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Borelli Consulting Full Review |
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Tuesday, 01 May 2007 |
Read Borelli's New Full
Review of the KRISS XSMG
KRISS XSMG
From Transformational Defense Industries
By Frank Borelli
At
SHOT Show I saw a new design in sub-machineguns that struck me as
evolutionary. I've mentioned it before: the Kriss XSMG from
Transformational Defense Industries, Inc. (TDII). What makes the weapon
so new and different isn't the 5.5" barrel - been there, done that; it
isn't the fact that the gun uses standard Glock .45ACP magazines -
other weapons use common magazines too; but this subgun takes the
energy from the bolt blowing back and redirects it in a downward path
in front of the trigger area. When I first saw it I thought
"broomhandled Mauser mixed with Star Wars". When I got a chance to
learn more about it and shoot it at the range I came to appreciate the
newly developed recoil design. It was a cold day at the range with
precipitation that ranged from fat snow flakes to mixed sleet and
rain... it was definitely a cold weather test day and we put an ugly
mix of ammo through the weapon. Read how well it performed below.
As
I mentioned, the range day was less than sunny and pleasant. As you can
see from the photo right (yours truly behind the XSMG), the snow, rain
/ sleet was falling freely. Temperatures were running in the low to mid
thirties. We found out from the good folks at TDII that this was to be
the coldest day of firing for the prototype weapons. It's important to
understand that the two weapons we had available that day were both
prototypes. Both showed signs of use and abuse but functioned without
any flaw.
On hand at the range were three representatives from TDII and
a collection of us cops. Also on hand was an ammo can full of an ugly
assortment of ammo that ran the gamut from gun-show-bought 230g FMJ
reloads to Federal Hydra-Shok 185g JHP. When we discussed the
ammunition it was learned that testing to that point had all been done
with 230g FMJ (ball) ammo and that the weapon had performed best with
ammo from Federal and Remington. We were going to put the gun to much
uglier testing than that. To it's credit the Kriss XSMG fed and fired
all of the ammo we put into it. Some of what we had was truncated cone
FMJ ammo and it had no issues with that either. On the last round of
each magazine of JHP ammo we fired we experienced a feeding malfunction
as the jacket edge at the mouth of the bullet cavity cought on the feed
ramp where it mated with the wall of the mag well. While this
malfunction was easily identified, explained and will proove easy to
fix, it also did not and would not prevent reloading. The reloading
process cleared the hung up round which followed the magazine out the
bottom of the magazine well. A fresh magazine was loaded and we kept
shooting.
After happily burning through as much ammo as we could -
tolerating as much of the cold precipitation as we could - we went back
inside and talked about design, production, etc. Here are a few items
about the Kriss XSMG that I learned, and some of them I was quite
surprised with:
- Both of the prototypes had been proof tested with a round loaded to
150%. All production weapons will receive the same proof test.
- The weapon's recoil system is capable of supporting a cyclic rate of
up to 1,100 rounds per minute. However, due to market demand, the
current planned cyclic rate for production weapons is between 600 - 700
rounds per minute.
- The prototypes weigh about 4.8 pounds. Final production weight goal
is 4.2 pounds or less. (Competition is the H&K UMP and the MP5,
both of which weigh about 4.5 pounds)
- Overall length is 15" with the stock collapsed; 25-26" with the stock extended.
- The weapon was designed from the ground up to be modular so that it
can be ordered in various configurations to meet the customer's need(s).
- Prototype weapons have a 1-in-16 rifling rate. No issues have been
found with this, but final rifling specs haven't yet been determined.
- The weapon was designed without sights. There is a full length
picatinny system on the top rail. TDII recommends pop-up front and rear
sights with an electro-optical sight in between.
- The system frame was specifically designed to accept a tactical light
above the barrel, but below the sighting system. A pre-routed path for
wiring the light to a remote pressure switch was designed in.
- As the weapons available were prototypes and final production cost
hasn't yet been determined, no specific target price was available.
However, as the guys from TDII said, the price has to be as comparable
as the weapon to fit in the market.
So,
what really makes the Kriss XSMG radically different from the
competition? The recoil system. If you take a look at the photo shown
right (the XSMG field stripped), you can clearly see the bolt and
recoil system in the bottom center portion of the photo. That "V"
looking block is the key. The bolt moves back into milled grooves and
forces that V-shaped block DOWN instead of back. The recoil spring and
rod absorb the recoil as it moves DOWN and then forces the V-shaped
block back up which forces the bolt to move forward. Now think about
this...
Recoil for most small weapons move backward and up in an arc.
How tight that arc of movement is depends on the length of the recoil
system and where the pivot point is on the gun. Using the M16 as an
example, the recoil system goes from immediately behind the bolt all
the way back to the end of the shoulder stock. In a handgun, such as
the Glock Model 21, the recoil system is the slide being moved back and
forth by the forces at work internally, including the recoil assembly.
The pivot point of the M16 is where the stock is locked into the
shooter's shoulder. With a handgun, the pivot point is the shooter's
hand / wrist depending on technique used. Thanks to the recoil system
of the Kriss XSMG, the recoil is redirected DOWN in FRONT of the pivot
point so that the muzzle climb - the arc of the recoil - is minimized
by the force of the recoil pushing the weapon down. I like it.
To demonstrate the effectiveness of this recoil system, one of
the TDII reps (a former Marine and all around nice guy) fired a
magazine of ammo one handed on burst. He had no issues keeping all
rounds on target.
The stated production goal of TDII is spring of 2008 with
weapons available in .45ACP, 9mm and .40S&W. I think they are on to
something and I'm looking forward to doing further testing with one of
the early production models. Keep your eye on this new subgun. I think
it's going to rock the industry in all the fun ways.
BE SAFE!
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Newsflash
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See why Shooting Illustrated says, "TDI has
a real winner here." read more...
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