IWI Negev

IWI NEGEV and NEGEV NG-7

A left-side view of the IWI NEGEV
Type Light machine gun
Place of origin Israel
Service history
In service 1997–present[1]
Used by See Users
Wars Al-Aqsa Intifada
2006 Lebanon War
Gaza War
Operation Protective Edge
War in Donbass
Production history
Designer Israel Military Industries (IMI)
Designed 1985–1990
Manufacturer Israel Weapon Industries (IWI)
(Formerly: Israel Military Industries)
Produced 1995–present
Variants See Variants
Specifications
Weight (Weapon Only)
7.6 kg: NEGEV
7.65 kg: NEGEV SF
7.95 kg: NEGEV NG-7
7.8 kg: NEGEV NG-7 SF
Length NEGEV:
1,020 mm Stock Extended
810 mm Stock Folded
NEGEV SF:
890 mm Stock Extended
680 mm Stock Folded
NEGEV NG-7:
1,100 mm Stock Extended
1,030 mm Stock Folded
NEGEV NG-7 SF:
1,012 mm Stock Extended
942 mm Stock Folded
Barrel length 460 mm (18.11 inch): NEGEV
330 mm (12.99 inch): NEGEV SF
508 mm (20 inch): NEGEV NG-7
420mm (16.5 inch): NEGEV NG-7 SF

Cartridge
Action Gas operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire NEGEV and NEGEV SF:
850–1050 RPM (Regulated position 1 for Magazine Fed)
850–1050 RPM (Regulated position 2 for Belt Fed)
950–1150 RPM (Regulated position 3 for Belt Fed Extreme Conditions)
NEGEV NG-7 and NEGEV NG-7 SF:
600–750 RPM
Muzzle velocity 3,002 ft/s (915 m/s): NEGEV
2,789 ft/s (850 m/s): NEGEV SF
Effective firing range 300–1000 m sight adjustments (NEGEV)
300-800 m sight adjustments (NEGEV SF)
Feed system NEGEV and NEGEV SF:
150-round M27 ammunition belt, 35-round box magazine, or STANAG NATO Magazines
NEGEV NG-7 and NEGEV NG-7 SF:
100- and 125-Round NATO-Standard Belts
Sights Aperture with elevation drum and adjustable front post, folding tritium night sights, and a Picatinny rail for various optical sights

The NEGEV is a 5.56×45mm NATO light machine gun developed by an Israeli firearm manufacturer, Israel Military Industries Ltd. (IMI) of Ramat HaSharon (now known as Israel Weapon Industries), as a replacement for the 5.56 mm Galil ARM light machine gun, whose barrel would overheat easily during sustained fire. Design work on this new indigenous firearm began in 1985, it was inspired by the Belgian FN Minimi. The design was later improved to make it more reliable, especially in adverse conditions.[2] In 1997, it was officially adopted by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF).

IWI introduced the NEGEV NG-7 7.62×51mm NATO light machine gun to become the new standard issue machine gun for the Israeli Defense Forces in 2012.

Design details

A IDF NEGEV fed from an ammo box in a shooting range.

The IWI NEGEV is a gas-operated selective fire light machine gun that uses propellant gases from the barrel to cycle a short-stroke gas piston operating system under the barrel and a rotary bolt locking mechanism. The bolt itself features 4 radial locking lugs that engage the barrel extension and its rotation is controlled by a pin on the bolt body, which rides inside a camming guide machined into the bolt carrier. The bolt contains a spring-powered casing extractor unit, while a lever ejector is housed inside the receiver (it is rotated by the recoiling bolt carrier).

Striker firing mechanism

The NEGEV is striker-fired, where the bolt carrier assembly acts as the striker, and fires from an open bolt position. A lever-type fire control selector switch is provided (“A”— for fully automatic fire and “R”— for semi-automatic fire), installed on the left side of the pistol grip, which doubles as a manual safety against accidental firing. The safe “S” position disables the sear mechanism (which makes it impossible to cock the bolt carrier), by lifting the lever responsible for holding the bolt carrier in the forward position and disconnects the trigger mechanism from the sear. The weapon can be secured safe regardless of the position of the bolt carrier group. The cocking handle is equipped with a ratcheting mechanism that immobilizes the partially cocked bolt carrier.

Gas regulator

The NEGEV's adjustable gas regulator has three settings:

Early prototypes used a different 3-position gas adjustment system:

Barrel

The NEGEV has a quick-change chrome-lined barrel that is manufactured using a cold hammer forging process. The barrel is fitted with a slotted flash suppressor and a fixed carry handle, which is used to transport the weapon and change-out an overheated barrel. The barrel can be changed only after lifting open the feed tray cover.

During the weapon’s initial development a barrel with a 1 in 305 mm (1:12 in) rifling twist rate was also planned, adapted for the lightweight M193 cartridge. Additionally, a multifunction muzzle device was designed, used to launch rifle grenades.

Sight

The NEGEV’s iron sights (closed-type) consist of a front post (adjustable for both windage and elevation) and a rear aperture sight with an elevation adjustment drum, with 300 to 1,000 m range settings. For night-time operation the weapon is equipped with gaseous
tritium-illuminated vials (supplied by Betalight): one installed in the front sight post, and two—on a notch sight under the standard aperture sight arm (before use, the rear sight leaf is pivoted forward to expose the night notch sight). A rail is integrated into the receiver top cover that allows optical day and night-time sights to be mounted to the weapon. The barrel can also be optionally fitted with mounting hardware that would allow the NEGEV to mount a laser pointer or reflex sight.

The machine gun has a metal side-folding (right side) stock and a removable bipod, installed to the forward end of the handguard and folded under the handguard when stowed. The receiver also has slots and hooks used to secure the weapon to vehicle mounting hardware.

Cartridges

The NEGEV uses the 5.56×45mm NATO cartridge and is optimized for the SS109 bullet. Field maintenance involves stripping the weapon down to six main groups: the barrel, stock, bolt carrier, bolt, bipod and return mechanism. All parts, including the quick-change barrels, are fully interchangeable. While the NEGEV NG-7 uses the 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge.

Ammunition feeding

The NEGEV feeds from an M27 disintegrating, open-link ammunition belt, carried in a 150-round fabric container that clips into the magazine well or alternately from a 35-round box magazine from the Galil assault rifle or a 30-round STANAG magazine from the M16 rifle (with the use of an adapter). 200-round ammunition belt containers are also available. Belted ammunition is introduced into the feed tray port from the left side, while the magazine is inserted vertically into the magazine well at the base of the receiver. The feed system uses a pawl feeding mechanism, driven by the recoiling bolt carrier, but the belt is moved only during the rearward movement of the bolt carrier. The non-reciprocating charging handle is located on the right side of the weapon.

Variants

A left-side view of the IWI NEGEV NG-7.

Users

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kemp, Ian (March 2007). "Lightweight Firepower" (PDF). Asianmilitaryreview.com - Asian Military Review. Retrieved 2010-04-18.
  2. James H. Willbanks, 2004."Machine Guns: An Illustrated History of Their Impact". ABC-CLIO. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "IWI tavor brochure". Retrieved 2017-03-19.
  4. 1 2 "NEGEV ASSAULT GRIP - IWI". IWI. Retrieved 2017-06-19.
  5. "IWI Negev | Weaponsystems.net". weaponsystems.net. Retrieved 2017-06-19.
  6. "News.Az - Azerbaijan buys great deal of weapons from Israel last year". news.az.
  7. Israeli arms transfers to sub-Saharan Africa Archived 2013-12-15 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. "Eesti Kaitsevägi - 5,56 mm kergekuulipilduja Negev - Kaitsevägi". Mil.ee. Retrieved 2016-03-25.
  9. "Negev in Georgian army". Mod.gov.ge. Retrieved 2012-06-09.
  10. Hogg, Ian (2002). Jane's Guns Recognition Guide. Jane's Information Group. ISBN 0-00-712760-X.
  11. Negev NG7 - Israel-Weapon.com
  12. Mexican Federal Police Using IWI Negev Machine Gun - Thefirearmblog.com, 2 August 2013
  13. "Conectarse". Paraguaydefensa.foroactivo.com. Retrieved 2012-06-09.
  14. MONUSCO Forces/FIB-TANZBATT. (2017-01-09). "PHOTO DU JOUR DU LUNDI 9 JANVIER 2017". MONUSCO Photos. Retrieved 2017-06-05.
  15. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-07. Retrieved 2010-06-18.
  16. "Những bức ảnh về Quân Đội Nhân Dân Việt Nam (Phần 4) - Trang 480". TTVNOL. Retrieved 2012-06-09.

NEGEV SF

NEGEV NG-7

NEGEV NG-7 SF

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