Heckler & Koch G36


The G36 is a 5.56×45mm assault rifle, designed in the early 1990s by Heckler & Koch in Germany as a replacement for the heavier 7.62mm G3 battle rifle. It was accepted into service with the Bundeswehr in 1997, replacing the G3. The G36 is gas-operated and feeds from a 30-round detachable box magazine or 100-round C-Mag drum magazine.

History

Development

Work on a successor for the venerable G3 rifle had been ongoing in Germany since the second half of the 1970s. These efforts resulted in the innovative 4.73mm G11 assault rifle, that used caseless ammunition. It had been predicted that this weapon would eventually replace the G3, therefore further development of H&K's series of firearms chambered for the 5.56×45mm NATO cartridge had been halted. Heckler & Koch, having no incentive to pursue a new 5.56 mm weapon system, was content with the export-oriented HK33 and G41 rifles. However, the G11 program came to an abrupt end when the Bundeswehr cancelled its procurement due to defence budget cuts after the unification of East and West Germany and H&K was acquired in 1991 by British Aerospace's Royal Ordnance division.
Increasing interest in Germany for a modern service rifle chambered for the NATO-standard 5.56 mm cartridge led H&K to offer the German armed forces the G41 rifle, which, too, was rejected. Design work was then initiated from the ground up on a modern 5.56 mm assault rifle designated "Project 50" or HK50. The prototype was then trialed, where it was rated higher than the rival Austrian Steyr AUG system. The final version of the G36 was completed in 1995. Production of the G36 began in 1996.
On 22 April 2015, the German Minister of Defence announced that the G36 would be phased out of the German army due to concerns about overheating.

Production

The HK50 rifle was selected for service and an initial order was placed for 33,000 rifles under the Bundeswehr designation Gewehr G36. The order also involved an option for a further 17,000 rifles. Deliveries were first made to the Bundeswehr's NATO Quick Reaction Force during the fourth quarter of 1997. The G36's production line began in early 1996.
In July 1998, it was announced that the G36 had been selected as the standard rifle for the Spanish Armed Forces, replacing the 5.56 mm CETME Model L and LC rifles. Deliveries first took place at the end of 1999. From 1999 to 2005, 75,219 of these rifles were manufactured in Spain under license by General Dynamics Santa Bárbara Sistemas at the FACOR facility, in Coruña, Galicia.
In addition, the rifle has been licensed for local production in Saudi Arabia. The manufacturer in the country is the Military Industries Corporation. Technology transfer was granted by Germany to Saudi Arabia on 30 June 2008 The first Saudi-made G36 was produced at MIC's factory on 30 June 2009. However, some components of their own G36s are supplied by Heckler & Koch.

Design details

The G36 is a selective-fire 5.56 mm assault rifle, firing from a closed rotary bolt. The G36 has a conventional layout and a modular component design. Common to all variants of the G36 family are: the receiver and buttstock assembly, bolt carrier group with bolt and the return mechanism and guide rod. The receiver contains the barrel, carry handle with integrated sights, trigger group with pistol grip, handguard and magazine socket.
The G36 employs a free-floating barrel. The barrel is fastened to the receiver with a special nut, which can be removed with a wrench. The barrel is produced using a cold hammer forging process and features a chrome-lined bore with 6 right-hand grooves and a 1 in 178 mm rifling twist rate. The barrel assembly consists of the gas block, a collar with a bayonet lug that is also used to launch rifle grenades and a slotted flash suppressor.
The weapon can be stripped and re-assembled without tools through a system of cross-pins similar to that used on earlier HK designs. For cleaning purposes, the G36 dismantles into the following groups: receiver housing, return mechanism, bolt carrier group and trigger group.

Features

Fire selector

The fire and safety selector is ambidextrous and has controls on both sides of the receiver which took upon the design of the original G3 selector. Selector settings are described with letters: "S"—safe, "E"—semi-automatic fire and "F"—continuous fire. HK also offers several other trigger options, including the so-called Navy trigger group, with settings analogous to the standard trigger, but the selector positions have been illustrated with pictograms. A semi-automatic only trigger unit is also available.

Magazine

In the box magazine is room for 30 cartridges staggered on top of one another. The magazines are molded with shock resistant plastic, and are translucent allowing the user to see the ammunition. On the sides are studs which allow the magazines to be attached next to each other, this way the operator can reload more easily. An empty G36 magazine weighs and filled with 30 rounds. STANAG magazines cannot be normally used, but the G36 can use an adapter that will accept the STANAG. Certain types of Beta C-Mags can also be used and are employed with the MG36 support variant.

Stock

The stock too is multifunctional; it has the ability to fold to one side, shortening the overall length of the weapon for use in tight areas or vehicles. The rifle can also still fire with the stock collapsed. Also, it incorporates holes where assembly pins can be placed during weapon cleaning and maintenance.

Material

The G36 employs a large number of lightweight, corrosion-resistant synthetic materials in its design; the receiver housing, stock, trigger group, magazine well, handguard and carry handle are all made of a carbon fiber-reinforced polyamide. The receiver has an integrated steel barrel trunnion and a nylon 66 steel reinforced receiver.

Sights

The standard German Army versions of the G36 are equipped with a ZF 3×4° dual optical sight that combines a 3× magnified telescopic sight and an unmagnified reflex sight mounted on top of the telescopic sight. The reflex sight is illuminated by ambient light during the day and uses battery powered illumination for use at night. Electric illumination is activated automatically by a built in photo sensor and can be manually activated to boost the brightness of the reticle in daytime low contrast situations.
The export versions have a single telescopic sight with a 1.5× magnification and an aiming reticle fixed at 300 m. All rifles are adapted to use the Hensoldt NSA 80 third-generation night sight, which clamps into the G36 carry handle adapter in front of the optical sight housing and mates with the rifle's standard optical sight. The sighting bridge also functions as a carrying handle and features auxiliary open sights molded on top of the handle that consist of a forward blade and rear notch, but these can only be used with the reflex sight removed, as in the G36V. The optical sight system is produced by Hensoldt AG.

Operating mechanism

The G36 uses a short-stroke piston system from which HK later developed the HK-416's impingement system. Unlike direct impingement, this system takes gas trailing the bullet to operate a piston instead of pushing directly on the bolt. The G36's bolt is operated by a cam that guides the bolt carrier by its respective cutout. Then when fully pushed forward 7 radial locking lugs fully enclose the chamber.
HK included several design features that are essential in modern military firearms. For example, the bolt locks back after the last round is spent, and at the front end of the trigger guard there is a bolt catch button. The cocking handle can be switched from either end, folds in, and unfolds from a spring so the shooter need not unfold it by hand before firing. Another feature of it is that it doubles as the forward assist, which is used in the instance that the spent cartridge is ejected but the next round does not properly feed. In addition, the ejection port has a brass deflector to mitigate the amount of casings that may strike the face of left-handed operators. Instead of a dust cover which has the need to be flipped back up when the gun isn't in use, the bolt acts as the seal from dirt.

Accessories

The rifle can be fitted with a 40 mm AG36 under-barrel grenade launcher, which is a breech-loaded break-action weapon with a side-tilting barrel.
Standard equipment supplied with the G36 includes: spare magazines, a cleaning and maintenance kit, sling, speed-loading device and sometimes modified AKM type II blade bayonets.

Overheating

In April 2012, reports surfaced that G36 rifles used in Afghanistan would overheat during prolonged firefights after several hundred rounds were fired. Overheating affected the accuracy of the G36, making it difficult to hit targets past 100 meters, ineffective past 200 meters, and incapable of effective fire past 300 meters. The G36 has been called unsuitable for long battles. H&K said the rifle was not designed for sustained, continuous fire. German soldiers gave no negative feedback. Operational commanders advised allowing the weapon to cool between periods of rapid shooting.
In February 2014, the German Federal Ministry of Defence announced that the overheating deficiencies of the G36 were not a result of weapon design, but of the ammunition. A report by the Bundeswehr on 21 February 2014, revealed that the issues were not the fault of the rifle, but that one manufacturer of ammunition was making bullets with copper plated jackets that were too thin.
The manufacturer of the ammunition confirmed this, although experts disagreed, and also said the accuracy problems were already known to the defence ministry by 2010.
On 22 June 2014, it was reported that Germany's defense ministry had temporarily halted new orders worth €34 million over accuracy concerns for the rifle. The Bundeswehr consulted the Fraunhofer Institute for High-Speed Dynamics and the Federal Criminal Police Office. On 30 March 2015, Minister of Defence Ursula von der Leyen told the Associated Press that the weight-saving design is the root of the issues. This is based on a letter from Inspector General Volker Wieker advising the Stewards of Defence and Budget Committee of the Bundestag and the troops in advance of publication of the report.
The report was released by the Fraunhofer Ernst Mach Institut and Wehrtechnische Dienststelle 91 on 19 April 2015. According to their 372-page report, the observed hit rate of the predominantly plastic weapon with the unsupported free-floating barrel drops down to a mere 7% at 100 meters when the temperature increases by or more, whereas the Bundeswehr required a hit rate of 90% at that distance.
On 22 April 2015, the German Minister of Defence announced that the G36 would be phased out of the German army due to these concerns. Defense Minister von der Leyen considers the weapon to be useless. She stated that the German military will stop using a plastic assault rifle that cannot shoot straight when temperatures increase by or the rifle heats up during a firefight.
In 2016, the German Defence Ministry lost its lawsuit filed against Heckler & Koch on the ministry's claim for compensation or warranty work on the subpar G36 rifles, because the Bundeswehr did not make its specifications for the weapon clear enough in the beginning of the procurement process. The District Court of Koblenz rejected claims from the Bundeswehr procurement office, and ruled that weapon manufacturer Heckler & Koch did not have to pay damages on the 167,000 rifles still in use out of more than 176,000 G36 rifles Germany had originally purchased.

Variants

Based on the G36, Heckler & Koch also created the semi-automatic SL8 rifle and the straight-pull, bolt-action R8, which are offered to the civilian sport shooting markets. The SL8 is substantially different from the G36, it has a modified receiver and a thumbhole stock with a cheek rest, which is integral with the trigger group. The SL8 has a heavy profile, extended, barrel that does not have a flash hider or bayonet lug. The rifle uses a 10-round single-stack magazine and an extended top rail used to mount a wide variety of Picatinny-standard optics. Mounted to the rail are a set of iron sights with a hooded foresight and adjustable flip rear aperture. The SL8 can also mount the G36 carry handle and integrated sight assembly, after removing the mechanical iron sights. The SL8 has an unloaded weight of 4.3 kg, overall length of 980–1030 mm and a trigger rated at.
In November 2013, Heckler & Koch applied for permission from the German Government to sell a new civilian-legal version of the G36. Called the HK243 in Europe and the HK293 in America, it is more similar to the G36 assault rifle than previous civilian models. The main difference is the bolt is redesigned to not allow a conversion to fully automatic fire. It has quad picatinny rails and accepts STANAG magazines. Four different barrel lengths from to and four stock models will be offered.

Users

CountryOrganization nameModelQuantityDateReference
Special Operations Battalion G36C3502007
Airport Security Police G36K
Australian Federal Police Specialist Response Group__-
Antwerp local police special squad BBT ___
Brazilian Federal PoliceG36K, G36C__
Victoria Police DepartmentG36~1002004
Croatian police special units_3002004
Croatian Armed Forces contingents in international operations_5502007
Police of the Czech republic:
  • URNA – Nationwide paramilitary SWAT unit
  • KZJ – Regional SWAT units
  • SPJ – Special riot units
  • PMJ – Emergency motorized units
G36C, G36K__
Politiets AktionsstyrkeG36C__
Policia Nacional de Timor-LesteG36K__
Used by special forces and police, Some later to Libyan Jamahiriya, see below_608+2003
Estonian Special Operations ForceG36K__
Finnish Border GuardG36C__
Finnish PoliceG36C__
French ArmyG36E__
Groupes d'Intervention de la Police NationaleG36C__
Brigade Anti-criminalité G36C, G36K2042016
Standard service rifle of the BundeswehrG36A1, G36A2
G36K, G36C
176,544 delivered, 166,619 in use_
Bundespolizei___
Police special forces: Central Anti Crime Division, Special Crisis Unit, Special Operations Department, Coast Guard Anti piracy UnitG36K/C/E/A__
Hellenic Army ETA----
Special Duties Unit of the Hong Kong Police ForceG36KV_2001
National Police of Iceland and its special forces unit Víkingasveitin___
Peshmerga_8,000 supplied by Germany2014
Komando Pasukan Khusus special forces group of the Indonesian ArmyG36C__
Detasemen Jala Mangkara tactical diver group of the Indonesian NavyG36V, G36C__
NOCS team of the Italian PoliceG36C__
Jordanian special forces 71st Special BattalionG36C__
Kosovo Security ForceG36V35002010
Latvian Army, National Guard, State Border GuardG36KV_2006
Lebanese Armed Forces, Internal Security ForcesG36C32502008
Libyan Jamahiriya
Libya
Unclear. Weapons are from a batch legally sold to Egypt in 2003.G36KV, G36E"numerous"
Probably <600
2003–2005?
Libyan Jamahiriya
Libya
Tripoli Brigade G36KV, G36E"numerous"
Probably <600
2011
Lithuanian Armed ForcesG36KA4, G36KV1
G36C, G36KA4M1
_2017
Pasukan Khas Laut Maritime Counter-Terrorism Forces of the Royal Malaysian NavyG36C, G36E
G36KE
_2006
Pasukan Gerakan Khas Counter-Revolutionary Warfare of the Royal Malaysia PoliceG36C__
Standard service rifle of the Military of MauritiusG36A2, G36K
G36C
__
Various Mexican law enforcement agencies use the G36, namely the Mexican Federal Police and many state and city police forcesG36 Family__
Mongolian Armed Forces___
Military of Montenegro___
Norwegian Navy KystjegerkommandoenG36KV2_2001–2007
Armed Forces of the Philippines
Presidential Security Group
G36K, G36C__
BOA/SPAP special units of the PolicjaG36V, G36K
G36C
__
Biuro Ochrony Rządu Government Protection BureauG36C__
Jednostka Wojskowa Formoza naval unit of the Polish Special ForcesG36KV3, G36C_2006
Portuguese ArmyG36KV, G36KV3__
Portuguese Marines___
Portuguese Air Force
Guarda Nacional Republicana G36C200_
Grupo de Operações Especiais of the Polícia de Segurança Pública___
Korea Coast Guard SSAT __2007
1st Special Operations Regiment of the Romanian ArmyG36K, G36C__
Saudi Arabian Army, Police, Border Guards, Special ForcesG36C, G36E
G36KE
__
Special Brigade of the Serbian ArmyG36C_2010
Sierra Leone Police forceG36K112+2001
5th Special Forces Regiment of the Armed Forces of the Slovak RepublicG36___
Spanish Armed Forces
Guardia Civil
G36E, G36KE
G36CE
75,219_
Unidad de Operaciones Especiales special group of Spanish Navy and Spanish MarinesG36E, G36KE
G36CE
__
National Task ForceG36C_Replaced by LWRC M6
PiketenG36C_Replaced by LWRC M6
Särskilda operationsgruppenG36K, G36C_Replaced by LWRC M6
Will soon replace the Galil in use by the Trinidad and Tobago Regiment and become the primary service rifle.G36---
Naresuan 261 Counter-Terrorism Unit Special Operations Unit of the Royal Thai PoliceG36C, G36K
SL8
_2007
Royal Thai Army Infantry.G36K, G36KE
G36E, MG36
__
Underwater Demolition Assault Unit tactical diver group of the Royal Thai Navy G36KV_2004
Royal Thai Marine Corps Amphibious Reconnaissance battalion Special operations forces, RTNG36C_2004
-----
Avon and Somerset PoliceG36C__
Cheshire ConstabularyG36C__
City of London PoliceG36C__
Civil Nuclear ConstabularyG36C__
Greater Manchester PoliceG36C__
Humberside PoliceG36C__
Kent PoliceG36C__
Lancashire ConstabularyG36C__
Norfolk ConstabularyG36C__
Northumbria PoliceG36C__
Nottinghamshire PoliceG36C__
Police ScotlandG36C__
Police Service of Northern IrelandG36C__
Specialist Firearms Command, Metropolitan Police Service___
West Yorkshire Police__Until 2017
Special Air Service___
-----
Baltimore City Police Department___
Cobb County Police DepartmentG36K_2000
United Nations Department for Safety and SecurityG36V, G36KV
G36CV, MG36
___
Department of Peacekeeping OperationsG36V, G36KV
G36CV, MG36
__
Uruguayan ArmyG36,
G36K, G36C
__
Uruguayan NavyG36E, G36V, AG G36 40 mm__

Gallery

Similar rifles