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United States Navy Mark 12 Mod X Special Purpose Rifle

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An SPR clone built by Mid-South Tactical Network (MSTN). This specific rifle features a clone of the Crane Stock (variants of which are made by companies like LMT - Lewis Machine and Tool, Vltor and others) and Harris Bipod.
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An SPR clone built by Mid-South Tactical Network (MSTN). This specific rifle features a clone of the Crane Stock (variants of which are made by companies like LMT - Lewis Machine and Tool, Vltor and others) and Harris Bipod.

The United States Navy Mark 12 Mod 0/1 Special Purpose Rifle (SPR) is a rifle that has been in service with the United States special forces in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. SPR initially stood for Special Purpose Receiver, but that nomenclature seems to have disappeared as the weapon became a stand alone weapon system, and not just an add on upper as part of proposed SOPMOD upgrades. SPR now means Special Purpose Rifle. It was eventually type classified by the Navy as the Mk 12, though the Army also uses this designation.

Background

This weapon system, used by Special Forces units of both the US Army and US Navy, is a heavily modified deviation from the familiar AR15/M16 line of infantry weapons, and thus is chambered for NATO standard 5.56 x 45 mm caliber ammunition. It serves a light sniper/sharpshooter role. The SPR was originally proposed by Mark Westrom, currently president of Armalite, while at the Rock Island Arsenal. The SPR program was an outgrowth of the desire by both US Army and Navy special forces for a rifle with greater effective range than an M4 type Carbine but still shorter in length than a standard issue M16A2/A4. The SPR program appears to have grown out of both the demise of the proposed SOPMOD Block IV, and the US Navy SEALs 'Recon Rifle' (a 16" flat-topped AR-15/M16 Carbine). The Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane Division (often referred to as NSWC-Crane or just Crane) essentially expanded on the Recon Rifle, an idea that some SEALs maintain was a waste of energy and money.

The exact history of the Mk 12 is still something under debate, but its become apparent that there are between four and five prime iterations of the weapon, culminating in the last Mk 12 Mod 1 version. One progression has four models: SPR Proto 1, SPR Proto 2, Mk 12 Mod 0 and Mk 12 Mod 1. The other progression is: SPR, SPR/A, SPR/B, Mk 12 Mod 0, and Mk 12 Mod 1 (all as separate iterations). The specifications entered will follow the second progression.

There is also increasing agreement among observers and small-arms historians that different US military service branches deploy different iterations of the SPR. Available evidence, including both US DOD photographs and privately-obtained photographs (like the ones shown below), consistently show US Army SOF units using the Mk 12 Mod 0 iteration of the SPR, while NAVSPECWAR operators have been identified as using the Mk 12 Mod 1 version.

Though the Mark 12 Mod 0 Special Purpose Rifle had enjoyed relative obscurity for most of its short life, recently it has been featured prominently both in media photos of the Iraq conflict and in interactive video games such as the government-created title ' the console title Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon 2, and the freeware first-person shooter '. In a civilian capacity, copies (commonly called "SPR clones") of the SPR rifle have also become quite popular among shooters and collectors in the US, with several reputable builders of AR15-style rifles making civilian-legal copies of this very accurate rifle.

Specifications

AR-15-related firearm articles:
AR-10, AR-15
M16/A1/A2/A3/A4
M4/A1 Carbine
Diemaco C7, C8
Colt Commando, XM177, CAR-15
M231 FPW
SDM-R, SAM-R
Mark 11 'SWS'
Mark 12 'SPR'
SEAL Recon Rifle
Mark 18 'CQBR'
Ares Shrike
La France M16K
KAC SR-25

Photos

Image:SPR-A_Profile.jpg|An SPR/A w/ fixed stock, Harris bipod, and the KAC M4 Match FF RAS. Image:SPR-B_Profile.jpg|An SPR/B setup similarly to the SPR/A to the left. The SPR/A and SPR/B only differ on the type of scope used. Image:Spr_sf_p5.jpg|Another US Army SF operator carrying is OD green painted Mk 12 Mod 0. The exposed front end of the rifle details the OPS Inc. muzzle brake, the Versa-Pod bipod (folded) and an Insight Technologies AN/PEQ-2A illuminator mounted on the side of the handguards. Image:SPR-NVG.jpg|An SPR with a full M16 riflestock and various night vision optics attached. Image:Spr_sf_p2.jpg|A US Army SF operator shows his Filipino counterparts the SPR. This one also has a full M16 riflestock, has the OPS Inc. silencer attached, and is camouflage painted. Image:Mk12223.jpg|A US Army SF operator takes aim with his desert camouflage painted SPR. An Insight Technologies AN/PEQ-2A Target Pointer/Illuminator Aiming Light (TIPAL) is mounted on the right of the rifle's handguards. A standard M4 telescoping stock is used on this one. Image:Mk12_Mod0_Profile.jpg|An SPR, not a Mk 12 Mod 0. Note the early PRI freefloat tube of constant diameter. This SPR has a Versa-pod bipod and has a fixed stock. The upper receiver block has a teardrop-shaped forward assist.

See also

External links

 


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