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M134


Minigun


Overview


GAU-17

A GAU-17 on a US Navy speedboat.
Source: US Navy (Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Jayme Pastoric) - © public domain

Origin
United States
Type
Minigun
Entered service
Early 1960's
Status
In service
Development
1960
Developer
United States - General Electric
Production
1962 - present
Producer
United States - General Electric
United States - Dillon Aerospace
Unit cost
$17.750 for M134D in 2003
$19.900 for M134D in 2005
$20.500 for M134D in 2007
Number produced
Over 20.000
Designations
Minigun (popular nickname)
M134 (US Army)
GAU-2/A (US Air Force)
GAU-17/A (US Air Force)
GAUSE-17 (US Navy)
Mk 44 (US Marine Corps)

Description


Introduction

The M134 is a minigun of US origin. It was developed by General Electric in 1960 as armament for helicopters and to be used in aircraft gun pods. The name M134 is the US Army designation, the marketing name Minigun has become popular and is even used to refer to rotary barrel weapons in general. The M134 has been trailed as a tripod mounted weapon for infantry use, but contrary to popular belief it cannot be used as a man portable weapon.

Design

The M134 is based on the Gatling principle and uses a six barrel rotary assembly. Ammunition is fed linkless or by belts that travel through a delinking device. The gun is externally powered and has a short spin up time. When operated manually the gun is mounted on a single arm that allows the weapon to swivel horizontally and vertically. The gun is fired using spade grips with a sight unit and tracer ammunition as means of targeting.

Firepower

The M134 fires the standard 7.62x51mm NATO round at a rate of fire that ranges between 300 and 6.000 rpm. Two rates of fire can be selected and 2.000 and 4.000 rpm are most common. Area targets can be engaged at ranges well over 1 km. The dispersion is about 6 mrad. Normal ammunition canisters of 1.500, 3.000 or 4.500 rounds are used.

Users

The M134 was widely used as helicopter and aircraft armament during the Vietnam war. Over time the M134 has been widely exported and is now also used on vehicles, small boats and naval vessels.

Variants


M134

The M134 is the original model Minigun that is produced since the early 1960's. It has been produced in a variety of versions that mainly differ in the mounting in which it is used. Manually fired units feature grips with a trigger and brackets for mechanical or optical sights. Remote fired models with solenoid trigger are found in gun pods and helicopter fuselage mountings.

Regarding the weapon itself three versions can be identified: the original model, an improved reliability model and a final model firing at 2.000 and 4.000 rpm instead of 2.000 and 6.000 rpm. These are known simply as the M134 in US Army service but have the designations GAU-2/A, GAU-2A/A and GAU-2B/A in US Air Force service. The GAU-17 is a late production model similar to the GAU-2B/A with new Picatinny sight brackets and other minor changes. The GAUSE-17 is similar to the GAU-17 but is optimized for mounting on naval vessels.

M134 D

The M134D is the latest model of the M134 that is produced by Dillon Aerospace. The M134D functions in a similar way as the original M134 but uses many parts that are altered for increased strength and reliability. Another change for improved reliability is the removal of the fire rate selector. The M134D has no selectable rate of fire and always fires at 3.000 rpm.

Details


Facts M134 M134D
General
Origin
United States
Type
Minigun
Caliber
Caliber
7.62x51mm NATO
Feed system
Belt fed, often from 4.000 round box
Number of barrels
6
Barrel length
559 mm
Rifling
4 grooves, right hand twist
Muzzle velocity
869 m/s
Operation
Action
Gatling principle, externally powered
Fire selector
0 - F
Rate of fire
2.000 to 6.000 rpm, selectable
Dimensions
Length
802 mm
Weight
16.3 kg
Sights
Mechanical
Depends on mount and variant
Optics
Various optional optical sights

Related articles


GAU-19

The GAU-19 is a larger minigun than the M134. It is chambered for 12.7x99mm NATO and has three barrels.

GShG-7.62

The GShG-7.62 can be considered the Soviet counterpart of the M134. Unlike the M134 it is gas operated.