South Korea to adopt K14 Sniper Rifle
South Korean media is reporting that the Republic of Korea Armed Forces
have awarded a 3.2 billion wong contract to S&T Motiv (formerly
Daewoo), for procurement of new K14 sniper rifles. 3.2 billion wong
translates to roughly $3 million U.S. dollars, and there is no
indication yet of just how many rifles are to be delivered.
According to the poorly translated source, the specifications of the
rifle seem somewhat underwhelming compared to current international
standards. Chambered in 7.62×51 NATO, the source claims an effective
range of 800 yards and an accuracy guarantee of 1 minute of angle, or
one inch groupings at 100 yards. The rifle has been in development for
two years and underwent a one year evaluation by the ROK military before
adoption.
I can only find a single photo of the K14 and it does not show the
action itself. A chassis system, similar to the Remington XM2010 or JP
Enterprises Remington 700 chassis, sports a monopod out back and tall
bipod up front. The thumbhole stock features an adjustable cheek piece
and adjustable length of pull. Up front a detachable box magazine leads
to about a foot of 1913 Picatinny rail before a heavy profile, fluted
barrel ends in a Vortex-style flash hider. Optic and mount are unknown
at this time.
Korean K14
Well trained military snipers can achieve quite a bit with a 1 MOA rifle
out to 800 yards, and the South Koreans are understandably proud to be
manufacturing their own military hardware domestically. However, if
these initial numbers are correct, it seems doubtful that the U.S. Army
Marksmanship Unit will be looking over their shoulders at Camp Perry
anytime soon.
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