If there was a gun that defined the mid-2000s, it was the XM8.
The XM8 seemed to grace the cover of every Tom Clancy game between 2005 and 2013. It popped up in movies, TV shows, and more and was often seen as the elite super-soldier's rifle.
Ghost Reconย showcased it,ย Rainbow 6ย featured it, and evenย Solid Snakeย carried it.
The tactical tuna was seemingly the future of assault rifles. HK was riding high, but like the best โBehind the Bandโ episodes, it all came crashing down.
Kind ofโฆ
The Early Origins of the XM8
The United States military has been trying to replace the M16/M4 series of rifles since they were adopted. Many challengers haveย come and gone, but the XM8 stands out because it actually achieved an XM designation.
XM means experimental model and is a term given to weapons when they are being considered for adoption.
It's not a new story by any means, but the U.S. Army was shopping around to replace the Stoner design and had been working on a project called the XM29 OICW (Objective Individual Combat Weapon).
I won't dive deep into the OICW, but it was essentially a grenade launcher with an under-mounted rifle. Big Army killed the OICW project but wanted to test out the rifle that was attached to it.
HK worked on the OICW and developed that standalone rifle for the program. When they began developing the XM8, they tookย much inspirationย from their G36. According to Larry Vickers, many parts look the same but are not interchangeable between the two rifles.
While the parts are similar, they are dimensionally different, although the magazines are interchangeable.
HK delivered 30 prototypes of the XM8 in November 2003 for testing. Like the G36, this was a gas-operated rifle with a short-stroke gas piston. Another 200 were subsequently ordered for testing.
The XM8 Promise
At this point, the M16 was still fairly common as an infantry rifle. Theย M4ย was establishing some dominance, but 20-inch barrelsย ruled the roost. I mention that because the standard XM8 had a short barrel at 12.5 inches.
That's below typical carbine lengths, and at 33 inches overall, it was handy. The stock could both collapse and fold. Although the gun made extensive use of polymers, it still weighedย 7.5 pounds.
HK designed the rifle with ambidextrous controls, which is certainly an improvement on the M4 family of rifles. And honestly, the general shape makes it something more akin to a Star Trek phaser than an infantry rifle.
The XM8 featured some fairly advanced features, including an integrated red dot/IR laser produced by Insight and a rail system known as PCAP.
PCAP stands for Picatinny Combat Attachment Points. This system allowed soldiers to place the rails right where they needed them. It's a modular rail thatย predates M-LOK and Keymod.
The XM8 wasn't just a single rifle, either. HK promised an entire family of guns, including a sharpshooter variant, an automatic rifle variant, and a compact carbine.
In 2003 the gun seemed fairly advanced but had itsย fair share of complaints.
The optic kind of sucked. Battery life was terrible, and that was a big complaint. Larry Vickers reportedly told HK they should partner with Aimpoint, but his wisdom was ignored.
Other complaints included the fact the gun was heavy. And oh, theย handguards were meltingย when round counts got higher.
Controversy Arises
The Army wantedย $26 millionย to field 7,000 XM8s for long-term testing. Congress said, โNah, dog.โ They decided Heckler and Koch were stepping on the toes of American arms makers like Colt and even companies like FN with U.S.-based facilities.
Other arms makers wanted a shot at creating a new rifle for the U.S. Army. They complained and wanted an open contest, which led to the Armyย halting the program in 2004.
In 2005 they released a formal Request for Proposals (RFP), so everyone got a chance to play. The RFP asked for both a rifle and a Squad Automatic Weapon. By July 2005, the program was halted, and by October, the RFP was canceled entirely.
Over the next few years, the XM8 would pop up in various tests, including the SCAR program. It did well in a dust and reliability test in 2007 but languished in any further testing by the U.S. Military.
Eventually, the road for the XM8 just ended, and the M4 series of rifles remained the standard.
What Became of it?
Well, not much. The Malaysian Armed Forces adopted the rifle for their PASKAL Special Operations unit. If you google PASKAL Parade, you can see it on parade in Malaysia. That's about as far as the XM8 went.
HK's 416 proved much more successful and saw adoption by elite special operations and the United States Marine Corps. These days the XM8 is relegated to being โthat gun from Ghost Recon.โ
Final Thoughts
While the XM8 had some genuinely good features, there were ultimatelyย too many roadblocksย to success.
Issues during testing, red-tape bureaucracy, and the military's unwillingness to step away from AR-based platforms ultimately doomed the XM8 to its eternal video game status.
Read the original article in its entirety at PewPewTactical.com.