The MP7 is a German submachine
gun manufactured by Heckler & Koch (H&K) and chambered for
the 4.6×30mm
cartridge. It was designed with the new cartridge to meet NATO requirements
published in 1989, as these requirements call for a personal defense weapon (PDW) class
firearm, with a greater ability to defeat body armor
than current weapons limited to conventional pistol cartridges. The MP7 went
into production in 2001. It is a direct rival to the FN P90, also
developed in response to NATO's requirement. The weapon has been revised since
its introduction and the current production version is the MP7A1.
The proliferation of high-quality body
armor has begun to make guns that fire pistol ammunition (such as HK's
earlier MP5 submachine gun or USP pistol) ineffective. In response to this
trend, HK designed the MP7 (along with the now cancelled UCP pistol, which
uses the same ammunition) to penetrate body armor, but small enough to be used
in place of either a pistol or a submachine gun.
Design details
The MP7 essentially operates like a scaled-down assault
rifle, with the same action as HK's G36, a short stroke piston. The 4.6x30mm ammunition
is virtually exclusive to the gun (save for the now cancelled H&K UCP and a planned variant of the Brügger & Thomet MP9) and also offers
low recoil. This
ammunition is unique among submachine guns in that the bullet is made almost
entirely of a hardened steel penetrator instead of softer copper or lead.
The weapon allows a conventional 20-round, 30-round, or
40-round box magazine to be fit within the pistol grip (the 20-round magazine
being comparable in size to a 15-round 9mm
magazine, while the 40-round magazine compares to a 30-round 9 mm
magazine). The weapon features an ambidextrous fire selector, bolt catch lever
and magazine release. It has an extendable stock and a folding front grip; it
can be fired either one-handed or two-handed. It is compact and light, due to the use of polymers in its
construction.
Ammunition
The MP7's specially designed AP
high velocity rounds allow copper plated solid steel projectile (DM11), alloy
plated steel jacket projectile (DM21) or copper alloy jacketed lead core
projectile (Fiocchi FMJ ZP). Standart AP
high velocity DM11 round with a 2.0 g (31 gr)
projectile has a muzzle velocity of 720 m/s (2,362 ft/s), which is
nearly as high as that of a .223
Remington round, and has a muzzle energy of 506 J (373 ft-lbf). The
DM11 round penetrates the NATO CRISAT target (20 layers of kevlar with
1.6 mm titanium backing) even at 200 m. he round has a small
diameter, allowing for redoubling penetration capability and high capacity in a
very small magazine.
VBR of Belgium produces a 4.6x30mm 2-part controlled
fragmenting projectile that is claimed to increase the content of the permanent
wound cavity and double the chance to hit a vital organ. Heckler
& Koch claims that the CPS Black Tip ammunition made by Fiocchi has a
muzzle energy of approximately 525 J, which would be comparable to 9x19mm
Parabellum rounds.
Variants
A recent production MP7A1 (note the safety trigger) of the Bundeswehr
with a Zeiss RSA reflex red dot sight and LLM01 laser light module.
- PDW: The first prototype shown in 1999 was designated the 'PDW' (Personal Defense Weapon). It had a short Picatinny rail on the top and a smooth pistol grip surface.
- MP7: In 2001 it was named the 'MP7' and went into production. It included a full length Picatinny rail, a thick curved stock and an anti-slide surface on the pistol grip much like the HK USP. It also featured folding iron sights mounted on the Picatinny rail and the button to fold the foregrip was made larger for easier operation.
- MP7A1: In 2003 its designation was changed to 'MP7A1' and featured a redesigned pistol grip with a different surface and curved shape, a smaller stock with a straight buttpad, side mounted Picatinny rails as standard and the folding iron sights were made more compact. The weapon was made slightly longer, but because the stock was shortened, the overall length did not change. The stock is also able to be locked into 3 positions. Recent MP7A1 models have a trigger safety similar to a Glock pistol; the middle section of the trigger must be pulled first before the outer part will move. This helps to stop accidental discharges if the trigger is bumped. In early 2011, US Naval Special Warfare units tested a 5.7x28mm version of the MP7A1.
- MP7-SF: Semi-automatic only variant of MP7. Currently used by Ministry of Defence Police in United Kingdom.
Accessories
The weapon features a full-length, top-mounted Picatinny
rail that comes standard with folding fore and rear iron sights attached.
When the sights are folded flat, they resemble simple open
sights. Folded up, they feature aperture sights. The sights can easily be removed by
loosening a single screw and lifting them off. It can fit additional rails on
the sides of the barrel, which allow it to mount commercial optical sights (telescopic
and red
dot sights), laser aiming modules (LAM), and tactical
flashlights. The MP7 can also accept a suppressor.
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