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Australian Defence Force provided with EF88 rifle to maintain small arms manufacturing in Australia

Zarvan

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The Australian Government has given second pass approval for project LAND 125 Phase 3C – Soldier Enhancement Version 2 – Lethality. This project provides the Australian Defence Force (ADF) with a new Austeyr F88 rifle (the enhanced F88) and advanced ancillary devices to improve effectiveness for soldiers involved in close combat and their immediate support elements.

Australian_Defence_Force_provided_with_EF88_rifle_to_maintain_small_arms_manufacturing_in_Australia_640_001.jpg
Australian soldier with a enhanced F88 assault rifle. Photo: Australian Army

The ADF has used the F88 rifle since 1988. Since being introduced into service, the rifle has undergone refurbishments which have gradually enhanced the F88 capability over the past decade.

This approval improves the ADF’s close combat and general combat capability by upgrading the ergonomics and balance of the rifle and increasing the mounting options for ancillary devices, such as optic sights, laser aiming devices and grenade launcher attachments.

This enables personnel to more effectively identify and engage targets with improved precision and discrimination, and enables ADF personnel to operate more safely and effectively on the battlefield.

Thales Australia has designed and will produce the enhanced F88 rifle that will be manufactured and receive heavy grade repair at a facility in Lithgow New South Wales. Maintaining a small arms manufacturing capability in Australia, the Lithgow factory currently employs 140 personnel.

The LAND 125 Phase 3C project value is approximately $467m (€317 million) with the enhanced F88 rifle contract value estimated to be approximately $100m (€68 million). The signing of this contract will result in 10 direct manufacturing positions being created and the Australian Industry Content is estimated at approximately 90%.

On June 2015, the 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment (1 RAR) was the first to receive the enhanced F88 (EF88) as a precursor to the roolout of the EF88 to the Australian Army. The EF88 being issued to 1 RAR will be equipped with an enhanced day sight, foregrip and, for grenadiers, a grenade launcher attachment. Lessons learned from the rollout of the EF88 to 1 RAR will influence the introduction into service of the EF88 and ancillary packs provided by Land 125-3C from 2016.
 
Thales EF88 / F90 assault rifle (Australia)

Thales EF88 / F90 assault rifle with 40cm barrel




Thales EF88 / F90 assault rifle with 50cm barrel and underbarrel grenade launcher









F90 carbine

F90

Caliber

5.56x45 NATO

5.56x45 NATO

Length

700 mm

802 mm

Barrel length

407 mm

508 mm

Weight

3.25 kg

3.39 kg

Rate of fire

850 RPM

850 RPM

Magazine

30 rounds

30 rounds



F90 assault rifle, also known as EF88 (enhanced F88) is an evolution of the F88 assault rifle, which was adopted by Australian and New Zealand armed forces during late 1980s. The original F88 rifle is a licensed copy of the AustrianSteyr AUG rifle, and it was produced in Australia at Australian Defense Industries factory in Lithgow. Today this same factory is operated by the Thales Australia, which developed EF88 / F90 rifle as a next weapon for Australian army, as well as for export.
While internally and externally the F90 is still close to Steyr AUG, it has many distinctive upgrades and changes, developed by Thales to fulfill current and near-future requirements of Australian armed forces. The Thales F90 rifles were first displayed to the public in mid-2012, and initial production is scheduled for 2013.
The resulting weapon is said to be much more reliable and comfortable than original F88 / Steyr AUG rifle. It is also noticeably lighter: standard F90 with 50 cm / 20” barrel is about 0.5 kg / 1.1 lbs lighter than standard F88 rifle; with new 40mm underbarrel grenade launcher installed, resulting weapon is more than 1.6 kg / 3.5 lbs lighter than F88 rifle equipped with M203PI grenade launcher.





F90 / EF88 assault rifle is gas operated, selectively fired weapon of bullpup layout. It uses polymer housing with improved shape of buttstock (including the new buttpad and added comb for better cheek-weld). Gas operated, short-stroke, rotary bolt action is similar to that of original Steyr AUG, but the gas block is modified. Aluminum alloy receiver is also modified to improve reliability and reduce weight. Ejection ports and ejection covers also modified to ensure reliable extraction under all conditions.
Unlike all previous versions of the Steyr AUG, the F90 has non-removable barrels, cold-hammer forged and externally fluted. Standard F90 rifles are offered with 50 cm / 20” barrels; other versions include carbines with 40 cm / 16” barrel and CQB variants with 36 cm / 14.1” barrel. Other clearly visible changes include extended Mil-Std (Picatinny) rail at the top; bottom rail has replaced original folding forward grip of the Steyr AUG / F88. Third accessory rail is mounted on the right side of the weapon. Trigger guard is redesigned to accept new, specially designed 40mm Underbarrel Grenade Launcher. This lightweight add-on weapon can be quickly attached directly to the bottom rail of the host rifle, and then easily removed when not required. Less visible changes include addition of the bolt hold-open device to facilitate faster reloads. F90 will feed from the same proprietary translucent magazines, made from polymer as the original Steyr AUG / F88 rifles, although optional STANAG-compatible version is said to be available in the near future. Basic sighting is provided by Trijicon ACOG optical sights with 1.5X or 3.5X magnification, although sights can be easily changed, thanks to MilStd mounts.
 
I really hope Pakistan will eventually replace it's AKs and G3s with more modern rifles.
 
Looks good but one can only dream of having this in our inventory. :lol:
 
Looks good but one can only dream of having this in our inventory. :lol:
Well Sir if we want I think we can arrange the money

Australia ready to sign EF88 Austeyr rifle contract
Julian Kerr, Sydney - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
06 July 2015
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The ADF will start receiving about 30,000 new EF88 Austeyr 5.56 mm rifles in 2016. Source: Thales
The Australian Defence Force (ADF) will begin taking delivery in 2016 of about 30,000 new EF88 Austeyr 5.56 mm rifles under an AUD100 million (USD75 million) contract to be signed later this month, a Department of Defence (DoD) spokesman confirmed to IHS Jane's on 7 July.

The contract, to be signed with Thales Australia, follows second pass approval announced on 6 July by Defence Minister Kevin Andrews for expenditure of AUD467 million under Project Land 125 Phase 5C.

The EF88 (E for Enhanced) will replace the Austeyr F88 which, with various modifications, has been in service with the ADF since 1988.

Andrews said in a statement that the rifles would cost an estimated AUD100 million and would be manufactured by Thales Australia at its small arms facility in Lithgow, New South Wales.

They would improve the ADF's close combat and general combat capability by upgrading the ergonomics of the current weapon and increasing the mounting options for ancillary devices.

The DoD spokesman said the Thales contract would be signed before the end of July for "about" 30,000 EF88s.

First deliveries under the new contract would take place in 2016, although some EF88s from low-rate initial production approved by the government in September 2014 had already been received for derisking activities.

The balance of the approved expenditure would be applied to the acquisition of a broad range of targeting and surveillance ancillaries for the EF88, solicitation for which was already under way.

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Australia ready to sign EF88 Austeyr rifle contract - IHS Jane's 360
 
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