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Adaptive Combat Rifle

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The Adaptive Combat Rifle ( ACR ) is a modular assault rifle formerly designed by Magpul Industries of Austin, Texas , and known initially as the Masada .

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76-652: In late January 2008, Bushmaster Firearms International entered into a licensing agreement with Magpul whereby Bushmaster would take over production, future development, and sales of the Masada. It was then known as the Bushmaster ACR . However, Remington Arms is contracted to manufacture the rifle for the US military and US law enforcement agencies, in which it is known as the Remington ACR . Hence, Remington Arms

152-446: A 5.56 NATO chambering with forged aircraft-grade (7075-T6) aluminum receivers. Most Bushmaster barrels were 4150 steel , offered in 1:9 twist rate , and chrome-lined to increase durability. Some barrels were available with 1:7 rifling on special order. Stainless steel or chrome molybdenum barrels were available on certain models. Bushmaster Firearms originally produced their 'First Generation' rifle using an aluminum lower receiver and

228-548: A "familiarization shoot" at ranges of 25 and 300 yards firing the M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round . Rifle contenders were also allowed to participate in the "compatibility check" which consisted of the firing of the M320 grenade launcher and M26 Modular Accessory Shotgun System underbarrel attachment systems. Phase I of the competition commenced following the familiarization shoot. It included

304-526: A Bushmaster dealer were the subjects of a civil lawsuit brought by two survivors and six families of victims of the October 2002 D.C. sniper attacks , which resulted in the deaths of ten and injuries to three people. On September 8, 2004, Bushmaster agreed to pay $ 550,000 of a $ 2.5 million settlement in the lawsuit and Bull's Eye Shooter Supply of Tacoma, Washington , the Bushmaster dealer from whom one of

380-631: A financial advisor to design and execute a process to sell [their] interests in Freedom Group" (Freedom merged with the former Bushmaster company). Cerberus indicated that the decision to sell the company stemmed from publicity surrounding the use of a Bushmaster rifle in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting . According to the company: "It is apparent that the Sandy Hook tragedy was a watershed event that has raised

456-657: A future replacement for the M4 Carbine . It was also part of the Individual Carbine competition to replace the M4. The original Magpul Masada's design represented a combination of several recent assault rifle designs, incorporating what was considered by its designers to be the best features of each in a single, lightweight, modular rifle. Design features from the Armalite AR-18 ( short-stroke gas system ),

532-567: A longer sight radius. Bushmaster produced the Bushmaster Arm Pistol from 1977 to 1990. The Bushmaster M17S was a semi-automatic bullpup rifle that was manufactured by Bushmaster from 1992 until 2005. The BAR-10 was meant to compete in the .308 market against ArmaLite 's AR-10 series rifles and Springfield Armory 's M1A Rifle by offering a .308 rifle that could accept the relatively inexpensive metric and inch pattern FN FAL magazines. In 2005 Bushmaster discontinued

608-777: A modified variant of the Remington ACR , the Adcor Defense BEAR Elite , the Beretta ARX-160 , and the Colt Enhanced M4 . Phase II test scoring, in order of priority, depended upon: Phase II was to last 12–18 months and narrow the field of contenders down to three. On March 19, 2013, the Defense Department released a testimony as part of their efforts to improve spending efficiency and reduce overall waste. Part of

684-479: A month to respond. A 12–18-month testing phase commenced and over 1 million rounds were to be fired. Testers looked at the consistency in accuracy of the carbines as they aged. Costs were also to be considered. The Office of the Secretary of Defense monitored tests and the evaluation and there was congressional oversight to ensure the competition was full and open. US$ 30 million was spent on testing. The winner of

760-561: A new barrel nut (which eliminates the quick change barrel), and a folding charging handle. These changes made the weapon 1.8lbs (.8kg) lighter. The Individual Carbine competition was cancelled before a winning weapon was chosen. Remington also unveiled a sub-compact variant called the ACR-C Personal Defense Weapon (PDW). This version retains the features of the Individual Carbine variant, except that

836-543: A new carbine was selected, the Army would see 500,000 purchased for infantry brigade combat teams (IBCT), and the existing and improved M4s given to support troops to replace their M16s. If the improved M4 turned out to be the winner and the new carbine program scrapped, then the IBCTs will likely be fitted with the improved M4s, and the existing M4s would again be given to support troops to replace their M16s. On November 17, 2011,

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912-409: A private range. Westrom said ammunition and caliber conflicts had little to do with it, as neither those factors nor the rifle designs would fundamentally change the battlefield capabilities of a soldier or small unit, while previous weapon transitions advanced combat shooting doctrines and shooting tactics. ArmaLite did not participate in the competition because Westrom determined their designs weren't

988-540: A quick-change barrel/ trunnion system, adjustable gas regulator, non-reciprocating charging handle, and storage compartments located in the stock and grip. Just prior to the deal with Bushmaster, Magpul made additional changes to their design, the most obvious of these was the relocation of the ambidextrous operating handle to a forward position (somewhat similar to the Heckler & Koch G3 and MP5 series of weapons). The weapon's caliber could easily be changed by replacing

1064-468: A revolutionary improvement over the M4 weapon system, and because the published Army requirements "set the bar so low" that the outcome that no one would win a contract was "predetermined." On June 17, 2013, Senator Tom Coburn sent a letter to Secretary of the Army John M. McHugh expressing his disappointment in the decision to cancel the program without giving soldiers an opportunity to field test

1140-606: A roundtable for reporters on May 23 which would include project managers and officials. The PEO Soldier press conference was postponed to an unknown date because senior leaders had not made any decisions on the competition or other equipment programs. On June 6, 2013, the House Armed Services Committee passed an amendment to the 2014 budget that would prevent the Army from cancelling the IC program before user evaluations. Committee members voted unanimously for

1216-513: A significant advance in fighting ability. The Army admitted each entrant offered marginal improvements over the M4 Carbine, but that none would substantially increase a soldier's battlefield capability. Westrom said the carbines offered incremental improvements, not any that offered a tactically superior advance to justify replacing the entire inventory. There were also complaints about the ammunition used in testing. The competition began while

1292-420: A small number of ACR rifles" and goes on to state that "Bushmaster discovered a design flaw which could result in multiple rounds firing continuously when the trigger is pulled ". Bushmaster has stated that it will cover all of the costs associated with repairs to recalled rifles. In 2020, Freedom Group declared bankruptcy, forcing it to close both Bushmaster and Remington. The closures also ended plans to market

1368-469: A stamped steel upper receiver. This first-generation model used a long-stroke gas piston operating system. The recoil spring was within the upper barrel gas system compared to the AR-15/M-16, where the recoil spring is within the butt stock. Originally marketed for police and the military, Bushmaster later moved from this design to a variant of Eugene Stoner's AR-15/M-16 weapon system. Bushmaster chambered

1444-423: A standard rifle (with a 16.5 inch barrel) into a carbine (with a 14.5 inch barrel), into a compact rifle (with a 10.5 inch barrel), or into a designated marksman rifle (with an 18-inch barrel) without any tools. Barrel lengths of the two calibres are exactly the same. The Barrels are hammer-forged and hardened with a nitriding process rather than having chrome plated bores as some other rifles. The Bushmaster ACR

1520-460: Is a gas operated, semi-automatic rifle of modular design. It utilises an aluminium alloy upper receiver, with polymer pistol grip, trigger, and magazine housing (lower receiver) unit which is attached to the upper receiver using cross-pins. It is available for the civilian market in 5.56×45mm NATO , 6.8mm Remington SPC and .450 Bushmaster via conversion kits. A 7.62×39mm conversion kit was done by Templar Precision. The trigger/manual safety unit

1596-645: Is a selective-fire modular rifle that is only available for the military and law enforcement market in 5.56×45mm NATO , 6.8mm Remington SPC , and 6.5mm Grendel . ACR – 14.5 in (368mm) barrel, 16.5 in (419mm) barrel ACR-PDW – 8.25 in (210mm) barrel, 10.5 in (267mm) barrel The Bushmaster ACR is a modular semi-automatic rifle that is available for the civilian market in 5.56×45mm NATO , 6.8mm Remington SPC , .450 Bushmaster and .300 AAC Blackout . ACR BASIC – 16.5 in (419mm) barrel ACR ENHANCED – 16.5 in (419mm) barrel ACR DMR – 18.5 in (470mm) barrel ACR SBR – 10.5 in (267mm) barrel In October 2023, it

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1672-410: Is located at the front of the trigger guard. Safety lever is also ambidextrous, and charging handle can be installed on either side of the rifle. It can be equipped with various Magpul-made buttstocks, fixed or side-folding, and adjustable for length of pull (some also with adjustable cheek rest). It can be fitted with removable iron sights and/or with any optical- or night vision- sights, all depending on

1748-446: Is located over the pistol grip. A charging handle can be installed on either side of the receiver and does not reciprocate when the weapon is fired. Magazine release button is also ambidextrous. Spent case ejection port is located on the right side of the receiver, however it has a case deflector, which propels the cases away from left-handed shooters. The rifle can also be configured for handguard, stock type and trigger unit setup. Among

1824-421: Is made as a single removable item, and mostly utilises AR-15 compatible parts. The rifle features a quick-detachable barrel, with its own short-stroke gas piston attached. To remove the barrel (for change, inspection, or maintenance), the operator has to remove the polymer handguards, then swing down the wire lever which is located below the barrel, and then turning the barrel to unlock and pull it forward and out of

1900-511: Is responsible for the selective-fire version of the ACR, while Bushmaster Firearms International is responsible for the semi-automatic only version. The Remington ACR was one of the weapons displayed to U.S. Army officials during an invitation-only Industry Day on November 13, 2008. The goal of the Industry Day was to review current carbine technology prior to writing formal requirements for

1976-763: The FN SCAR (upper receiver, charging handle location), the Heckler & Koch G36 and XM8 (wide use of polymer components), and the M16 / AR-15 (trigger pack, barrel , fire control group) were present. Some claim that the bolt-catch/release was inspired by, or copied from, the Robinson Armament XCR (which was developed as direct competition to the FN SCAR during the SOCOM SCAR program). The rifle also included several features developed by Magpul , such as

2052-744: The M4 / AR-15 design. It is currently in full operation and is based in Carson City, Nevada . Bushmaster Firearms is unrelated to the M242 Bushmaster autocannon, which was produced by Northrop Grumman . Bushmaster Firearms is the successor of Gwinn Firearms, founded by Mack Gwinn Jr. upon his return from the Vietnam War. It went bankrupt, was purchased by Richard Dyke in 1976, and moved from Bangor, Maine to Windham, Maine . Quality Products Company acquired it in 1990. In 2002, Bushmaster and

2128-747: The XCR by Robinson Armament Co. , an off-the-shelf or derivative of the M6A4 by LWRC , the ACR by Remington , the SR-16 by Knight's Armament Company , the FN SCAR by FN Herstal , the CM901 by Colt's Manufacturing Company , and the HK416 by Heckler & Koch . A draft request for proposal (RfP) was issued in late 2010 followed by an industry day. The finalized RfP was issued in second quarter FY 2011 to which industry had

2204-413: The caliber for any new weapon was open for the competition, any contributions not of 5.56×45mm NATO and/or 7.62×51mm NATO had the burden of test ammunition and extra costs placed on the competitor. The draft asked for a non-developmental weapon. Rather than working with the Army to develop a new weapon, competitors were to bring forward designs they already had available. Weapons submitted included

2280-507: The 5.56×45mm NATO version of the rifle is called the Magpul PMag , a high-impact, 30-round, polymer magazine claimed by Magpul to be significantly more resistant to wear, shock, and harsh environments than other counterparts on the market. The PMag is STANAG 4179 -compatible, as it will readily fit any STANAG magazine firearm, including the M16 rifle family. The rifle is available with four barrel lengths and can be easily converted from

2356-407: The ACR will be capable to endure certain conditions such as exposure to sand, dirt, mud, and water. The initial ACR design was offered in the Army's Individual Carbine competition. In late 2011, Remington unveiled an improved version specifically for the competition. Improvements included a magnesium lower receiver, A2-style pistol grip, collapsible but non-foldable stock, carbine length gas system,

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2432-593: The ACRs by both companies. In 2021, Bushmaster announced that they are open in Carson City and are working on reintroducing the ACR. The Bushmaster ACR was known to be used in 2012 by Polish soldiers under the Służba Wywiadu Wojskowego (Military Intelligence Service). The Remington ACR is a gas operated, selective fire weapon with a modular design. It has several features of other recent designs, such as

2508-449: The Army announced it was considering cancelling the Individual Carbine competition. Phase II of testing had been completed, but not soldier evaluation or contract awards as part of Phase III. With M4A1 Carbines being purchased through 2018, the Army was rethinking carbine acquisition. PEO Soldier (Program Executive Office Soldier), a group responsible for rapid prototyping, procurement, and fielding of equipment for soldiers, had scheduled

2584-427: The Army decided not to pursue a new carbine because of consideration of operational requirements in the context of available small arms technology, the constrained fiscal environment, and the capability of their current carbines. One reliability requirement that was not reached by the vendors was firing 3,592 mean rounds without malfunctioning. In 1990, the M4 was required to fire 600 mean rounds between stoppages, while

2660-555: The Army found the B.E.A.R. provided “outstanding” accuracy, even after firing thousands of rounds. The Pentagon Inspector General audit of the Individual Carbine competition continued despite the program's termination. On September 16, 2013, the Inspector General published a report on the audit's findings. The analysis said the Army wasted $ 14 million to find new rifles it did not need. The report reads, "The Army Deputy Chief of Staff … inappropriately approved and validated

2736-480: The Army selected the companies and rifles that passed phase I of the competition and moved on to phase II. While phase I eliminated companies that would not have had the production capacity to manufacture sufficient numbers of their rifle, phase II included actual test firings of the weapons to assess accuracy, reliability, and durability. The phase II contenders were the FN FNAC , the Heckler & Koch HK416A5 ,

2812-424: The Army simply did not find the capability it was after with the rifles submitted. None of the weapons met minimum requirements. The competition was a binary pass-or-fail venue, rather than a test-fix-test venue to improve the weapons following test results. Mark Westrom, owner of ArmaLite which designed the original M16 rifle , said the competition was "destined to fail" because the requirements did not represent

2888-437: The Army was planning just weeks before cancellation. Other companies expressed concern that they had learned the program may be cancelled through media reports rather than being informed directly. Army officials said they were surprised that none of the rifles submitted passed muster and maintained that there was transparency throughout the three-year competition. Brigadier General Paul A. Ostrowski, head of PEO Soldier , said

2964-407: The Army's decision to terminate the program, and would focus on delivering BEAR rifles to commercial customers. Adcor Chairman and CEO Jimmy Stavrakis said though they were "disappointed that the Army chose to discontinue a competition that could have provided soldiers with significant improvements in accuracy and reliability," they accepted the decision. Test results made available to the company said

3040-616: The BAR-10 line of rifles. Individual Carbine The Individual Carbine was a competition to select the planned successor to the M4 carbine in the United States Army . The U.S. Army conducted an open competition for a carbine to replace the M4. This competition was for the Army only—the United States Marine Corps and other branches chose to stay with current weapons in service. The proposal

3116-510: The First Generation rifles for the 5.56mm round. The First Generation rifles are considered scarce and collectible. In late January 2008, Bushmaster signed a licensing deal with Magpul , granting Bushmaster the right to produce and distribute Magpul's Masada rifle, renamed the Bushmaster ACR . According to the company, in 2010, Bushmaster began making the ACR available to the civilian market, posting it on its website. Carbon 15

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3192-558: The Freedom Group announced that operations at the Windham facility would cease as of March 2011. Windham Weaponry was founded by Dyke in 2011 in Windham, "to put Maine people back to work who lost their jobs" when Bushmaster moved out of state in March 2011. In December 2012, Cerberus Capital Management announced its intention to sell Bushmaster's successor company, Freedom Group. In a press release, Cerberus stated that they would "retain

3268-605: The M16 and FN SCAR. The key idea of the ACR's modular system, is that it will provide a wide variety of configurations within a matter of minutes. It is only available for the military and law enforcement market in 5.56×45mm NATO , 6.8mm Remington SPC and 6.5mm Grendel . It can change caliber in minutes at the user level by changing the bolt head, barrel, and magazine. All of the rifle's parts can be easily stripped for cleaning and all of its controls are fully ambidextrous. A three position (safe, semi-auto and full auto) fire selector lever

3344-562: The M4A1, while the M4 Product Improvement Program worked on improving the current M4 design if the competition didn't yield major improvements. The Inspector General questioned why the Army was pursuing a new rifle when the structure of their total force will be reduced. In the next two months a draft report was to be released elaborating concerns and giving recommendations to the Defense Department. On May 2, 2013,

3420-714: The M855 round was in use. In June 2010, the M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round was fielded, and the competition began using the EPR in August. Army analysis found that the M855A1 may have contributed to lower than expected reliability performance. Even so, the Army insists they made industry aware of the ammo change, giving them time to adjust their designs and arranging for each vendor to fire 10,000 M855A1s at

3496-468: The Remington name. As of April 2010, civilian market rifles were available for sale. On October 15, 2010, Bushmaster issued a recall of all ACR rifles, instructing users to "Please immediately discontinue the use of your ACR rifle" along with instructions to contact customer support for an RMA. Bushmaster stated that the recall was issued due to "a possible firearms performance issue that may develop with

3572-705: The US Marine Corps announced they will not participate or adopt any new weapon which may or may not come out of the competition. The USMC said they will continue to use standard M4s and M16A4s. They did mention they are considering upgrading the M16A4. However, General Jim Amos said on April 16, 2013, that the Marines were watching the Army program and whether or not they would join was "yet to be seen." The first round of tests were carried out from January to May 2011. Rifles chambered in 5.56×45mm NATO participated in

3648-455: The amendment that would require user evaluations, a business case analysis, and reports back to congressional defense committees before a final decision is made. If passed into law, it would not take effect until October 1, 2013, which gave the Army four months to decide the fate of the program without violating a congressional directive. On June 13, 2013, the U.S. Army formally cancelled the Individual Carbine competition. The Army said none of

3724-456: The bankruptcy auction of Remington Outdoor Company, Crotalus Holdings, Inc. purchased the Bushmaster trademarks. In August 2021, Bushmaster Firearms Industries, Inc. revived the brand name with a new business headquartered in Carson City, Nevada. The new Bushmaster business revived XM15-E2S, 450 Bushmasters, ACR, and BA50 brands. Bushmaster's firearms, such as the XM-15 line, were offered in

3800-467: The bolt head, magazine, and barrel. The rifle was originally named after the Siege of Masada . Magpul company literature about the rifle states that "Magpul Industries is not Jewish owned or Israeli backed, however, Magpul has always found the story of the Masada as a bold example of defiance". When production rights were signed with Bushmaster, the Masada name was dropped from the product. In January 2008,

3876-437: The carbine-length gas system) with 1:7 inch rifling twist, and a Geissele enhanced trigger. The DMR ACR weighs 8.75 lb (3.97 kg) and has an MSRP of $ 2,799. The ACR was stated to be available in the second quarter of 2010 for military, government, and commercial customers. It was available in greater quantity (tens of thousands) in the commercial marketplace in 2010. According to an official press release from Bushmaster,

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3952-515: The carbines evaluated during testing met the minimum scoring requirement needed to continue to the next phase of the evaluation. Letters were sent to gunmakers involved to inform them that no future contract awards would be made for the soldier evaluation phase. PEO Soldier reported that no competitor demonstrated a significant improvement in weapon reliability to justify buying a new carbine. Weapons tested also had low reliability performance using M855A1 Enhanced Performance Rounds (EPR) . Ultimately,

4028-465: The competition had to be a "measurable improvement" over the M4 carbine to replace it; otherwise, the program would instead convert all M4 carbines to the enhanced version. The winner of the competition would sell the rights to their weapon to the military and choose two other competing suppliers to help manufacture it. As for fielding a possible winner, the Army has over 1.1 million armed personnel, approximately half are front-line combat brigades . If

4104-401: The current M4A1 fires 1,691 mean rounds between stoppages using M855A1 ammunition. PEO Soldier said that the new carbine had to be a superior improvement, not a small improvement. The Army has not released how close the competitors came to reaching the mean rounds between stoppages requirement, or how they performed compared to the M4A1. That information is seen as proprietary, and may be up to

4180-596: The design of the Magpul Masada was licensed to Bushmaster Firearms International and the production version of the Masada became known as the Bushmaster ACR. The rifle was initially developed over a period of five months and was planned to replace the M16 completely independent of government funding. Prototypes were displayed at the 2007 SHOT Show in Orlando, Florida . Originally scheduled for release in

4256-530: The folding stock was kept and the barrel was shortened to 9.5 inches. With the stock folded, it is only 19.5 inches long. Remington has replaced this variant with the ACR-PDW. In January 2014, Bushmaster unveiled a designated marksman rifle version of the ACR. It includes the Magpul PRS adjustable stock, a longer 18.5 in (470 mm) full profile 416 stainless steel melonite coated barrel (that retains

4332-411: The help of Remington Arms , (a sister company in the Freedom Group, Inc. portfolio that includes Bushmaster, Remington, Marlin, and DPMS Panther Arms brands) have also made extensive design changes based on extensive environmental and functional testing specifically to meet the emerging requirements of the US military in both the carbine and subcompact weapon versions of the ACR family. They made sure that

4408-461: The manufacturers to release data. Analysis has not yet been done to determine if any exact event cause per vendor led to performance failures. The Army clarified that it was not cancelling the IC competition, but that it was in a position to conclude it. Industry participants said the competition was plagued by miscommunication from the Army. Gabriele de Plano, vice president of military marketing and sales for Beretta , said he knew nothing of what

4484-592: The national debate on gun control to an unprecedented level." Cerberus announced in late 2013 that it had failed to divest itself of the Freedom Group and planned to buy out some Cerberus investors. Those who chose to give up their shares would be paid by an unidentified lender. In January 2020, the parent entity, Remington Outdoor Company, announced that it would focus operations on its core hunting and shooting brands: AAC, Barnes, Remington, and Marlin. It also announced that it would no longer produce Bushmaster, TAPCO, DPMS, and StormLake Barrels. In September 2020, in

4560-478: The options for the ACR are various stocks including a fixed adjustable (in terms of length of pull and cheek weld), folding adjustable (folding and six-position telescoping), and sniper stock based on the Magpul PRS stock. The Remington's handguard model has a five-sided aluminium handguard that can be user configured with MIL-STD-1913 rail elements, while the Bushmaster's model is polymer with heat guards and attachable aluminium tri-rail. The magazine conceived for

4636-483: The perpetrators said he had shoplifted the rifle, paid $ 2 million. The company cited mounting legal fees and compassion for the victims and their families as the reason for settling. Dyke sold Bushmaster in 2006 for $ 70 million to Cerberus Capital Management . The company became part of the Freedom Group (renamed Remington Outdoor Company in 2015), owned by Cerberus Capital Management, in April 2006. In December 2010,

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4712-421: The proximity of the gas port to the muzzle, which threw the timing of the weapon's gas system off and made it more sensitive to gas port diameter and port pressure variables introduced by the ammunition. Bushmaster's solution was to use a low-profile gas block in the normal position for carbine-length barrels and fit the front sight tower/gas block, which was not connected to the gas system, further forward to create

4788-505: The receiver. All barrels are free-floated within the handguard to achieve consistent accuracy. The barrel is like an AR-15 barrel with a resized gas port and a thin profile for the piston support. The bolt group also is made as a single unit, with captive return spring and rotary multi-lug bolt which locks directly to the barrel breech. The standard magazine housing, which is suited to accept AR-15 type magazines, has ambidextrous magazine release buttons. The ambidextrous bolt stop release button

4864-530: The requirements document used to support the establishment of the individual carbine program. As a result, the Army wasted about $ 14 million on a competition to identify a source to supply new carbines it does not need." It would have cost $ 2.52 billion for the 501,289 carbines the Army planned to buy over a 20-year cycle. The Army's own analysis suggested the procurement could be delayed for another 10 years with no impact on readiness. The Army will recoup $ 382 million it can “put to better use,” of which $ 375 million

4940-425: The rifle had a suggested retail price between $ 2,685–$ 3,061.00, twice as much as early price quotes of "around $ 1500". The revelation caused public outcry and dismay of the rifle from a large portion of the firearms community and potential civilian end-users. Semi-automatic versions are available to the commercial market from Bushmaster, and selective fire versions are available for military and law enforcement under

5016-471: The second quarter of 2008, Bushmaster announced on May 16, 2008, that the consumer release would be delayed until the first quarter of 2009, owing to a focus on military projects. On November 18, 2008, Bushmaster released a statement saying, "The ACR is being redesigned to be a superior offering to compete for the next generation US Army infantry carbine and subcompact weapon requirement and will be available to select customers in 2009". Bushmaster Firearms, with

5092-502: The testimony was the Pentagon Inspector General's reconsideration of the Individual Carbine program to replace the M4. An audit of the acquisition process was launched to re-evaluate the $ 1.8 billion program. Program experts and Army officials asserted that the testimony misunderstood the carbine replacement initiative. The Individual Carbine competition was to find a commercially available rifle design superior to

5168-461: The user's preference or with the configuration of the rifle. It also has an integral Picatinny rail on the top of the receiver and additional accessory rails can be installed on the forend according to user preferences. The Bushmaster's handguard model is polymer with heat guards and attachable aluminum tri-rail, while Remington's model has a five-sided aluminum handguard that can be user-configured with MIL-STD-1913 rail elements. The Remington ACR

5244-417: The weapon's ability to mount accessories, such as optics and suppressors, the company's ability to produce 2,000-4,200 carbines per month, and production costs. In November 2011, Colt pulled its CM901 rifle from the competition. This was because the winner is required to turn over technical data rights to the Army, who would distribute the blueprints to two other companies that would each produce one-third of

5320-419: The weapons purchased, and Colt did not want to reveal its trade secrets. Other companies backed out for similar financial reasons, including Smith & Wesson with their M&P 4, Stag Arms , LWRC , and Knight's Armament Company . Stag Arms then bid for the contract to produce one-third of the winning weapon order quantity, while Knight's Armament submitted components for the upgraded M4A1. In May 2012,

5396-495: The weapons to determine if they were improvements over the current M4. Senator Coburn's efforts in 2008 led the Army to look if industry had anything to offer that was better than the M4, which lead to the IC competition. Coburn wanted to know where money from the cancelled program would go and why near-term small arms strategies did not include an assessment of a medium-caliber round for increased battlefield capability. On July 17, 2013, Adcor Defense announced it would not protest

5472-436: Was a lightweight AR15 available as rifles or pistols. It saved weight by using polymer in the upper and lower receivers. Some models also removed the forward assist and the dust cover and used a thinner barrel design to save weight. The Bushmaster Dissipator combined a longer sight radius with a shorter barrel to allow more effective use of the iron sights. Similar modifications sometimes suffered from reliability problems due to

5548-510: Was passed before the Joint Requirements Oversight Council in August 2010, and the Army was to solicit submissions from the small arms industry by the end of that year. The competition was open to all manufacturers. However, Phase II testing reduced the field down to six rifles. The competition was intended to provide an evaluation of the full range of weapons available. Presolicitation notice W15QKN-11-R-F003

5624-503: Was posted January 31, 2011. Complete results of the competition and selection of a new carbine were expected before FY 2013. However, the competition was cancelled in June 2013. The Individual Carbine was to provide accurate and reliable firepower. It had to be capable of semi-automatic and full-automatic fire. Integrated rails were to accept MIL-STD-1913 Picatinny rail-mounted accessories . It had to be fully ambidextrous . While

5700-522: Was programmed procurement funding. The other $ 7 million was set aside for research, development, testing, and evaluation. Another $ 2.14 billion in expenditures will be avoided through 2018 as a result of the termination. Research and development funding set aside in the FY 2013 budget was put into operation and maintenance accounts, while procurement funding allocated in fiscal years 2015 to 2018 are under review to be funneled to other Army priorities. The review of

5776-667: Was reported that Remington signed a previously undisclosed deal with Activision to have the Remington ACR promoted in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 in 2009. According to the Wall Street Journal, no money was exchanged as part of the agreement. Bushmaster Firearms International Bushmaster Firearms International, LLC , is an American firearm manufacturer and distributor. The company's product line revolves around semi-automatic pistol and rifle variants of

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