- Colt CMG-1 machine gun
The Colt Machine Gun-1 or CMG-1 was an
open bolt belt-fedmachine gun that fired 5.56x45mm cartridges designed byColt Manufacturing Company in 1965. Colt hastily developed the CMG-1 to complement theCAR-15 , a Colt branding of theM16 rifle , so that Colt might offer both of them as an alternative to theStoner 63 weapons system. It failed to achieve any sales, and was replaced by the Colt CMG-2, which also failed to achieve any sales.Though marketed together with the CAR-15, the CMG-1 had few parts in common with it. One CMG-1 used
direct impingement and shared the bolt, gas tube, and other operating parts of the M16. However, other CMG-1s used gas pistons. The CMG-1s also used the M16'spistol grip , front sight block, and flash hider. Similar to the Stoner 63, the CMG-1 could be fed from either side. The rate of fire was 650 rounds per minute. Only two or three CMG-1s were ever made. Colt made them with sheet-metal stamping.Colt offered the CMG-1 in four different versions: bipod-mounted, tripod-mounted, vehicle-mounted, or fixed mount. The convert|11.5|lb|abbr=on. bipod-mounted version was marketed as a light machine gun for use by assault troops. It was the only version with a buttstock. The convert|12.5|lb|abbr=on. tripod-mounted version was considered a medium machine gun. The vehicle mounted version was a pintle-mounted machine gun for use by soldiers in land vehicles. The fixed mount version was fired by a solenoid allowing for remote operation so it could be mounted in a helicopter or other aircraft.
In 1967, Colt replaced the CMG-1 with the CMG-2. The CMG-2 abandoned any commonality with the M16 and was only available as a bipod-mounted light machine gun with a vertical foregrip. It was fed from a 150-round belt using
M13 link s contained in a drum. The CMG-2 was gas-piston operated, but used an M16 bolt. The extractor was machined into the bolt. The CMG-2's barrel was detachable and had a handle, so an overheated barrel could be replaced in the field. The barrel had a 1:9 twist and was meant to fire an experimental convert|68|gr|sing=on bullet, designed for longer ranges than the then-standard convert|55|gr|sing=on M193 bullet. Unlike theM60 machine gun , then in use in theVietnam War , an M2 bipod was mounted on the CMG-2's ventilated handguard. The most unusual feature was that a user charged the CMG-2 by unlocking the pistol grip, and then sliding it forward and back. Colt submitted a buttstock-less short-barreled CMG-2 to the Navy SEALs. The Navy classified the CMG-2 as the EX 27 Mod 0 machine gun but they ultimately chose the Stoner 63 MK23 Mod 0 Commando instead. The CMG-2 never left prototype phase and Colt ceased development in 1969.References
*cite book|last=Stevens|first=R. Blake|coauthors=Edward C. Ezell|title=The Black Rifle: M16 Retrospective|origyear=1987|edition=Second Enhanced Edition|series=Modern U.S. Military Small Arms|year=1994|publisher=Colector Grade Publications Inc.|location=Cobourg, Canada|isbn=0-88935-115-5
*cite journal|last=Shea|first=Dan|year=1998|month=June|title=SAR Identification Guide: The Colt Models (Part V)|journal=Small Arms Review|volume=1|issue=9|pages=54–60|issn=1094-995x
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