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The Army's office that purchases Soldier weapons contacted Kit Up! to flesh out the details on news that the service was looking for a replacement or rebuild of the current M110, which is based ...
Smoke clears from the chamber of an M110 A1 Squad Designated Marksman Rifle fired by Spc. Steven Monnat, an infantryman assigned to the New York National Guard's Headquarters and Headquarters ...
The M110 Semi-Automatic Sniper System (SASS) has earned its reputation as a trusted tool for U.S. military marksmen. Designed by Knight’s Armament, this 7.62mm rifle blends the accuracy of a ...
Spc. Joshua Scott, an infantryman of Co. C, 1st Bn., 28th Inf. Regt., 4th IBCT, 1st Inf. Div., fires M110 Semi Automatic Sniper System at a target downrange on Aug. 16. Scott is firing the weapon ...
If the M4 is good enough for USASOC to cancel its Mk16 purchasing plans, then why isn't the M110 and the newly modified M110 A1 good enough? Honest question, not being critical at all.
The M110 Semi-Automatic Sniper System has been in service since 2008. It is a Knight’s Armament Company rifle. The Army ordered the smaller, more ergonomic CSASS in 2016, ...
The M110 is based on the smaller M115 howitzer, a towed artillery piece that in its ultimate configuration was designed in 1939, but owed its development to a post-World War I heavy howitzer.
European-made M110 variants were part of Saddam Hussein’s chemical arsenal and wounded American and Iraqi troops from 2006 to 2010. NYTimes.com no longer supports Internet Explorer 9 or earlier ...