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Posted: 9/8/2013 10:17:29 AM EST
We're any of the original m4 carbines with a2 uppers or c7 uppers roll marked with "m4" or were they only marked "m16a2 carbine" I can't find much info on the origanl xm4 program. I know by the time in 1994 or so when the m4a1 carbines were out they were all flat top and marked with current m4a1 markings. Did a roll stamp "xm4" ever exist?
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The last weapon I had on active duty was a carbine.
From memory (and after 20 years, I don't really trust that!) the were roll marked M-16A2. Uppers were standard A2s. For some reason I want to say the FCG was Safe/Semi/Auto but again I'm not sure about that. I only fired it once for qualification right before I got out. Don't know if this helps. |
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Yes, I had a grey A2 Colt upper with M4 ramps, marked m4 in small letters over the gas tube hole. According to Kevin Dockery's 'Weapons of the Navy Seals' the first M4s were A2 uppers. The M4A1 designation came about as the flat top upper was accepted. There is a LOT of controversy about this, but that A2/M4 upper on an NDS lower, with a fixed stock is still my favorite set up for a practical, all - around carbine. I am working on building a couple similar weapons right now. I wouldn't have broken it up and sold it if I hadn't needed the money at the time.
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M4A1 has nothing to do with the carry handle/sights, and is the designation for the full auto M4 variant.
Early M4 program developmental weapons were rollmarked "XM4 Carbine." Coldblue (IIRC) posted a pic once of one of these weapons from when the Marine Corps was involved in the program, it had the fixed carry handle and A2 sights. Pre-M4 carbines such as the RO727 (A2 sights) and 723 (A1 sights) were rollmarked "M16A2 Carbine." These were typically full auto. The 727s had what became the M4 profle barrel, later 723s did as well. When the M4 feedramps were standardized, Colt started marking barrel extensions and upper receivers with "4" or "M4" to ensure the right combinations were used, so you'll see 727, 723, nd 733 uppers with the "4" or "M4" mark above the gas tube hole on the front of the carry handle. Folks will see 727s and refer to them as M4s or even M4A2s, though that is incorrect. Even high speed, low drag guys, who couldn't care less about the minutia of details we wank about online. |
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Like I said, lots of controversy about this. All I know is what I've read. Doesn't mean it's true. Doesn't mean it's not. Sorry I even responded to this post - I can see it going downhill already. I don't have Dockery's book, or I'd give a qoute. Doesn't mean he isn't wrong, but he was very specific. The Abu Dhabi carbines did exist, as do 727's. It seems nomenclature is something that people on this sight love to argue about - which is why I refer to the variant as an A2/M4. It's as good a label as any I guess.
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We're any of the original m4 carbines with a2 uppers or c7 uppers roll marked with "m4" or were they only marked "m16a2 carbine" I can't find much info on the origanl xm4 program. I know by the time in 1994 or so when the m4a1 carbines were out they were all flat top and marked with current m4a1 markings. Did a roll stamp "xm4" ever exist? View Quote The very few developmental versions were marked "M16A4E1" or "M16A4E2" - dunno if they ever bothered rolling out an XM4 rollmark. |
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I've always understood the Abu Dhabi carbines were RO727s, and reportedly the source of the stepped barrel we have today; Abu Dhabi wanted A2 carbines, with the A2 profile barrel, but the ability to mount the M203.
Lots of good info to be found here. Start in September 1984. |
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Thanks everyone the knowledge here always seems to surprise me following the lead I was given about member coldblue I was able to find the picture of the roll marks. Here is the picture taken by coldblue http://i1357.photobucket.com/albums/q759/D_A_Lutz/XM4USMC_zpsdfe5c9ff.jpg View Quote Well wouldja look at that! Awesome, haven't seen those before! ~Augee |
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http://media.ca1.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/getopn.pl?OPINION=06-1696.01A
In the early 1980s, the military determined that it needed a more compact version of the M16. Colt originally designed the prototype for this new weapon under a 1985 contract with the military in which Colt agreed to build and test forty "XM4 Carbines." In 1990, the military entered into an agreement with Bushmaster to provide sixty-five carbines "having all the physical and technical characteristics of the M4 Carbine." What were the design permitters for the original "40" xm4 carbines ? Have there been any reports of m4 or xm4 lowers being used on 723 orders after 1985? |
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Augee, quick question. After perusing through some older posts I found 2 posts you made and was wondering if you could tell me more I did also run into a staff-weenie from the 101st at Bagram who had a late RO723, "CH" marked upper with case deflector, .750 notched barrel marked (C) MP, and with commercial rollmarks that read, ETA* - M4/M16A2E. No photographs of that one, unfortunately. And Just a "by the way," the rollmark on that RO723 was "M4/M16A2E," commercial rollmarkings, just like this one: Did the late colt 723 have a c7 upper? Sorry for picking your brain so much. I'm just genuinely interested in this model for some reason. Do you have any more photos of said two rifles by any chance ? what year did Colt stop making the 723? The picture you provided http://disassociatedpersonalities.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/benellim1entry009.jpg View Quote It probably had a c7 upper, (I dont think there are any "C H" marked A2 uppers, I think that was only on the A1/C7 sighted uppers) |
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From everything I've read on the subject , it COULD have been possible for an early xm4 to have a m16a2 upper with feild sights. I say possible as I havnt seen a picture confirming but I also havnt found anything really to the contrary. Now I don't believe there was ever a xm4 with field sights produced and sold to the military, but possible in early trials?. Lots of information pointing to early xm4 carbines using left over 727 parts to make the initial run( thanks Augee) ( like most things colt there Is a weird transition period where almost anything goes) so I wouldn't be suprised to see a few leftover 723 parts being used as well?( no source) maybe that's why I have seen c7 uppers stamped with a 4 on the front above he threads for the barrel nut. ( ill try to find pictures) possibly COTS acquired? My quest for information continues on Picture belongs to member LEG C7 upper marked with a 4 http://i305.photobucket.com/albums/nn205/Leg031/Colt%20upper/Coltupper_4.jpg It seems that the c7 upper was well in production until a few years after the xm4 competition was over and it became the m4. Not saying it is correct , but I really want to find one like that! View Quote The marking above the gas tube hole can be found on AR6520s as well. it's just how Colt ID'd uppers meant for carbines with the M4 barrel extension to keep them and the rifle uppers separate. |
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From everything I've read on the subject , it COULD have been possible for an early xm4 to have a m16a2 upper with feild sights. I say possible as I havnt seen a picture confirming but I also havnt found anything really to the contrary. Now I don't believe there was ever a xm4 with field sights produced and sold to the military, but possible in early trials?. Lots of information pointing to early xm4 carbines using left over 727 parts to make the initial run( thanks Augee) ( like most things colt there Is a weird transition period where almost anything goes) so I wouldn't be suprised to see a few leftover 723 parts being used as well?( no source) maybe that's why I have seen c7 uppers stamped with a 4 on the front above he threads for the barrel nut. ( ill try to find pictures) possibly COTS acquired? My quest for information continues on Picture belongs to member LEG C7 upper marked with a 4 http://i305.photobucket.com/albums/nn205/Leg031/Colt%20upper/Coltupper_4.jpg It seems that the c7 upper was well in production until a few years after the xm4 competition was over and it became the m4. Not saying it is correct , but I really want to find one like that! View Quote The marking above the gas tube hole can be found on AR6520s as well. it's just how Colt ID'd uppers meant for carbines with the M4 barrel extension to keep them and the rifle uppers separate. |
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The marking above the gas tube hole can be found on AR6520s as well. it's just how Colt ID'd uppers meant for carbines with the M4 barrel extension to keep them and the rifle uppers separate. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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From everything I've read on the subject , it COULD have been possible for an early xm4 to have a m16a2 upper with feild sights. I say possible as I havnt seen a picture confirming but I also havnt found anything really to the contrary. Now I don't believe there was ever a xm4 with field sights produced and sold to the military, but possible in early trials?. Lots of information pointing to early xm4 carbines using left over 727 parts to make the initial run( thanks Augee) ( like most things colt there Is a weird transition period where almost anything goes) so I wouldn't be suprised to see a few leftover 723 parts being used as well?( no source) maybe that's why I have seen c7 uppers stamped with a 4 on the front above he threads for the barrel nut. ( ill try to find pictures) possibly COTS acquired? My quest for information continues on Picture belongs to member LEG C7 upper marked with a 4 http://i305.photobucket.com/albums/nn205/Leg031/Colt%20upper/Coltupper_4.jpg It seems that the c7 upper was well in production until a few years after the xm4 competition was over and it became the m4. Not saying it is correct , but I really want to find one like that! The marking above the gas tube hole can be found on AR6520s as well. it's just how Colt ID'd uppers meant for carbines with the M4 barrel extension to keep them and the rifle uppers separate. Thanks. Now my only remaining question regards the m4/m16a2e colt 723 |
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It's odd there would be a 723 upper in the 101st armory, I don't think they're one of the units that COTS purchased the 723s and 727s back in the 80s (those were all SOCOM units; NSW, Rgr Regt, CAG). Given that 723s were commercial guns, and every 723 I've seen for sale on the NFA boards and dealer websites had commercial "M16A2 Carbine" roll marks, my guess, is it was a throw togther from someone's armory of a 723 upper from somewhere, and a lower from one of those first batches of M4s that ended up in the unit armory o in dudeman's hands througha crackdeal or handmedown, or whatever.
Some of my former employers' Bushmaster "M4s" ended up in the hands of some SF bubbas in Kandahar at one point a few years ago until our govt rep did and inventory of weapons and someone got it by the short and curlies until the weapons were retrieved. Strange shit happens. |
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Thanks to all who have posted info on this thread.
The knowledge that is here continues to astound me. I could read about this kind of thing all day long. |
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The carbine I saw in 2008 had an A2 upper with field sights (i.e. "C7"). It may have in fact been something like an "RO923" rather than an RO723, based on the "M4/M16A2E" marked lower.
Based on the conversation I had with its "owner," though he was from the 101st, I believe that the carbine was in fact Theater Provided Equipment (TPE). The soldier himself did not specifically tell me so, he was an E3 or 4, IIRC. He was a Bagramite REMF, and told me that he had deployed with an M16[A2], and had received the "M4" in theater and switched. As such, I don't believe that it was organic to 101. My guess is that it was TPE, passed down from unit to unit, it being by then 2008, if it were TPE, there's almost no telling how it came to be there, considering the number of changes to units, organizations, and TPE between when I departed in 2008 and returned in 2010. If I were to hazard wild conjecture, I'd guess that was probably a COTS purchase early on in the war, a lot of units were given discretionary funds to purchase "whatever they needed" to deploy and some interesting things have appeared, like MP5s for PSD, ect. Possibly an SF support unit, or perhaps a non-organic support unit that had been attached to them purchased them COTS, as they had not been able to secure enough M4/M4A1s prior to deployment (a lot of BCTs were getting very quickly converted to M4s at the time) and either were scheduled to receive the appropriate weapons during reset or simply had no more use of them back stateside, and left them in theater, and they became TPE, and passed from unit to unit - lot of musket bearers on BAF that probably would have loved to have a carbine, any carbine, it's not as if it was going to go anywhere other than Popeye's and maybe the gym. Once again, if it was TPE, it's impossible to say how it came to be where it was - a lot of units have been headquartered at Bagram at one time or another. ~Augee |
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That's along the lines of what I imagined it's provenance would be.
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Thanks everyone the knowledge here always seems to surprise me following the lead I was given about member coldblue I was able to find the picture of the roll marks. Here is the picture taken by coldblue http://i1357.photobucket.com/albums/q759/D_A_Lutz/XM4USMC_zpsdfe5c9ff.jpg View Quote I kinda went that way on mine: |
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The very few developmental versions were marked "M16A4E1" or "M16A4E2" - dunno if they ever bothered rolling out an XM4 rollmark. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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We're any of the original m4 carbines with a2 uppers or c7 uppers roll marked with "m4" or were they only marked "m16a2 carbine" I can't find much info on the origanl xm4 program. I know by the time in 1994 or so when the m4a1 carbines were out they were all flat top and marked with current m4a1 markings. Did a roll stamp "xm4" ever exist? The very few developmental versions were marked "M16A4E1" or "M16A4E2" - dunno if they ever bothered rolling out an XM4 rollmark. I have never heard of the M16A4E1 and M16A4E2 nomenclature. Do you have any more information on these? Possible mistaken for the M16A2E1 and M16A2E2? |
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I have never heard of the M16A4E1 and M16A4E2 nomenclature. Do you have any more information on these? Possible mistaken for the M16A2E1 and M16A2E2? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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We're any of the original m4 carbines with a2 uppers or c7 uppers roll marked with "m4" or were they only marked "m16a2 carbine" I can't find much info on the origanl xm4 program. I know by the time in 1994 or so when the m4a1 carbines were out they were all flat top and marked with current m4a1 markings. Did a roll stamp "xm4" ever exist? The very few developmental versions were marked "M16A4E1" or "M16A4E2" - dunno if they ever bothered rolling out an XM4 rollmark. I have never heard of the M16A4E1 and M16A4E2 nomenclature. Do you have any more information on these? Possible mistaken for the M16A2E1 and M16A2E2? Yes, I believe I was misremembering the M4/M16A2E rollmark. |
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The M4 carbine with A2 upper just looks right. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I kinda went that way on mine: http://i623.photobucket.com/albums/tt317/Pericles-photo/M4early_zps8f01a6ab.jpg The M4 carbine with A2 upper just looks right. Sure does. Looks almost identical to the last long gun I had on active duty a long time ago. |
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We're any of the original m4 carbines with a2 uppers or c7 uppers roll marked with "m4" or were they only marked "m16a2 carbine" I can't find much info on the origanl xm4 program. I know by the time in 1994 or so when the m4a1 carbines were out they were all flat top and marked with current m4a1 markings. Did a roll stamp "xm4" ever exist? View Quote Yes I've seen quite a few of them. The XM 4 carbines for field testing around 1985. The factory Government issued M16A2 carbine had the same roll mark as the M16A2 rifle. They were not marked carbine. They were all equipped with M-16A1 full auto parts instead of A2 burst.kits. The lowers however were stamped safe, fire, burst. These were in use around 1988/89. Regards |
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The M4 carbine with A2 upper just looks right. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I kinda went that way on mine: http://i623.photobucket.com/albums/tt317/Pericles-photo/M4early_zps8f01a6ab.jpg The M4 carbine with A2 upper just looks right. +1 |
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http://<a href=http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y43/Rebel05/DSCN2253_zps2b9ad6c3.jpg</a>" /> http://<a href=http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y43/Rebel05/DSCN2254_zps46d43858.jpg</a>" /> http://<a href=http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y43/Rebel05/DSCN2255_zpsc0f3bea8.jpg</a>" /> View Quote I've got one 733 upper marked exactly the same way, and another that has no marking other than the 4 above the gas tube hole. |
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im a little late to the party on this one, but reading that gunzone link..colt had double heat shield handguards for the XM4 in 1986...were these the fat M4 handguards that we know today?? because when the 727 came about they still had the skinny single heat shield ones...
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I'm currently working on a M4A1 project: http://i302.photobucket.com/albums/nn115/wjtwining/AR15/s_zps8b69f3b5.jpg and with some of the info here, I think I may have to make some changes.... So, not only did the M4 have the flat top and A2 upper, but also the C7 (A1 type) upper? View Quote ive seen that called a 723 on here...723 had both pencil barrel and m4 profile... |
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I'm currently working on a M4A1 project: http://i302.photobucket.com/albums/nn115/wjtwining/AR15/s_zps8b69f3b5.jpg and with some of the info here, I think I may have to make some changes.... So, not only did the M4 have the flat top and A2 upper, but also the C7 (A1 type) upper? View Quote Now that's an interesting lower. To my knowledge only US military M4s and M4A1s have the "W" serial prefix. I suppose those are now in the commercial 6920 runs? |
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Now that's an interesting lower. To my knowledge only US military M4s and M4A1s have the "W" serial prefix. I suppose those are now in the commercial 6920 runs? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I'm currently working on a M4A1 project: http://i302.photobucket.com/albums/nn115/wjtwining/AR15/s_zps8b69f3b5.jpg and with some of the info here, I think I may have to make some changes.... So, not only did the M4 have the flat top and A2 upper, but also the C7 (A1 type) upper? Now that's an interesting lower. To my knowledge only US military M4s and M4A1s have the "W" serial prefix. I suppose those are now in the commercial 6920 runs? 80% lower custom engraved.. |
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Pretty cool.
To the best of my knowledge (based on Federal and DOD Acquisitions) the carbines Uncle bought before the M4/M4A1 had all kinds of dog-and-pony markings, typically M16A1 Carbine, M16A2 Carbine, and Commando. There were all kinds of upper and barrel combos. XM4 began under Marine Corps Program auspices in 1983/4. April 1986:
TECOM starts the XM4 Carbine program with a direct entry into Development Test / Operational Test II. The USMC Firepower Division, under the leadership of MAJ Jack Muth, later acquires seven XM4 from the Army. Marines from the Foreign Materiel Acquisition and Exploitation unit assist in testing. The testing is with the goal of issuing the XM4 to the USMC's Special Operations Capable (SOC) units then under development. The only compact shoulder weapons authorized for use by Force Recon to this point has been the M3A1 SMG (bolstered by very unofficial use of XM177E2). Originally, the Colt Commando was considered to be an acceptable replacement by the USMC Development Center, but certain parties demanded that any potential replacement accept the mounting of a bayonet. This is possible with the XM4. Picatinny awards a $33,000 contract modification to Colt for the XM4. Colt makes delivery of double heat shield handguards for the XM4 under evaluation. View Quote USSOCOM made the first official M4A1 purchases in FY 93/calendar 1994. The Department of the Army Master Priority List for fielding the M4 (burst) was for the 82nd, 101st, and 10th Mountain Divisions, and for armor crewmen to replace the M3 Grease Gun. May 1993: AMCCOM awards a $8,608,611 contract to Colt for 18,597 M4 carbines.
September 1993: The ORD for the SOPMOD kit is validated. (The ORD will be amended four times leading up to 1999.) 1994: The US military finally accepts an improved buffer assembly for the M4/M4A1 originally recommended during the carbine's initial development. Previously, the military did not want to introduce a new part different from that used by previous Colt carbines in inventory. The USMC approves "Operational Requirements Document 1.14." This document repaves the long and twisting path for the eventual adoption of the M4A1 Carbine by Force Recon and other units with need of a CQB weapon more capable than the current pistol-caliber SMG (HK MP5N). The military specification for the M4 carbine is revised to MIL-C-70599A(AR). The M4A1 carbine's military specification, MIL-C-71186(AR), is issued. On behalf of USSOCOM, AMCCOM awards Colt a $2,640,749 contract for the production of ~6,000 M4A1. April: AMCCOM issues a solicitation for additional M4 carbines. July: AMCCOM awards a $8,256,003 contract to Colt for ~18,000 M4 carbines. AMCCOM also awards a $153,102 contract modification related to the M4 carbine. The US Army officially adopts the M4 and M4A1 Carbines. Only the first lot of M4 will be delivered with fixed carrying handles. Afterwards, all M4/M4A1 in inventory will be shipped with flat-top upper receivers. ARDEC publishes "External Barrel and Handguard Temperature of the 5.56mm M4 Carbine." This test report examines the external barrel temperature of the 5.56mm M4-series carbines as a function of time and as a function of longitudinal location on the barrel. It also compares the effects of the handguard on barrel temperature and measures the temperature of the M4 Carbine handguard external surface and internal liners. The military specifications for the M4 and M4A1 carbines, M16A2E3, and M16 and M16A1 rifles are each amended. by Daniel E. Watters, Small Arms Historian TGZ is hosted by TCMi View Quote I'm sure an inquiry to Colt could tell you when the weapons were first shipped to the Army at the National Inventory Control Point (where Uncle first puts his hands on them and enters the serial numbers into the DOD small arms master serial number inventory). M4A1 Serial Number 1 is on display in the lobby of USSOCOM Headquarters in Tampa. |
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Pretty cool. . View Quote im going through that whole site right now, going to make a PDF of all the M4 related stuff..should be done in a day or 2..im at 2003 right now.. i did find it funny at one point we made an order to FN for ONE M16A4..price was $484ish? less than $500...apparently you can get a M16A4 from FN for anywhere from 399-500, but a M4 from Colt is going to cost you around 900 |
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ive seen that called a 723 on here...723 had both pencil barrel and m4 profile... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I'm currently working on a M4A1 project: http://i302.photobucket.com/albums/nn115/wjtwining/AR15/s_zps8b69f3b5.jpg and with some of the info here, I think I may have to make some changes.... So, not only did the M4 have the flat top and A2 upper, but also the C7 (A1 type) upper? ive seen that called a 723 on here...723 had both pencil barrel and m4 profile... Correct, not an M4, but an M16A2 Carbine RO723/725 depending on the FCG. |
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Quoted: Pretty cool. To the best of my knowledge (based on Federal and DOD Acquisitions) the carbines Uncle bought before the M4/M4A1 had all kinds of dog-and-pony markings, typically M16A1 Carbine, M16A2 Carbine, and Commando. There were all kinds of upper and barrel combos. XM4 began under Marine Corps Program auspices in 1983/4. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Pretty cool. To the best of my knowledge (based on Federal and DOD Acquisitions) the carbines Uncle bought before the M4/M4A1 had all kinds of dog-and-pony markings, typically M16A1 Carbine, M16A2 Carbine, and Commando. There were all kinds of upper and barrel combos. XM4 began under Marine Corps Program auspices in 1983/4. April 1986: TECOM starts the XM4 Carbine program with a direct entry into Development Test / Operational Test II. The USMC Firepower Division, under the leadership of MAJ Jack Muth, later acquires seven XM4 from the Army. Marines from the Foreign Materiel Acquisition and Exploitation unit assist in testing. The testing is with the goal of issuing the XM4 to the USMC's Special Operations Capable (SOC) units then under development. The only compact shoulder weapons authorized for use by Force Recon to this point has been the M3A1 SMG (bolstered by very unofficial use of XM177E2). Originally, the Colt Commando was considered to be an acceptable replacement by the USMC Development Center, but certain parties demanded that any potential replacement accept the mounting of a bayonet. This is possible with the XM4. LtCol Muth was my Bn CO in 3/6 from 91-93..rock hard Mustang from VN days... treated the troops right and the officers..well....if they were idiots or didn't have the Marines best interests in mind he hammered them... RIP "Whiskey Jack" Muth The "CO" Sept-Oct '91 in GITMO when we flew down as "air alert" for the Haiti govt. overthrow.... |
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I'm currently working on a M4A1 project: http://i302.photobucket.com/albums/nn115/wjtwining/AR15/s_zps8b69f3b5.jpg and with some of the info here, I think I may have to make some changes.... So, not only did the M4 have the flat top and A2 upper, but also the C7 (A1 type) upper? View Quote For a lower so marked, your only real choice would be to go with a standard flattop upper receiver. The question/debate over whether or not the M4 ever came with a fixed carry handle upper hinges on the RO920 M4 Carbine, not the RO921 M4A1 Carbine, like your lower is marked. The RO921 used a an accessory railed upper receiver from the get go. Early variants sometimes mistaken for, or erroneously referred to as "M4s" or "XM4s" were on commercial/export lowers, not property marked "M4A1" lowers. Most common would be the commercial "M16A2" marking. I am not aware of any prototype of the XM4 having ever been built or even conceived of with a field sights upper ("C7", "A1", ect.), though the RO723 series used A2/FS uppers - the XM4 was always intended as a variant of the M16A2 with M16A2 sights, whether fixed to the receiver, or detachable. The 80% lower you've got is also a modern forging pattern, not the earlier forging pattern, and the earliest M4s and M4A1s were not marked "COLT DEFENSE," but "COLT'S MFG CO. INC.," as Colt Defense had not yet spun off. It's a great lower for a build, though, and I only wish I had the means to mill 80% lowers - braceman would have a lot more of my money! ~Augee |
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Early variants sometimes mistaken for, or erroneously referred to as "M4s" or "XM4s" were on commercial/export lowers, not property marked "M4A1" lowers. Most common would be the commercial "M16A2" marking. I am not aware of any prototype of the XM4 having ever been built or even conceived of with a field sights upper ("C7", "A1", ect.), though the RO723 series used A2/FS uppers - the XM4 was always intended as a variant of the M16A2 with M16A2 sights, whether fixed to the receiver, or detachable. View Quote The izzies did both 14.5 skinny barrel carbines and 14.5 "M4-step cut" carbines with field sights - but that's in-country mods, not Colt factory models, or even US military variants. |
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I've got an odd upper assembly that came out of one of the marksmanship shops at Ft. Benning. The guy that gave it to me worked in the shops and he knew I was deploying to Sadi for the first gulf war and thought I might have "use for it" his words. I put it on a standard M16 lower while over there but never crossed the line so it never even got fired in theater. I was told this was some sort of test piece for the M4 carbine project, I'm thinking it was just some spares that were laying around in truth. The upper is a FN item with out the M4 cuts. the barrel extension also does not have the M4 Cuts. Barrel is chrome lined Colt 14.5 inches NATO marked and 1 in 7 twist. Old style Delta ring and HG cap. Exterior is a black, looks like Teflon finish. Interior is grey Solid Dry Film lube (SDF). Has a tear drop FA. Front sight tower looks original and never remove. Just a odd set up and thought I'd share.
http://i631.photobucket.com/albums/uu34/donws2/Trials%20M4%20Upper/IMG_0694_zps3f768a8f.jpg http://i631.photobucket.com/albums/uu34/donws2/Trials%20M4%20Upper/IMG_0695_zps5b73ed62.jpg http://i631.photobucket.com/albums/uu34/donws2/Trials%20M4%20Upper/IMG_0696_zps7a846f55.jpg http://i631.photobucket.com/albums/uu34/donws2/Trials%20M4%20Upper/IMG_0698_zpsfc7bcb8c.jpg http://i631.photobucket.com/albums/uu34/donws2/Trials%20M4%20Upper/IMG_0699_zps67521154.jpg http://i631.photobucket.com/albums/uu34/donws2/Trials%20M4%20Upper/IMG_0697_zpsf3da04d1.jpg |
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Alright, here is the timeline of the M4, from September 1984 to April 2009. Also some info related to the M4. I may have included non-M4 related stuff on accident as it all started to blend together after a while
M4 Timeline |
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There's a variant I haven't seen mentioned in a long time. M4A1K Aircrew Survival Carbine. I remember some pics of one with a cut down grip and shaved toe on the fiberlite stock.
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Quoted:
Alright, here is the timeline of the M4, from September 1984 to April 2009. Also some info related to the M4. I may have included non-M4 related stuff on accident as it all started to blend together after a while M4 Timeline View Quote Thanks for posting that. When I have an afternoon free I will finish reading it. Nice work |
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Quoted:
Alright, here is the timeline of the M4, from September 1984 to April 2009. Also some info related to the M4. I may have included non-M4 related stuff on accident as it all started to blend together after a while M4 Timeline View Quote Outstanding work! |
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