Tag Archives: Knight’s Armament Company

Knight’s to Equip British Marines, Rangers

The UK Ministry of Defence on Thursday announced that Florida-based Knight’s Armament Company will supply the country’s elite troops with up to 10,000 rifles over the next decade.

As the British military’s main infantry rifle system since 1985 has been the domestically designed (but Stoner AR-18 based) Enfield L85/SA80 bullpup carbine in 5.56 NATO, the program that KAC just won is known as the Alternative Individual Weapon system. While most units will continue to field the L85, the new rifle is to equip the British Army’s four-battalion Ranger Regiment and the Royal Marine’s Commando units.

Type classified as the L403A1 in British service; the rifle selected for the AIW program tender is the KAC KS-1 in 5.56. Using a 13.7-inch 1:7 twist barrel with a quick detach muzzle device that supports suppressors, a full-length free-floating aluminum handguard with M-LOK slots and a top Pic rail, the KS-1 has fully ambi controls and Magpul furniture. Rather than being a piston gun such as the HK416 series, the KS-1 has a direct gas impingement system in the form of KAC’s improved Mod 2 gas system which is designed to run both suppressed and unsuppressed without adjustment.

Images released by the British MoD show the select-fire L403A1 to be a KAC KS-1 rifle platform equipped with a Magpul P-MAG, an LVPO, a HuxWrx suppressor, and a backup red dot optic. (Photo: MoD)

Note the use of an Aimpoint ACRO enclosed emitter red dot atop a Vortex LPVO in service with the new L403A1, here seen frolicking in the snow in Norway with the RM’s Surveillance And Reconnaissance Squadron. (Photo: MoD)

The program’s maximum value, £90 million ($112 million), is based on 10,000 rifles delivered out to 2033. The initial £15 million ($18.7 million) order announced this week is for 1,620 guns.

The British military has been trialing the Knights KS-1 as part of the AIW program evaluation across multiple climes and locations as part of Project Hunter for most of the past two years. The platform reportedly beat out several big-name contenders– including Glock— for the award that was announced this week, one that stands to carry lots of weight with British Commonwealth partners. (Photo: MoD)

The systems will initially be fielded to the British Army’s Special Operations Brigade’s new Ranger Regiment, “who operate in complex, high threat environments.” The fact that the Rangers are often deployed near/with U.S. and Canadian forces that also use direct impingement M4/C7 rifles, is probably a big reason for the selection of a fairly standard format, if top-shelf, AR.

Meanwhile, further deliveries are going to the Royal Marines starting in 2024 as part of the Commando Force Programme which will include not only the new rifle but also new night vision goggles, tactical communications systems, battlefield vehicles, and helmets.

The L403A1 is not the only new American platform soon headed to service with the Royal Marines, intended primarily for Strike Companies and the Surveillance and Reconnaissance Squadron. The force is also fielding new LMT-made L129A2 Sharpshooter Rifles, chambered in 6.5 Creedmoor. These will be outfitted with Leupold scopes and HuxWrx suppressors, to equip two designated expert shooters in each Commando Force Strike Team with these upgraded rifles.

LMT has previously supplied the L129A1 series rifle, a development of the company’s LM308MWS chambered in 7.62 NATO, to the British military. LMT picked up a UK contract for the rifle in 2009 for 3,000 rifles and a follow-up contract with the New Zealand Army in 2011.

KAC getting a lot of Pentagon Love

The aircrew of the Florida-based Coast Guard Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron stand for a photo after the 500th recorded drug bust in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, March 11, 2017. U.S. Coast Guard photo. Note the M107A1 with mounted AN/PEQ-15 aiming laser in the foreground, the M110 7.62x51mm sniper rifle with can in the background, and the fact that the crew names and weapons’ serials have been blurred for OPSEC/PERSEC.

In the past week, the DOD has announced two big contracts for Knight’s Armament Company in Florida.

For those who aren’t familiar with Reid Knight’s KAC, just keep in mind that the company served as the final home of Eugene Stoner, who redesigned his original AR-10 there as the new and very much improved SR-25. That 7.62 NATO precision rifle went on to pull down the Army’s XM110 Semi-Automatic Sniper Rifle competition in 2005.

The resulting M110 has gone on to be used not only by the Joes but also with the Navy EOD and Specwar community, the Marines in a designated marksman role, and the Coast Guard’s HITRON interdiction teams.

It is so well-liked that, even while the Army is picking up HK-made G28s for the new M110A1, they are still buying M110s from KAC, announcing a $13M contract for the rifles last week. 

Quiet Time

U.S. Marines assigned to Scout Sniper Platoon, Battalion Landing Team 3/2, 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU), conduct an M4 Carbine live-fire exercise on the flight deck of the USS Kearsarge, at sea, July 18, 2013. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Christopher Q. Stone, 26th MEU Combat Camera/Released)

And in other related news, the Marines just issued a $25M contract to KAC for 5.56 NATO suppressors for their M4/M4A1s and M27 IARs. 

When it comes to suppressor-use by its warfighters, the Marines have been consistently striving to make them the standard rather than the exception. In 2016, the expeditionary-focused service moved to equip every element of a test battalion, from combat engineers to headquarters units, with suppressed weapons after company-level trials yielded results.

By 2017, they were exploring the option of picking up enough to outfit all of their battalions. The new contract will go a long way towards that if all the options are used.