursores já usam espingardas-automáticas da familia à décadas.
7. Todos os animais são iguais mas alguns são mais iguais que os outros.

 

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ACADO

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #371 em: Junho 19, 2010, 09:44:47 pm »
Citação de: "Cabeça de Martelo"
O SAS, SBS e os Precursores já usam espingardas-automáticas da familia à décadas.

Normalmente sao AR15 e nao AR10
The way of the Warrior(s) - www.warriors.pt:
" Only fools and dead Men don´t change their minds. Fools won´t and dead Men can´t !! "
 

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sergio21699

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #372 em: Junho 22, 2010, 04:51:25 pm »
Santarém: idoso morre atropelado por camião do Exército
Condutor não se apercebeu de que tinha atropelado o peão nem de que este estava a atravessar a via



Um idoso com 89 anos morreu esta terça-feira atropelado em Santarém por um veículo militar do Exército, disse à Lusa fonte da PSP, entidade que abriu um inquérito para averiguar as condições em que se deu o acidente.

O idoso estava a atravessar a estrada, numa zona sem passadeira, próximo do Largo Infante Santo, nas imediações do edifício da Câmara Municipal, tendo sido atropelado pela traseira de um camião do Exército que estava parado ao sinal vermelho do semáforo, disse à Lusa fonte do Exército, sem dar mais explicações.

A vítima, viúvo, ex-funcionário reformado da Câmara de Santarém, teve morte imediata, no acidente que ocorreu cerca das 13:30.

Segundo a PSP, o condutor do veículo militar não se terá apercebido de que tinha atropelado o idoso nem de que este estava a atravessar a via.

Segundo tenente-coronel Hélder Perdigão, relações públicas do Exército, o condutor do camião militar é um cabo da Brigada de Reacção Rápida de Tancos com cerca de 20 anos de idade.

A viatura envolvida no acidente mortal é um camião MAN e deslocava-se para a zona do exercício militar de demonstração Apolo 10 que estava a acontecer na zona do Jardim da República, em Santarém.

A mesma fonte do exército frisou que o trajecto efectuado pelo camião na altura do acidente não tinha nada a ver com o exercício militar em curso.

Ainda segundo o Exército, «não há indícios de culpabilidade do condutor, mas o inquérito será feito pela PSP de Santarém visto que o acidente se passou na via pública».

A vítima mortal foi transportada para hospital de Santarém e o inquérito está já a ser conduzido pelo departamento de investigação criminal de acidentes da PSP de Santarém.


http://www.tvi24.iol.pt/sociedade/idoso-exercito-atropelado-tvi24-ultimas-noticias-santarem/1172138-4071.html
-Meu General, estamos cercados...
-Óptimo! Isso quer dizer que podemos atacar em qualquer direcção!
 

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #373 em: Junho 26, 2010, 12:56:04 pm »
Citar
SOCOM Cancels Mk-16 SCAR
by christian on June 25, 2010 · COMMENTS (0)




In an exclusive report for Military.com we reveal that US Spec Ops Command has abandoned the 5.56 version of the SCAR and will use FY 2011 money to buy more 7.62 Mk-17s to fill a “capability gap” for a 7.62 battle rifle.

Here’s an excerpt:

In a surprising reversal that follows years of effort to design a one-of-a-kind commando rifle, the U.S. military’s Special Operations Command has abruptly decided to abandon the new SOCOM Combat Assault rifle – the “SCAR,” as the rifle is commonly known – in favor of previously-fielded carbines.

Details provided exclusively to Military.com reveal that SOCOM, the Tampa-based command that oversees the training and equipping of SEALs, Green Berets, Air Force Special Tactics Teams and Marine SOC groups, will stop purchasing the 5.56 mm Mk-16 Special Operations Forces Combat Assault Rifle and might require all units who now have them to turn the new weapons back into the armory.

“The Mk-16 does not provide enough of a performance advantage over the M-4 to justify spending USSOCOM’s limited … funds when competing priorities are taken into consideration,” officials at USSOCOM said in an email response to questions from Military.com. “Currently, three of USSOCOM’s four components receive the 5.56 mm M-4 from their parent service as a service common equipment item.”

A couple things to note here, so far SOCOM has purchased 850 Mk-16s and 750 Mk-17s — way below their original requirement. The weird thing to consider here is that the requirement was for a 5.56 and that was what was competed. Now they’re buying a 7.62 that has no written requirement document attached to it.

Further, the SEALs are going to be particularly in the hurt locker on this one since the Navy doesn’t buy their guns, SOCOM does. I hear that it was Naval Special Warfare that really pushed this program and that it was the USASOC that basically killed it. More of the Mk-16s were fielded to SEALs than any other unit within SOCOM.

Also of note: I hear that the services who have them will have to hand back their Mk-16s when they’re back from deployment and pick up their old SOPMOD M4s or HK-416s. So so a final goodbye to your SCAR-16 when you’re back from The Box.

Two well-informed industry analysts tell me that SCAR-maker FNH-USA will try to sell SOCOM on the idea of a Mk-17 common receiver that can be turned into a 5.56 or other caliber by switching out part of the lower receiver. So FNH-USA is positioning itself to rescue the Mk-16 through the Mk-17. But there’s no indication that SOCOM is biting.


 :arrow:  http://kitup.military.com/2010/06/socom-cancels-mk-16-scar.html#ixzz0rtef9uMB
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Trafaria

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Re: Notícias (Exércitos/Sistemas de Armas)
« Responder #374 em: Junho 26, 2010, 05:40:46 pm »
Citação de: "Camuflage"
O desfile finlandês pareceu tão pobrezinho, então e os aviões e a restante tropa?
Depende do ponto de vista.
Eu achei este defile riquissimo ...
Camiões Sisu de vários modelos, tamanhos e funções .... made in Finland.
Varios modelos de blindados Pasi... made in Finland.
Espingardas automaticas SAKO RK-95 ... made in Finland.
E muito, muito mais...

Enfim... valente desfile!
::..Trafaria..::