HUNTSVILLE, Ala.Nammo will qualify later this year a shoulder-fired munition called the M72-FFE that can be shot without a “back blast,” allowing it to be deployed from inside buildings.

Nammo Director of Growth Works Rob Willhelm told Defense Daily here Thursday when a traditional M72 round is fired, the rocket motor burns as much as a pound of propellant in 12 milliseconds. That produces a lot of gas and pressure, Willhelm said, and that pressure has to be released somewhere, usually out the back of a shoulder-fired weapon. This prevents the munition from being deployed indoors because the tremendous force from the back blast can destroy buildings and injure people inside, he said. 

Nammo's M72-FFE (fire from enclosure). Photo: Defense Daily.
Nammo’s M72-FFE (center). Photo: Defense Daily.

At the Association of United States Army (AUSA) Global Force Symposium and Exhibition, Willhelm said Nammo substituted a counter mass for the rocket motor on the M72-FFE (fire from enclosure), eliminating the back blast. In addition to reduced back blast, the M72-FFE features “dramatically reduced” firing noise with smoke and flash completely eliminated, with no loss in muzzle velocity, Nammo said on its website.

Willhelm compared the M72-FFE technology to that found on hobbyist water rockets, where air is pumped into a two-liter bottled filled with water, until the pressure is released as thrust, sending the water rocket into the sky. The M72-FFE is still under development, he said.

The reduced back blast also provides a safety feature, Willhelm said, allowing warfighters to avoid exposure to gunfire by having to run outside to shoot a traditional M72. The M72-FFE is deployed by the M72 Light Anti-Tank Weapon (LAW), a single-use, shoulder-fired, man-portable and light anti-tank rocket. Light infantry and special operations forces use the weapon, which can be used against light armor and destroy structures and vehicles.