4.5×26mm MKR
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The 4.5mm MKR was a Swedish prototype
rimfire cartridge Rimfire ammunition is a type of firearm metallic cartridge whose primer is located within a hollow circumferential rim protruding from the base of its casing. When fired, the gun's firing pin will strike and crush the rim against the edge o ...
developed for the prototype Interdynamics MKR bullpup assault rifle and carbine.


History

The 4.5mm MKR was designed in 1978 by Interdynamic AB, a Swedish company, around the time of the rise of "micro-caliber" popularity. Firearms companies everywhere were trying to achieve a type of practical, light and cheap ammunition. Micro-caliber (less than 5 mm / .20" caliber) ammunition makers wished to achieve high velocity, flat trajectory and good penetration while keeping weight and recoil low so as to facilitate controllable use in individual automatic weapons.


Design

The 4.5mm MKR was essentially a .22 WMR rimfire case necked down from 5.6 mm to accept a 4.5 mm bullet, for use in the
Interdynamics MKR The Interdynamics MKR was a Swedish prototype assault rifle developed in the 1980s. The weapon never proceeded beyond prototype stages. Design The Interdynamics MKR was originally designed using a 4.5×26mm MKR round using solid brass bullet ...
rifle and carbine. It was supplied in single-use, 50-round polymer magazines. The cartridge featured a curved taper of its body to aid extraction and a short, shoulderless neck. Its 4.5 mm caliber boat-tail spitzer bullet was 22 mm long and made by cold rolling solid copper wire. The lightweight bullet of 1.58 grams / 24.4 grains reportedly achieved a muzzle velocity of about 1,000 m/sec / 3,270 ft/sec and a muzzle energy of 790 joules / 583 ft lbs. This claim contrasts sharply with the comparable, more modern .17 HMR which has a muzzle energy of 340 joules / 250 ft. lbs. Due to the combination of a thin-walled rimfire case with a high-pressure powder charge, the cartridge needed good external support so the MKR rifle was designed to use locked breech, gas-operated action with a vertically tilting bolt rather than straight blow back operation. This ensured the bolt only opened once cartridge pressure had reduced to safe levels. The rifle and carbine, which differed only in barrel length, were fired from the open bolt position to prevent cook-off ignition of the thin walled cartridges. Users could select single shot, three-round burst or fully automatic modes. The burst and fully automatic modes had a high rate of fire of 1800 rounds per minute.


Performance

The 4.5×26 MKR was claimed to be on par with a 5.56×45mm NATO M-193 bullet at up to 300 meters while one could carry 3.5 times as many of the lighter cartridges. Its slender 4.5 mm projectile could penetrate a steel helmet up to 300 m out to which range it had a similar ballistic curve to the 5.56×45 NATO with M-193 projectile. This was due to a combination of slightly higher velocity, a similar Ingalls ballistic coefficient to the M-193 bullet (0.245 vs 0.265), and the superior penetrating ability of solid cold-rolled copper bullets vs jacketed lead bullets given an equal sectional density. It was potentially lethal (80 joules) up to 750 m and its tendency to tumble on impact was twice that of the 5.56 M-193 bullet, thus ensuring more effective transfer of its diminutive energy to its target, especially as its tip tended to bend. Maximum range was 2,500m. Due to concerns about stopping power, reliability, and problems with using rimfire ammunition, the MKR project was abandoned at the prototype stage and the 4.5mm MKR never saw service or any kind of widespread use.


See also

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.17 HMR .17 Hornady Magnum Rimfire, commonly known as the .17 HMR, is a rimfire rifle cartridge developed by Hornady in 2002. It was developed by necking down a .22 Magnum case to take a .17 caliber (4.5 mm) projectile. Commonly loaded with a 1 ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:4.5x26mm MKR Pistol and rifle cartridges Weapons of Sweden