Needlegun
A needlegun, also known as a needler, flechette gun or fletcher, is a firearm that fires small, sometimes fin-stabilized, metal darts or flechettes.
History
The first projectiles in early gun systems dating from the 14th century were typically hand wrought iron flechettes wrapped in a leather sabot. However, due to the expense and trouble of making these darts in a pre-industrial society, they were soon replaced with the less accurate stone cannonball.
Flechettes again came into mass use in World War I, when they were dropped from airplanes.
A June 1978 issue of Gallery Magazine[1] quotes L. Fletcher Prouty observing a test of flechette weapons in 1960 and the testimony of William E. Colby in the Church Committee on September 16 to 18, 1975 describing flechette weapons. Charles A. Senseney testified that he was a project engineer of the M-1 dart launcher that was described as resembling a M1911 pistol with a sight mount at the top.
Senseney claimed the M-1 was designed for the US Army Special Forces to be used in the Vietnam war but never got there due to not being able to get into the US Army's logistics system in time.[2] Flechette ammunition encased in a sabot was available for the M-16, shotguns, and other weapons for use in Vietnam.
A June 1965 Esquire magazine story on the making of the then upcoming James Bond film Thunderball featured drawings of dart firing pistols that were not used in the completed film.[3]
At the same time several makes of underwater firearms fired a steel bolt just over 4 inches long (but without fins).
The Special Purpose Individual Weapon was a long-running United States Army program to develop, in part, a workable XM-216 flechette-based "rifle", though other concepts were also involved. The concepts continued to be tested under the Future Rifle Program and again in the 1980s and 1990s under the Advanced Combat Rifle program, but neither program resulted in a system useful enough to warrant replacing the current M16.
Advantages and disadvantages
Theoretically, the advantages of a needlegun over conventional projectile firearms are in its compact size, high rate of fire, and extreme muzzle velocity. A needlegun leverages the principles of kinetic energy and conservation of momentum, resulting in a low-recoil delivery system capable of inflicting significant damage to a soft target. Recoil is generated by the ejecta, which in a chemical firearm includes not only the projectile itself but the hot expanding exhaust gasses, ejected empty catridge and any moving parts. Since the needle is the only moving part of a needlegun (as in a coilgun or railgun), there is inherently little recoil. Although it has extreme velocity, the needle possesses little mass, providing even less potential for recoil. A high rate of fire allows a massive number of projectiles to be fired in a very short period of time, before any perceivable recoil could begin to affect the user's accuracy. There have been experiments to make guided flechettes that can home in on targets.[4]
Disadvantages include:
- Terminal ballistics is often at least as important as aerodynamic efficiency. Rather than inflicting their full kinetic energy on a target, needle projectiles tend to pass smoothly through the target with little damage, similar to needles for textiles or medical usage.
- A powder-based propulsion system requires a barrel seal, which needles have a hard time providing at high rates of fire without damaging the barrels. Sabot systems result in smaller decreases in recoil (which is proportional to momentum). Compared to a full-size projectile, they allow an increase in projectile velocity per unit of barrel length. A typical full bore projectile might have mass of 147 grains, but a typical Flechette and Sabot for the same 7.62×51mm weapon would have mass of only 38 grains, for a substantial reduction in recoil and a very large increase in muzzle velocity.
- Lead, used almost universally in firearms for its high density and softness which allows it to pass through rifled gun barrels at high velocity, is unsuitable for a needle for this same reason - it cannot hold its shape without a stronger jacket. Steel-jacketed lead-core Flechettes are used in some sporting ammunition.
- Flechette projectiles do not deflect off typical surfaces as easily as regular bullets due to the longer distribution of mass, which increases the danger to bystanders. In addition to this, many flechette systems use self-discarding sabots that exit the barrel at dangerous speeds which can potentially harm allies or bystanders close by the muzzle. The low mass and large, irregular shape of the pieces of the sabot give them poor aerodynamic qualities and thus danger zone is very short.
Popular culture
This weapon appears frequently in science fiction. For example, it is featured in:
- Michael Moorcock's The Final Programme which has Jerry Cornelius wielding a needlegun.[5]
- Gene Wolfe's The Book of the Long Sun and The Book of the Short Sun
- Frank Herbert's Dune universe (variously referred to as needleguns, flechette guns, "Chandler" guns, and "maula" guns)
- William Gibson's Neuromancer
- The BattleTech universe
- Marvel Comics' Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD
- Larry Niven's A Gift From Earth
- Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash, in the form of a weapons system called Reason
- Dan Simmons's Hyperion and Endymion, as flechette rifles
- Also in Dan Simmons's Ilium and Olympos.
- In The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya, Kyon must use a needlegun to inject a program into Yuki Nagato after the collapse of the timespace continuum.
- In Isaac Asimov's Lucky Starr series of novels, Starr's sidekick, Bigman, uses a needlegun.
- In William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson's 1967 novel Logan's Run the Sandman's Gun has one "Needler" cartridge.
- In the Hyperion fictional universe based upon Dan Simmons' novels, the "flechette rifle" or "flechette pistol" was loaded with "egg shaped" cartridges that, when fired, deployed into a cloud of several thousand hyper-velocity steel needles, in a manner similar to the discharge of a shotgun shell, though much more deadly and effective for longer range than a shotgun.
- In the Warhammer 40,000 universe, the Inquisition uses weapons called Needle Rifles or Needle Pistols that fire shards of crystallized venom that can be deadly when penetrating an unarmored or lightly armored target.
- In World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War, a post-apocalyptic horror-survival novel by Max Brooks, an interviewed soldier tells of "flechette-filled anti-infantry canister shots" for the M1A2 Abrams tank which are highly effective against zombies.
- In Joe Haldeman's The Forever War future soldiers could fire shotgun rounds sending out an expanding cloud of a thousand tiny flechettes which would be deadly up to 5 meters away but turn into harmless vapor at 6 meters. In Haldeman's, Forever Peace, remotely controlled fighting units can fire rounds of hundreds of thousands of flechettes.
- A regular and Super-Nailgun were prominently featured as weapons in Quake. The weapon returns in Quake 4, but has a slight wind-up time before firing, similar to a minigun.
- The Halo series features the Needler and Needle Rifle. Both fire long, sharp, pink crystal shards that can "supercombine", resulting in an explosion if a critical amount of them have penetrated a soft target. The fully automatic Needler is appropriately known as Type-33 Guided Munitions Launcher. The Needle Rifle, which is introduced in Halo: Reach, is a longer, semi-automatic version that lacks the Needler's homing capabilities. The Spiker "carbine" (although it seems more similar to an SMG) used by the Brutes also fires needle-like projectiles, seemingly using a chemical propellant.
- Team Fortress 2's Medic class is armed with a Syringe Gun which fires what appear to be extremely sharp used medical syringes, and the Scout class was originally going to have a nail gun as its primary weapon. Many classes in its predecessor Team Fortress Classic have a nailgun, which operates similarly.
Drawing their inspiration largely from similarly themed literature, science-fiction role-playing games frequently include needle-guns in some form. For example:
- BattleTech, as needler pistols and rifles
- Star Frontiers, as needler pistols and rifles
- Gamma World, as needler pistols and rifles
- Traveller, in the form of gauss-pistols and gauss-rifles firing 4 mm darts.
- Shadowrun, as flechette pistols and rifles; these weapons use chemically-propelled flechette ammunition cartridges.
- Renegade Legion, as rifles, carbines and pistols. In this setting, needler weapons all share a common ammo type; a block of solid plastic that is shredded at tremendous velocities.
See also
References
- ↑ Sprague, Richard E. and Cutler, Robert The Umbrella System: Prelude to an Assassination Gallery Magazine June 1978
- ↑ Charles A. Senseney testimony''Church Committee' September 18, 1975
- ↑ Bond: A Spy's Report on 007's Next Movie Thunderball Esquire June 1965
- ↑ https://share.sandia.gov/news/resources/news_releases/bullet/
- ↑ Pringle, David (1987). Science Fiction: The 100 Best Novels, An English-Language Selection, 1949-1984 (US ed.). Carroll & Graf. ISBN 0-88184-259-1. pg. 133