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ArmaLite AR-5

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aircrew survival weapons were no longer in manufacture, the Air Force put out a request for a new survival weapon. Shortly after Fairchild established the ArmaLite division in 1954, ArmaLite designed and submitted the AR-5 in response. The Air Force officially adopted the AR-5 as the MA-1 in 1956.
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Designed to be stowed in cramped aircraft cockpits, the rifle had a takedown design and was primarily made from lightweight plastics and aluminum alloys. The AR-5 was unique for being able to be disassembled with all working parts, plus a basic survival kit, stored within the stock, which was 14
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takedown rifle chambered for the .22 Long Rifle cartridge. Released in 1959 as a civilian survival weapon and in continuous production since then, the AR-7 is related to the AR-5 in terms of its overall layout and retains the same modular takedown, storage in stock, and the ability to float.
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aircrew survival weapons already in inventory were judged to be sufficient for existing Air Force needs. However, adoption of the MA-1 established ArmaLite as a recognized firearms company, leading to several other rifle designs of varying success (e.g., the
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barrel. While there is versatility to such a combination, the AR-5's detachable box magazine-fed bolt action has the advantage of rapid-fire capability. The AR-5, like the
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inches (36 cm) long and thus able to fit in Air Force bailout packs. Additionally, the rifle was able to float in water, whether it was assembled or stowed.
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and M6 US Air Force survival rifles, used the .22 Hornet cartridge which has 2.3 times the muzzle velocity and 7 times the energy of the common
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Due to the cancellation of the XB-70 fleet, though, the Air Force never received funding to buy more than the original 12 test models. The
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George C. Sullivan (Inventor), United States Patent & Trademark Office, AR-5's gunstock design patent
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Armalite used the research and tooling for the AR-5/MA-1 to develop the
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This article is about the survival weapon. For other uses of AR 5, see
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cartridge and adopted as the MA-1 aircrew survival rifle by the
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Blake, Stevens, R. & Ezell, Edward C. (29 October 1987).
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needed a compact, lightweight, accurate rifle for the new
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List of individual weapons of the U.S. Armed Forces
482:. Boulder, Colorado: Paladin Press. pp. 4–5. 393:The Book of Gun Trivia: Essential Firepower Facts 236:manned bomber aircrew's survival kits. Since the 572: 460:: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ( 450:. Archived from the original on 1 October 2008. 544:: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( 486: 383: 439: 437: 420:Bierman, Harris (1971). "Armalite AR5A". 415: 413: 220:Engine and Airplane Corporation in 1954. 563:Design patent #179499 (January 01, 1957) 473: 471: 273: 492: 419: 389: 573: 434: 410: 468: 390:Rottman, Gordon L (20 October 2013). 477: 13: 522:The Black Rifle: M16 Retrospective 396:. Osprey Publishing. p. 168. 320:in such a light rifle (2.5 lbs.). 14: 597: 556: 493:Miniter, Frank (11 August 2014). 36: 286:is a superposed ("over-under") 187:5-round detachable box magazine 513: 1: 376: 7: 581:Rifles of the United States 339: 10: 602: 356:M6 Aircrew Survival Weapon 284:M6 Aircrew Survival Weapon 223: 15: 269: 183: 171: 159: 154: 135: 119: 103: 98: 88: 83: 73: 65: 60: 53:Place of origin 52: 44: 35: 28: 346:List of ArmaLite rifles 210:United States Air Force 78:United States Air Force 423:GUNS & AMMO ANNUAL 279: 212:. It was developed by 496:The Future of the Gun 478:Long, Duncan (1990). 277: 18:AR 5 (disambiguation) 430:on 22 December 2015. 480:AR-7 Super Systems 445:"ArmaLite history" 361:Marble Game Getter 280: 204:chambered for the 84:Production history 506:978-1-62157-244-2 403:978-1-78200-620-6 351:M4 Survival Rifle 310:M4 Survival Rifle 197:is a lightweight 191: 190: 593: 550: 549: 543: 535: 517: 511: 510: 490: 484: 483: 475: 466: 465: 459: 451: 449: 441: 432: 431: 417: 408: 407: 387: 371:List of firearms 331:, an eight-shot 216:, a division of 184:Feed system 40: 31: 26: 25: 601: 600: 596: 595: 594: 592: 591: 590: 571: 570: 559: 554: 553: 537: 536: 532: 518: 514: 507: 491: 487: 476: 469: 453: 452: 447: 443: 442: 435: 418: 411: 404: 388: 384: 379: 342: 291:combination gun 272: 226: 155: 66:In service 61:Service history 29: 24: 21: 12: 11: 5: 599: 589: 588: 583: 567: 566: 558: 557:External links 555: 552: 551: 531:978-0947898861 530: 512: 505: 485: 467: 433: 409: 402: 381: 380: 378: 375: 374: 373: 368: 363: 358: 353: 348: 341: 338: 333:semi-automatic 314:.22 Long Rifle 301:barrel over a 271: 268: 230:U.S. Air Force 225: 222: 202:takedown rifle 189: 188: 185: 181: 180: 175: 169: 168: 163: 157: 156: 152: 151: 140: 133: 132: 121: 117: 116: 105: 101: 100: 99:Specifications 96: 95: 90: 86: 85: 81: 80: 75: 71: 70: 67: 63: 62: 58: 57: 54: 50: 49: 46: 42: 41: 33: 32: 30:Armalite AR-5 22: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 598: 587: 586:Survival guns 584: 582: 579: 578: 576: 569: 564: 561: 560: 547: 541: 533: 527: 523: 516: 508: 502: 498: 497: 489: 481: 474: 472: 463: 457: 446: 440: 438: 429: 425: 424: 416: 414: 405: 399: 395: 394: 386: 382: 372: 369: 367: 364: 362: 359: 357: 354: 352: 349: 347: 344: 343: 337: 334: 330: 329:Armalite AR-7 325: 321: 319: 315: 311: 307: 304: 300: 296: 292: 289: 285: 276: 267: 265: 261: 257: 252: 248: 243: 239: 235: 231: 221: 219: 215: 211: 207: 203: 200: 196: 195:ArmaLite AR-5 186: 182: 179: 176: 174: 170: 167: 164: 162: 158: 153: 149: 145: 141: 138: 134: 130: 126: 122: 118: 114: 110: 106: 102: 97: 94: 91: 87: 82: 79: 76: 72: 68: 64: 59: 56:United States 55: 51: 47: 43: 39: 34: 27: 19: 568: 521: 515: 495: 488: 479: 428:the original 422: 392: 385: 326: 322: 297:single-shot 288:break action 282:The earlier 281: 227: 194: 192: 139: length 89:Manufacturer 74:Used by 199:bolt-action 178:Bolt-action 575:Categories 377:References 295:.22 Hornet 278:.22 Hornet 206:.22 Hornet 166:.22 Hornet 146:(356  127:(711  540:cite book 218:Fairchild 107:2.5  69:1956–1959 456:cite web 340:See also 214:ArmaLite 142:14  123:28  111:(1  93:ArmaLite 306:shotgun 293:with a 224:History 161:Caliber 528:  503:  400:  318:recoil 270:Design 173:Action 137:Barrel 120:Length 448:(PDF) 299:rifle 264:AR-15 260:AR-10 234:XB-70 48:Rifle 23:Rifle 546:link 526:ISBN 501:ISBN 462:link 398:ISBN 303:.410 262:and 256:AR-7 249:and 240:and 228:The 193:The 104:Mass 45:Type 266:). 577:: 542:}} 538:{{ 470:^ 458:}} 454:{{ 436:^ 412:^ 258:, 251:M6 247:M4 242:M6 238:M4 148:mm 144:in 129:mm 125:in 113:kg 109:lb 548:) 534:. 509:. 464:) 406:. 150:) 131:) 115:) 20:.

Index

AR 5 (disambiguation)

United States Air Force
ArmaLite
lb
kg
in
mm
Barrel
in
mm
Caliber
.22 Hornet
Action
Bolt-action
bolt-action
takedown rifle
.22 Hornet
United States Air Force
ArmaLite
Fairchild
U.S. Air Force
XB-70
M4
M6
M4
M6
AR-7
AR-10
AR-15

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