Is The Army Finally Ready To Pull The Trigger On 6.8mm TVCM?

The light recoil of the 5.56 NATO round has helped make AR-pattern rifles a favorite of the civilian market, but the military has been looking for a rifle round with more punch for a while. Now they’re evidently moving forward with the replacement:

Buried deep within the DoD FY23 budget request by weapon system, the US Army has officially chosen the contractor(s) for the Next Generation Squad Weapons (NGSW) program.

NGSW is a prototyping effort by the Army that consists of a new rifle (NGSW-R) and automatic rifle (NGSW-AR), chambered in a new high tech 6.8mm cartridge, set to replace the aging M16, M4A1 Carbines and the M249 Squad Automatic Weapon, chambered in a 5.56 NATO round.

The NGSW has been in competitive prototyping testing with three defense firms, including SIG Sauer, General Dynamics – OTS, and Textron Systems.

On page 53/106 of the budget request, the Army expects to procure 29,046 NGSWs in 2023.

“Starts funding for the procurement and fielding of 1,704 NGSW-AR, which is the planned replacement for the M249 Squad Automatic Weapon (SAW) within the Close Combat Force; Procurement and fielding of 15,348 NGSW-R which is the planned replacement for the M4A1 Carbine within the Close Combat Force; and procurement and fielding of 11,994 Next Generation Squad Weapons Fire Controls,” the document read.

If I’m reading that correctly, the “new high tech 6.8mm cartridge” would be the 6.8mm TVCM, which uses a polymer case rather than brass.

Supposedly the round is compatible with a wide range of current weapon platforms with just a barrel swap.

The hybrid polymer-cased cartridge, developed by Texas-based True Velocity as part of the Army’s Next Generation Squad Weapon program, is compatible with legacy firearms as well.

The 6.8mm TVCM composite case design, coupled with the Army’s 6.8mm (.277-caliber) common cartridge projectile, was originally developed and optimized for use in the NGSW-Rifle and NGSW-Automatic Rifle submissions submitted to that military program by General Dynamics-OTS.

However, using what True Velocity characterizes as a “switch barrel” capability, they have demonstrated it can work with much of the Army’s currently fielded small arms including the M240B belt-fed machine gun, the M110 semi-automatic sniper system, and the M134 minigun.

Here’s a video of test-firing the ammo in an Assault Machine Gun.

Next Generation Squad Weapon will also be using an on-weapon ballistic computer integrated into the optics:

“The new optic has a integrated laser range finder, wind sensor, temperature gauge, elevation sensor, and ballistic computer all rolled into one.” That is likely to be a huge boost to troop capabilities, assuming it works as planned. Like any piece of technology, expect a shakedown phase where they work out all the bugs.

True Velocity hails from Garland, so mark that down as another win for Texas.

If there’s a downside for the civilian market, I’m pretty sure polymer ammo is not reloadable, and certainly not with current reloading presses. On the plus side, if the army makes a big move to 6.8mm TVCM, maybe 5.56 NATO ammo will come down in price…

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7 Responses to “Is The Army Finally Ready To Pull The Trigger On 6.8mm TVCM?”

  1. Bucky says:

    If the Army is going all in for the 6.8 TVCM that must mean they are abandoning the 5.56 NATO standard. How will our NATO allies react to that?

  2. Peachy rex says:

    NATO chose 7.62×51 because we wanted it, despite the potential of 7×49 as a universal assault rifle/GPMG round. Then when we soured on 7.62 and jumped to the shiny new 5.56×45, NATO dutifully drifted after us. So perhaps they won’t mind – particularly if it chambers in 7.62 weapons.

  3. Earth Pig says:

    Damnit! All these years I’ve limited my ammunition choices to the common U.S. military calibers. Now they’re shifting yet again. I went to 5.56mm and 9mm when DOD adopted them. Wish they’d stuck with just .45ACP and 7.62×51!!!

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  5. Quartermaster says:

    A bullpup stock? That stinks. The Ar-15/M-16 handles well and one can keep the weapon pointing properly while changing mags. A bullpup is harder in that regard and simply does not handle nearly as well.

  6. jb says:

    Switching to a an intermediate 7mm bullpup is really going to piss the Brits off.

  7. […] a previous post, I made the assumption that the army’s decision to go with 6.8 x 51mm for its Next Generation […]

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