n7axw wrote:Randomiser wrote:Don
The barrels were replaced after 10k rounds on average. Could that be a wear problem rather than an overheating one? How long would one expect a Vickers barrel to last? Draken's thesis is that a rifle barrel, firing at less than a quarter of the rate, is going to overheat quickly enough to be a problem in battlefield conditions.
How long would infantry expect to be firing at top rate continuously without a break or lull of some kind? Also I suspect that ammunition supply is going to be more of a problem than overheating if the kind of engagement he seems to be envisaging occurs.
What you are sayng does make sense with the barrels although I still wonder how Draken is coming up with his conclusions. It really doesn't go very well with the plot line for Howsmyn to be making repeating rifles that can't be fired faster than single shot rifles without the difficulty he is describing.
As for ammo, from LAMA It sounds like once production is up and going, they will be able to manufacture the stuff faster than it will be used which is the main thing.
Don
I went back and looked at that section in LAMA. Howsmyn anticipates ammo production at 1.6 million rounds per month for the M96s. The bottleneck there is primer material which they need to increase the production of before cartridge production can increase much more.
That sounds like a lot of ammo, but if you assume 500,000 troops armed with the M96s, it comes out to 3.2 bullets per gun. Tha sounds a bit skimpy to me. Now I realize that they aren't starting out with that many M96s, but its not unreasonable to assume that they will reach that number eventually.
So I thought that I would direct a question to you guys who are more knowledgable than I... If you had the job of producing ordinance for the M96s, how many rounds per day would you have to produce per rifle to know that you are meeting or exceeding demand?
Don