QCW-05

Type 05 (Weisheng Chongfeng Qiang QCW-05)

The QCW-05 with a suppressor
Type Bullpup submachine gun
Place of origin People's Republic of China
Service history
Used by People's Republic of China
Production history
Designer Jianshe Industry (Group) Corporation
Designed 2001-2005
Manufacturer China South Industries Group
Produced 2005—present
Variants JS 9 mm, QCQ-05
Specifications
Weight 2.2 kg (4.85 lb)
Length 500 mm (19.7 in)
Barrel length 250 mm (9.8 in)

Cartridge 5.8×21mm (DAP92 and DCV05)
Caliber 5.8mm
Action Blowback, open bolt
Rate of fire 900 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity QCW-05 - 150 m/s, QCQ-05 - 321 m/s
Effective firing range 50 m
Maximum firing range 200 m
Feed system 50-round detachable box magazine
Sights Flip-up rear sight

The QCW-05 (Chinese: 微声冲锋枪, 2005; pinyin: Wēishēng Chōngfēng Qiāng, 2005; literally: "Suppressed Assault Gun, 2005") (officially translated in pinyin as Qiāng Chōngfēng Wēishēng, literally 'Gun, Assault, Suppressed') (also referred to as the Type 05) is a suppressed bullpup submachine gun, manufactured and developed by the People's Liberation Army (PLA) 208 Research Institute and Jianshe Industries (Group) Corporation of Chongqing under the China South Industries Group for the People's Liberation Army Ground Force, the People's Liberation Army Special Operations Forces and the People's Armed Police. This weapon is designed for the 5.8×21mm DCV05[1] sub-sonic round that is also used by the QSW-06 Silenced Pistol.

Development

On October 2001 the Jianshe Industries (Group) Corporation (owned by the China South Industries Group) won a bid to produce the PLA's next generation of submachine gun to replace the Type 79 and the Type 85 silenced submachine guns, beating out other competitors such as the Changfeng CF-05 due to its ease of construction and operation. At the 2005 International Police Equipment Expo in Beijing, Jianshe revealed their final product, a bullpup, blowback, open bolt submachine gun that externally resembled the QBZ-95 assault rifle which was then given the designation QCW-05.[2] At the 2006 MILIPOL Expo, a smaller police and export version of the QCW-05 called the 'Jianshe JS 9mm', a silenced submachine gun, was revealed to the public. The 'JS 9mm' is chambered for the popular 9×19mm Parabellum calibre. The QCW-05 is intended to be PLA's frontline personal defence weapon for personnel in non-combat roles such as vehicle crews and aircrews who would normally be confined to quarters where a full assault rifle would be unwieldy and by specialised operation units such as the People's Liberation Army Special Operations Forces and People's Armed Police.

Design details

The QCW-05 is a blowback, open bolt bullpup silenced submachine gun that is capable of either full automatic or semi-automatic fire. The QCW-05s light weight can be attributed to its small aluminum receiver and polymer construction which also lends itself well towards quicker mass-production. It has a low rate of fire in order to maintain controllability, a feature stressed from the beginning by the PLA for a weapon as light as a submachine gun. There is a thumb fire mode selector on the left side of the weapon directly above the grip with a semi-automatic position (1), full automatic (2), and safety (0) and an ejection port on the right side of the weapon. A removable metal screw-on cylindrical suppressor is attached to the barrel of the gun.[3] The carrying handle, which is located above the compact aluminium receiver, houses the charging handle.[4] The use of the 5.8×21mm DV05 subsonic round reduced the QCW-05's muzzle velocity to approximately 150 m/s and gives the submachine gun an effective range of 50 metres which is considered adequate for a silenced weapon. As the QCW-05 is designed for general military use rather than being used only in a specialised niche role, a suppressor can be a hindrance when a situation calls for an emphasis on the performance or size of the weapon rather than its noise reduction capabilities, which is why the suppressor is removable, or in the case of the QCQ-05 variant, completely absent.[2] Once the suppressor is removed, the QCW-05 is essentially the same as the QCQ-05 and can fire the DAP92 round as well. The QCW-05 shares the common trait of other bullpup weapons of being suboptimal to fire from the left shoulder given the placement of the ejection port and its proximity to the operator's face when firing. Ammunition is fed from a detachable curved fifty round, four column, double stacked box (another initial requirement of the PLA) at the rear of the submachine gun.

Outline of QCW-05s four column, fifty round, proprietary magazine

Variants

There are two variants of the QCW-05; the JS 9mm and the QCQ-05.

JS 9mm

Main article: JS 9 mm

A slightly smaller, somewhat externally different version of the QCW-05 designed for use by police and for export overseas. The JS 9mm is chambered for the 9×19mm Parabellum cartridge, and it also uses the same 30 round magazines used by the popular Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine gun.

QCQ-05

The QCQ-05 (Chinese: 轻型冲锋枪, 2005; pinyin: Qīngxíng Chōngfēng Qiāng, 2005; literally: "Light Assault Gun, 2005") (officially translated in pinyin as Qiāng Chōngfēng Qīngxíng, literally 'Gun, Assault, Light') is a variant of the QCW-05 without the suppressor and is capable of using either the 5.8×21mm DCV05 subsonic pistol cartridge or the 5.8×21mm DAP92 pistol cartridge which is also used by the QSZ-92 pistol.[5] While the QCQ-05 does not come with a suppressor, the QCW-05 suppressor can still be affixed and removed from the QCQ-05.

See also

References

  1. "国产最新型QCW05式微声冲锋枪性能结构详解" (in Chinese). Sina.com. 2006-08-30. Retrieved 2007-08-18.
  2. 1 2 "QCW05 5.8mm Silenced Submachine Gun". Sinodefence.com. 2007-02-09. Archived from the original on 2007-08-19. Retrieved 2007-08-21.
  3. "国产最新型QCW05式微声冲锋枪(组图)" (in Chinese). Kaifeng Public Security Department. 2006-09-24. Retrieved 2007-08-18.
  4. "Type 05 5.8mm / JS 9mm submachine gun (PR China)". Retrieved 2007-08-21.
  5. "国产最新型QCW05式微声冲锋枪性能结构详解" (in Chinese). Armsky.com. 2006-08-30. Archived from the original on 2007-03-17. Retrieved 2007-08-21.
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