M25 Sniper Weapon System Explained

M25 Sniper Weapon System
Origin:United States
Type:Sniper rifle/Designated Marksman Rifle
Is Ranged:yes
Service:1991 (possibly earlier) – present
Used By:United States
Wars:Gulf War
Designer:10th Special Forces Group
Design Date:Late 1980s
Manufacturer:Springfield Armory (commercial version)
Weight:4.9kg (10.8lb)
Length:1125mm
Part Length:560mm
Cartridge:7.62×51mm NATO (.308 Winchester)
Action:Rotating bolt, Gas operated, Air cooled
Rate:semi-automatic
Velocity:850 m/s (2800 ft/s)[1]
Max Range:900m (3,000feet)
Feed:5, 10, or 20 round detachable box magazine
Sights:Bausch & Lomb Tactical 10×40

The M25 Sniper Weapon System is a joint venture precision rifle built for the U.S. Army Special Forces and the U.S. Navy SEALs. It was originally developed by the 10th Special Forces Group, based at Fort Devens, Mass., to fulfill a requirement for a sniper rifle based on a match grade M14 that satisfied the requirements of the Army Special Forces and the Navy SEALs.

SOCOM called the rifle the "Light Sniper Rifle", and it is also known as the "Sniper Security System" and "Product Improved M21".[2] The commercial version has been named "White Feather" in honor of Carlos Hathcock, the U.S. Marine Corps sniper who became famous during the Vietnam War. (The enemy called him "White Feather" because he wore a white feather on his hat to taunt enemy troops hoping to collect a large bounty for his death or capture offered by the enemy.)

The M25 is not a replacement rifle for the M24 Sniper Weapon System; it was designed to fill a specific need for accurate fire beyond the range of a standard-issue carbine and has been used from the Persian Gulf War onwards as the Designated Marksman's Rifle (DMR). As the DMR, the M25 gives either the sniper's spotter or a squad-level marksman a long-range rifle that can be fired at a faster rate than a sniper's bolt-action rifle.

Design

The M25 is similar in many ways to the M21. It has a National Match M14 barrel in a McMillan glass bedded fiberglass stock, uses a special gas piston, a National Match spring guide and a Brookfield Precision Tool Advanced Scope Mounting System. Most rifles use the Bausch & Lomb 10× Tactical scope; some use scopes made by Leupold & Stevens, including the Ultra Mark 4 M1, Ultra Mark 4 M3, and Vari X-III LR M3. Suppressors for use with this rifle are manufactured by OPS.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Springfield M21.
  2. http://www.snipercentral.com/m25.htm "U.S. Army & U.S. Navy M25 & XM25 Sniper Weapon System"