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AR-15



 
 
AR-15 (for Armalite model 15, often mistaken for Automatic Rifle or Assault Rifle) is the common name for the widely-owned semi-automatic
Semi-automatic firearm

A semi-automatic, or self-loading firearm is a gun that after being fired, ejects the empty cartridge that has been fired, loads a new cartridge, and cocks itself....
 rifle
Rifle

A rifle is a firearm designed to be fired from the shoulder, with a barrel that has a helical groove or pattern of grooves cut into the barrel walls....
 which soon afterwards became the fully automatic
Automatic firearm

An automatic firearm is a firearm that fires, automatically extracts the used Cartridge case from the barrel and ejects it, then loads a new case into the barrel; generally by harnessing the recoil of the cartridge's explosion....
 M16
M16 rifle

M16 is the Military of the United States designation for a family of rifles derived from the ArmaLite AR-15 and further developed by Colt's Manufacturing Company starting in the mid-20th century....
 and M4 Carbine
M4 Carbine

The M4 Carbine is a family of firearms tracing its lineage back to earlier carbine versions of the M16 rifle, all based on the original AR-15 made by ArmaLite....
 assault rifle
Assault rifle

An assault rifle is a rifle designed for combat, with selective fire . Assault rifles are the standard small arms in most modern Army, having largely superseded or supplemented battle rifles such as the World War II-era M1 Garand rifle and SVT-40....
s, which are currently in use by the United States military. AR-15 was the original name for what became the militarily designated M16, the assault rifle first used by the U.S.






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Encyclopedia


AR-15 (for Armalite model 15, often mistaken for Automatic Rifle or Assault Rifle) is the common name for the widely-owned semi-automatic
Semi-automatic firearm

A semi-automatic, or self-loading firearm is a gun that after being fired, ejects the empty cartridge that has been fired, loads a new cartridge, and cocks itself....
 rifle
Rifle

A rifle is a firearm designed to be fired from the shoulder, with a barrel that has a helical groove or pattern of grooves cut into the barrel walls....
 which soon afterwards became the fully automatic
Automatic firearm

An automatic firearm is a firearm that fires, automatically extracts the used Cartridge case from the barrel and ejects it, then loads a new case into the barrel; generally by harnessing the recoil of the cartridge's explosion....
 M16
M16 rifle

M16 is the Military of the United States designation for a family of rifles derived from the ArmaLite AR-15 and further developed by Colt's Manufacturing Company starting in the mid-20th century....
 and M4 Carbine
M4 Carbine

The M4 Carbine is a family of firearms tracing its lineage back to earlier carbine versions of the M16 rifle, all based on the original AR-15 made by ArmaLite....
 assault rifle
Assault rifle

An assault rifle is a rifle designed for combat, with selective fire . Assault rifles are the standard small arms in most modern Army, having largely superseded or supplemented battle rifles such as the World War II-era M1 Garand rifle and SVT-40....
s, which are currently in use by the United States military. AR-15 was the original name for what became the militarily designated M16, the assault rifle first used by the U.S. in the Vietnam War. The name AR-15 is now used almost exclusively to refer to the semi-automatic (commercially available) civilian version(s)
Semi-automatic rifle

A semi-automatic rifle is a type of rifle that fires a single bullet each time the trigger is pulled. They may be operated by a number of mechanisms, all of which derive their power from the explosion of the powder in the cartridge that also fires the bullet....
 of the M16 and M4 assault rifles.

All standard AR-15 rifles accept detachable magazines of widely varying capacities, and have a pistol grip that protrudes beneath the stock. AR-15 rifles are highly configurable and customizable, and are commonly fitted with several accessories, including bipods, bayonet lugs, folding or collapsing butt stocks, threaded barrels for the attachment of a flash suppressor
Flash suppressor

A flash suppressor, also known as a flash guard, flash eliminator, flash hider, or flash cone, is a device attached to the muzzle of a rifle or other gun that directs the hot gases as they leave the barrel....
 or other accessories, and a Picatinny rail
Picatinny rail

The Picatinny rail or MIL-STD-1913 rail or STANAG 2324 rail is a bracket used on some firearms in order to provide a standardized mounting platform....
 in place of the fore grip for the attachment of vertical grips, flashlights, laser sights, telescopic sights, and other accessories.

History

The AR-15 is based on the 7.62 mm
7.62x51mm NATO

The 7.62x51mm NATO is a rifle Cartridge developed in the 1940s and 50s as a standard for small arms among NATO countries. Specifications for the 7.62x51mm NATO cartridge are not identical to the commercial .308 Winchester though they are safely interchangeable....
 AR-10
AR-10

The AR-10 is an United States 7.62x51mm NATO battle rifle developed by Eugene Stoner in the late 1950s at ArmaLite, then a division of the Fairchild Aircraft Corporation....
, designed by Eugene Stoner
Eugene Stoner

Eugene Morrison Stoner is the man most associated with the design of the AR-15, which was adopted by the military as the M16 . He is regarded by most historians, along with John Browning and John Garand, as one of the United States? most successful military firearms designers of the 20th century....
 of the Fairchild ArmaLite
ArmaLite

ArmaLite, originally the ArmaLite Division of the Fairchild , is a small arms manufacturing company. Products include the M16 rifle and M4 carbine rifles....
 corporation. The AR-15 was developed as a lighter, 5.56 mm version of the AR-10. The "AR" in AR-15 comes from the ArmaLite name. ArmaLite's AR-1, AR-5, and some subsequent models were bolt action rifles, and there are shotguns
Shotgun

A shotgun is a firearm that is usually designed to be fired from the shoulder, which uses the energy of a fixed shell to fire a number of small spherical pellets called lead shot, or a solid projectile called a shotgun slug....
 and pistols whose model numbers also include the "AR" prefix.

ArmaLite sold its rights to the AR-10 and AR-15 to Colt
Colt's Manufacturing Company

Colt's Manufacturing Company is a United States firearms manufacturer founded in 1847. It is best known for the engineering, production, and marketing of dozens of different firearms over the later half of the 19th and the 20th century....
 in 1959. Colt marketed the AR-15 rifle to various military services around the world, including the U.S. Air Force, Army, and Marine Corps. The AR-15 was eventually adopted by the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 military under the designation M16. However, Colt continued to use the AR-15 trademark for its semi-automatic
Semi-automatic firearm

A semi-automatic, or self-loading firearm is a gun that after being fired, ejects the empty cartridge that has been fired, loads a new cartridge, and cocks itself....
 variants (AR-15, AR-15A2) which were marketed to civilian and law-enforcement customers. The original AR-15 was a very lightweight weapon, weighing less than 6 pounds with empty magazine, though later heavy-barrel versions of the civilian AR-15 can weigh upwards of 8.5 lbs.

Today the civilian-model AR-15 and its variations are manufactured by many companies and have captured the affection of sport shooters
Shooting sports

The shooting sports include those competitive sports involving tests of proficiency using various types of guns such as firearms and airguns ....
 and police forces around the world due to their accuracy and modularity. (Please refer to the M16
M16 rifle

M16 is the Military of the United States designation for a family of rifles derived from the ArmaLite AR-15 and further developed by Colt's Manufacturing Company starting in the mid-20th century....
 for a more complete history of the development and evolution of the AR-15 and derivatives.)

The trademark
TradeMark

TradeMark is a tall, primarily residential, skyscraper in Charlotte, North Carolina. It was completed in 2007 and has 28 floors. There are 200 hundred residential units....
 "AR15" or "AR-15" is registered to Colt Industries, which maintains that the term should only be used to refer to their products. Other manufacturers make AR-15 clones marketed under separate designations, although colloquially
Colloquialism

A colloquialism is an expression not used in formal Speech communication, writing or paralinguistics. Colloquialisms are also sometimes referred to collectively as "colloquial language"....
 these are sometimes also referred to by the term AR-15.

Some notable features of the AR-15 include:

  • Aircraft grade aluminium
    Aluminium

    Aluminium or aluminum is a silvery white and ductile member of the boron group of chemical elements. It has the symbol Al; its atomic number is 13....
     receiver
    Receiver (firearms)

    In firearms terminology, the receiver is the part of a firearm that houses the operating parts. It is sometimes called the body of the firearm, and especially in the context of handguns it is often called the frame....
  • Modular design allows for a variety of accessories and makes repair easier
  • Small caliber
    Caliber

    The term caliber designates the inside diameter of a tube, the diameter of a solid wire or rod, or a measurement of the length of a gun relative to its diameter....
    , accurate, high velocity round
  • Synthetic stock and grips do not warp or splinter
  • Front sight adjustable for elevation
  • Rear sight adjustable for windage
    Windage

    Windage is a force created on an object by friction when there is relative movement between air and the object.There are two possible causes of windage:...
     and elevation
  • Wide array of optical devices available in addition to or as replacements of iron sights
  • A direct impingement
    Direct impingement

    Direct impingement is a type of gas-operated for a firearm that directs gas from a fired Cartridge directly to the Bolt carrier or slide assembly to cycle the action....
     gas system
  • Synthetic pistol grip (regulated
    AR-15

    AR-15 is the common name for the widely-owned Semi-automatic firearm rifle which soon afterwards became the Automatic firearm M16 rifle and M4 Carbine assault rifles, which are currently in use by the United States military....
     in some jurisdictions)


Semi-automatic and automatic variants of the AR-15 are effectively identical in appearance. Automatic variants have a rotating selective fire
Selective fire

A selective fire firearm can be fired in both Semi-automatic firearm and any number of Automatic firearm modes by means of a selector. Some selective fire weapons utilize burst fire mechanisms that limit the maximum or total number of shots fired when in this mode....
 switch, allowing the operator to select between three modes: safe, semi-automatic, and either automatic or three round burst, depending on model. Civilian AR-15 models usually do not have three-round burst or automatic settings on the fire selector. In semi-automatic only variants, the selector only rotates between safe and semi-automatic. The pistol grip
Pistol grip

On a firearm or other tool, the pistol grip is that portion of the mechanism that is held by the hand and orients the hand in a manner similar to the position one would take with a conventional pistol such as the M1911 pistol....
 that protrudes beneath the stock was also considered an accessory feature under the 1994 Federal Assault Weapons Ban
Federal assault weapons ban

The Federal Assault Weapons Ban was a subtitle of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, a federal law of the United States that included a prohibition on the sale to civilians of certain semi-automatic firearm so called "assault weapons" including military-style semiautomatic rifles derived from assault rifles....
, and was subject to restrictions. Some AR-15 were manufactured with a grip not described under the Ban installed in its place.

Operating mechanism

M16 Rifle Firing Fm 23 9 Fig 2 7
The mechanism of operation for the rifle is known as direct gas impingement
Direct impingement

Direct impingement is a type of gas-operated for a firearm that directs gas from a fired Cartridge directly to the Bolt carrier or slide assembly to cycle the action....
. Gas is tapped from the barrel as the bullet moves past a gas port located above the rifle's front sight base. The gas rushes into the port and down a gas tube, located above the barrel, which runs from the front sight base into the AR-15's upper receiver. Here, the gas tube protrudes into a “gas key” (bolt carrier key) which accepts the gas and funnels it into the bolt carrier. This movement of gas into the bolt carrier forces the bolt and carrier backward in line with the stock of the rifle. As the bolt carrier moves toward the butt of the gun, the bolt begins to turn and unlock from the barrel extension. Once the bolt is fully unlocked it begins its rearward movement along with the bolt carrier. The cam pin is responsible for the bolt's rotation as it follows a groove cut into the carrier that twists and forces the bolt to unlock. Once the bolt is unlocked, the bolt carrier and bolt continue to move toward the butt of the gun and the empty case is extracted and ejected out the ejection port on side of the upper receiver.

Behind the bolt carrier is a plastic or metal buffer which rests in line with a return spring that pushes the bolt carrier back toward the chamber. A groove machined into the upper receiver traps the cam pin and prevents it and the bolt from rotating into a closed position. The bolt's locking lugs then push a fresh round from the magazine which is guided by feed ramps into the chamber. As the bolt's locking lugs move past the barrel extension, the cam pin is allowed to twist into a pocket milled into the upper receiver. This twisting action follows the groove cut into the carrier and forces the bolt to twist and “lock” into the barrel’s extension.


Variants

The AR-15 rifle is available in a wide range of configurations from a large number of manufacturers. These configurations range from short carbine-length models with features such as adjustable length stocks and optical sights, to heavy barrel models. Some of the most popular manufacturers are ArmaLite
ArmaLite

ArmaLite, originally the ArmaLite Division of the Fairchild , is a small arms manufacturing company. Products include the M16 rifle and M4 carbine rifles....
, Bushmaster, and DPMS
DPMS Panther Arms

DPMS Panther Arms is a manufacturer of a wide range of military and civilian rifles located in St. Cloud, Minnesota. The rifles are chambered for the .223 Remington, 5.56x45mm NATO, .308 Winchester, .260 Remington, .300 Remington SA Ultra Mag, 6.8mm Remington SPC, and .204 Ruger cartridge , among others....
.

There are many aftermarket upper receiver
Receiver (firearms)

In firearms terminology, the receiver is the part of a firearm that houses the operating parts. It is sometimes called the body of the firearm, and especially in the context of handguns it is often called the frame....
s that incorporate barrels of different weights, lengths and ammunition calibers available for the AR-15. Due to the rifle's modular design, one upper receiver can quickly and easily be substituted for another. There are many different calibers available for the AR-15 platform, far too many to list, but some of the most popular are .223 Remington
.223 Remington

The .223 Remington is a sporting cartridge with almost the same external dimensions as the 5.56x45mm NATO military cartridge. It is loaded with a diameter, jacketed bullet, with weights ranging from 40 up to , though the most common loading by far is ....
/5.56x45mm, .308 Winchester
.308 Winchester

The .308 Winchester is a rifle round and is the commercial version of the military 7.62x51mm NATO centerfire cartridge. The .308 Winchester was introduced in 1952, two years prior to the NATO adoption of the 7.62x51mm NATO T65, Winchester Repeating Arms Company branded the cartridge and introduced it to the commercial hunting market as the ....
/7.62x51mm, and 6.8 mm Remington SPC
6.8 mm Remington SPC

The 6.8 mm Remington SPC is a new rifle cartridge that was developed with collaboration from individual members of US SOCOM. Based upon the .30 Remington Cartridge , it is midway between the 5.56x45mm NATO and 7.62x39mm in bore diameter and velocity....
. In addition, the AR-15 can also be found in many obscure wildcat cartridges
Wildcat cartridge

A wildcat cartridge, or wildcat, is a custom cartridge for which ammunition and firearms are not mass produced. These cartridges are often created in order to optimize a certain performance characteristic of an existing commercial cartridge....
.

When installing a new complete upper receiver, particularly one designed to handle a different caliber of ammunition (i.e. other than .223 Remington or 5.56 x 45 mm NATO), some modification to the contents of the lower receiver may also be required, depending on the particular conversion. For example, a conversion to 9mm typically would involve the installation of a magazine well block (to accommodate a typical 9mm magazine, such as Uzi or Colt SMG), replacing the .223 hammer with one designed for 9mm ammunition, and depending on the original stock, replacing the buffer, action spring and stock spacer with those designed for the new 9mm AR-15 configuration.

Early models had a 1:14 rate of twist, which was changed to 1:12 for original 55 grain (3.6 g) bullets. The 1:14 rate of twist was shown to be unstable at lower temperatures. Most newer configurations use 1:9 and 1:7 twist rates. There is much controversy and speculation as to how differing twist rates affect ballistics and terminal performance with varying loads, but heavier projectiles tend to perform better with faster rifling rates. Additionally, the various non .223 / 5.56 calibers have their own particular twist rate, such as 1:10 for 6.8x43mm SPC and 7.62x39mm, and 1:12 for .308 Winchester.

Standard issue magazines are 20 or 30 round staggered-column magazines, traditional box magazines also exist in 40 and 45 round capacities, and usable magazines have been constructed from a variety of materials including steel, aluminum, and high-impact plastics. Drum magazine
Drum magazine

A drum magazine is a type of Magazine that is cylindrical in shape, similar to a drum. In a drum magazine, rounds are stored in a spiral around the center of the magazine....
s with 90 and 100 round capacities also exist, such as Beta C-Mag
Beta C-Mag

The Beta C-Mag is a 100-round capacity Magazine designed by L. James Sullivan and adapted for use in numerous firearms firing the 5.56 x 45 mm NATO, 7.62 x 51 mm NATO, and 9 x 19 mm Parabellum cartridges....
s. Low-capacity magazines, usually of a 5 or 10 round capacity, are available to comply with some areas' legal restrictions, hunting
Hunting

Hunting is the practice of pursuing living animals for food, recreation, or trade. In present-day use, the term refers to lawful hunting, as distinguished from poaching, which is the killing, trapping or capture of the hunted species contrary to law....
 and because larger magazines can inhibit shooting from a benchrest.

Legal status


United States

In the United States, variants with certain features such as collapsible stocks, flash suppressor
Flash suppressor

A flash suppressor, also known as a flash guard, flash eliminator, flash hider, or flash cone, is a device attached to the muzzle of a rifle or other gun that directs the hot gases as they leave the barrel....
s, and bayonet lugs were prohibited for sales to civilians during the period 1994-2004 by the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994
Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act

The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act was an act of Congress dealing with crime and law enforcement that became law in 1994. It is the largest crime bill in the history of the US and will provide for 200,000 new police officers, $9.7 billion in funding for prisons and $6.1 billion in funding for prevention programs which were desi...
, under the provision known as the Assault Weapons Ban
Federal assault weapons ban

The Federal Assault Weapons Ban was a subtitle of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, a federal law of the United States that included a prohibition on the sale to civilians of certain semi-automatic firearm so called "assault weapons" including military-style semiautomatic rifles derived from assault rifles....
. Included in this was a restriction on the pistol grip
Pistol grip

On a firearm or other tool, the pistol grip is that portion of the mechanism that is held by the hand and orients the hand in a manner similar to the position one would take with a conventional pistol such as the M1911 pistol....
 that protrudes beneath the stock, which was considered an accessory feature under the ban and was subject to restrictions. Some rifles were manufactured with a grip not described under the Ban installed in its place. Those AR-15's that were manufactured with those features were stamped, "Restricted Military/Government/Law Enforcement/Export Only" as well as the accompanying high capacity magazines. Since the expiration of the Federal AWB in September of 2004, these features are now legal in most states.

California
The 2000 Assault Weapons ban in the state of California sparked a renewed interest in the AR-15 rifle. It is estimated that some 70,000 California Legal AR-15s are in existence in that state. Adding the upper receiver of a standard AR-15 or equivalent with an AR-15 equivalent lower receiver which has not been specifically banned by statute or regulation, and that has a fixed 10 round magazine will render the firearm "California legal." In such a configuration, the user could add otherwise prohibited features such as a telescoping stock and pistol grip. The magazine is not detachable, so to load the rifle the shooter must pull the rear takedown pin, hinge the upper receiver on the front pivot pin, and load the now exposed magazine either with a stripper clip or by hand, then close. Popular lower receivers for this purpose are manufactured by Stag Arms, Fulton Armory, Dane Armory, Mega, and Ameetec. By California law if the magazine requires a tool to remove it, that changes the classification of the firearm. A tool called the "Bullet Button" is gaining in popularity: the bullet button works by replacing the magazine release button with a hollow shell that protrudes a short distance from the lower; the shooter must then push the inset pin to activate the mag release, doing so requires a tool e.g., a bullet, hence the name. Stag makes a lower receiver called the STAG-15 which is considered an by the CA DOJ and is legal. As of December 2006, Doublestar, Stag Arms, CMMG, Spikes Tactical, and MEGA all qualify as "off-list" lowers in the state of CA. There is also one model made by Colt, the CAR-A3 HBAR Elite, that was never banned by name, and thus still legal to own in California provided it has the correct configuration. This receiver can be made into a full rifle if the following requirements are met: the receiver has a fixed magazine with no more than 10 cartridges — in which case the rifle may have pistol grips, folding or collapsing stocks, etc.; or, the receiver may have a detachable magazine but may not possess any sort of attachment such as pistol grips, folding or collapsing stocks, etc.

Canada

The Government of Canada
Government of Canada

Canada is a constitutional monarchy. The powers and structure of the federal government are set out in the Constitution of Canada, which includes the written part, the decisions of courts, and unwritten conventions developed over time....
 classifies the AR-15 (and its variants) as a restricted firearm. For a citizen to lawfully own an AR-15, he or she must first pass a 'Canadian Non-Restricted Firearms Safety Test', then a 'Canadian Restricted Firearms Test'. This allows the applicant to obtain a Possession and Acquisition Licence
Possession and Acquisition Licence

A Possession and Acquisition Licence is a licence that allows individuals in Canada to possess and acquire firearms as well as ammunition....
 (PAL) valid for restricted firearms.

In Canada, AR-15s are only allowed to be shot at certified firing ranges.

Finland

In Finland possession of military-style semiautomatic rifles including the AR-15 is legal to volunteers active in military training sponsored the National Defence Training Association of Finland
National Defence Training Association of Finland

National Defence Training Association of Finland is a voluntary organization providing safety and security training to all Finnish residents over the age of 15 and supplemental military training for all Finnish citizens over the age of 18....
.

Criticism

With the plethora of manufacturers of complete weapons and aftermarket barrels, there is a potential hazard associated with chamber specifications. Both civilian (SAAMI) specification .223 Remington and 5.56 mm NATO are available. Though both chambers typically accept both types of ammunition, the firing of military specification ammunition in civilian specification chambers can produce chamber pressures greater than the barrel is designed to handle. The most common result of firing military 5.56x45mm ammunition in a .223 Remington chamber is that the primer can be forced out of the case by chamber pressure, often resulting in the primer becoming lodged somewhere in the action of the rifle, and disassembly of the rifle is often necessary to remove the jammed primer. Military specification chambers typically have a more open throat area producing less pressure and can handle both types of ammunition.

A few AR15 manufacturers incorporate the use of a hybrid chamber specification known as the Wylde chamber. Designed by and named after Bill Wylde, this chambering was created for High Power shooters after the 80 grain .224" bullets became popular. While the Wylde chamber allows for optimal seating depth of 80 grain bullets over .223 Remington and 5.56 NATO, it is capable of accepting both ammunition types. The Wylde chamber is used by a few manufacturers who sell "National Match" configuration AR-15 rifle, barrels, and upper receivers.

The type of chamber, manufacturer, and rifling twist in inches is typically found stamped into the barrel in front of the front sight assembly.

An additional point of concern in the design is the inertial firing pin. A lightweight firing pin rides in a channel inside the bolt unrestrained. When the bolt locks forward during loading, the firing pin typically rides forward and impacts the primer of the chambered round. In military specification ammunition and quality civilian ammunition, this is not normally enough to fire the round and only leaves a small "ding" on the primer. With more sensitive primers or improperly seated primers, this can cause a slamfire
Slamfire

A slamfire is a premature, unintended discharge of a firearm that occurs as a round is being loaded into the Chamber . Slamfires are most common in military firearms that have a free-floating firing pin, as opposed to a spring-loaded one....
 during loading.

See also

  • M4 Carbine
    M4 Carbine

    The M4 Carbine is a family of firearms tracing its lineage back to earlier carbine versions of the M16 rifle, all based on the original AR-15 made by ArmaLite....
  • M16
  • CAR-15
    CAR-15

    The Colt Automatic Rifle-15 Military Weapons System or CAR-15 was a family of AR-15 and M16 rifle-based firearms marketed by Colt's Manufacturing Company in the late 1960s and early 1970s....
  • SR-47
    SR-47

    The SR-47 is a modern assault rifle based on the AR-15 family of rifles created by Knight's Armament Company for the United States Special Operations Command....
  • C7
  • C8 carbine
  • T65 assault rifle
  • Bushmaster M4 Type Carbine


External links