RCA-2009

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The RCA-2009 (Raidhfil Coise-Athfhillteach 2009, or Type 2009 Repeating Infantry Rifle) is a bullpup-pattern assault rifle manufactured in Faneria. It is produced by the Central National Arms Foundry both for service in Faneria's army and for export. It was designed as a direct replacement of the licensed RCA-1984 and serves as the primary infantry rifle for the country's armed forces.

Raidhfil Coise-Athfhillteach 2009
RCA-2009 chambered in .25 caliber.
TypeAssault rifle
Place of origin Faneria
Service history
In service2011–present
Used byFaneria Office of the National Army
Maloka National Liberation Army
WarsPeninsular War Final War of the Deluge
Production history
DesignerCentral National Arms Foundry
Designed2001-2009
ManufacturerCentral National Arms Foundry
Produced2010-
VariantsRCA-2009-.30

RCA-2009-.30 Goirid

RCA-2009-.30 Aonaicht
Specifications
Mass7.5 lbs (3.4 kg)
Length30 in (762 mm)
Barrel length19.5 in (495.3 mm)
Width1.75 in (44.45 mm)
Height9.25 in (234.95 mm) without magazine

Cartridge.25x1.5 in (6.35x38.1 mm)
ActionGas-operated rotating bolt
Rate of fire850 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity3,120 ft/s (950 m/s)
Effective firing range1200 ft (366 m)
Maximum firing range11000 ft (3353 m)
Feed system20 or 30 round magazine or 60-round drum magazine
SightsIron sights or attached optical/night and laser sights

Design

The RCA-2009 was envisioned as a short, high-capacity battle rifle capable of sharing ammunition with sidearms, building on the lessons of the RCA-1984 for use in urban environments as well as medium-range engagements. It also had to be produced natively as a result of pressure from the civilian government to produce as much materiel natively as possible as an informal concession to lobbying surrounding active protections systems. Its design program began in 2001 and changed repeatedly through to 2007 before final specifications were decided, with original variations being considerably bulkier; this was largely due to the inclusion of both Capetian and Kiravian engineers and industry specialists in observation and testing, which encouraged a focus on a larger-scale long-range battle rifle. The eventual compact design was a result of agreement on the use of proprietary steel round casings, allowing for a higher quantity of powder, and an extension of the barrel on the base version. Its finalized 2009 design was intended to reduce overall length and in particular weight. The 'standard' form fires .25 caliber rounds, although the primary users (Faneria, the Cape, and Kiravia have since reverted to the heritage .30 caliber.

The RCA-2009 is select-fire, with single, two-round burst, and automatic. Three-round burst as present on the Maktstepân was reduced to two due to the tendency for the Maktstepân's kick to send the third round wide unless the user was braced, whereas a two-round burst was more manageable in snap-firing. The rate of fire in automatic was also reduced by the compacting of the design, though it is largely considered a benefit due to how rapidly a soldier firing an Maktstepân on automatic would typically run out of ammunition even when loaded down with additional magazines. The design was also made friendly to a 60-round drum magazine, though the drum is inconvenient for holding the weapon at rest across the chest in the standard Occidental fashion.

The RCA-2009's scope features a lock that allows a soldier to hold the weapon by its handguard without de-calibrating the iron sights; a frequent complaint with the original Maktstepân that was addressed in the Maktstepân-03 upgrade. It additionally features a gauge for rifle-fired grenades integrated along the interior of the handguard rather than a separate alidade, which was known to occasionally bend if the Maktstepân was dropped and render it ineffective. The RCA-2009 comes natively with rails on the handguard and front grip for attaching sights and other addons, unlike its ancestors, which later received updated variants. This rail also allows for some infantry-based drone disruption systems to be mounted, although this makes firefighting with the equipped weapon unwieldy due to obstruction of view and greatly increased weight with a higher center of mass.

The RCA is able to mount a bayonet above its barrel, and its bayonet mount may alternatively be used to mount a laser sight or infrared laser for ordinance targeting/tracking.

Due to the placement of the ejection port, users are expected to wear long sleeves. A steel-and-cloth clip and bag attachment for casing collection was introduced for left-handed users in 2014 to prevent the occasional slippage of casings underneath the users' collar; this attachment is useable by right-handed personnel but generally ignored due to its needing to be ripped or cut open at the bottom to prevent filling up after approximately eighty rounds, dropping casings directly at the feet rather than further outwards.

Variations

RCA-2009-.30 - Chambered for legacy .3 inch and foreign 7.62 mm ammunition. By far the most common version.

RCA-2009-.30 Goirid - RCA 'Short', with shorter barrel and body for carbine use. Also chambered in .30 caliber.

RCA-2009-.30 Aonaicht - RCA 'Integrated', with built-in 1.5-inch underslung grenade launcher. Variant of the 2009-.3.

Users and Operational History

Capetian soldier tests out the RCA-2009 in pre-purchase trials, 2014

Faneria

Maloka

The Cape

Ashkenang