Title: NCODP
1NCODP MK 19, 40-MM GRENADE MACHINE GUN
2CREED OF THE NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICER
NO ONE IS MORE PROFESSIONAL THAN I. I AM A
NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICER, A LEADER OF SODLEIRS.
AS A NONCOMISSIONED OFFICER I REALIZE THAT I AM A
MEMBER OF A TIME HONORED CORE WHICH IS KNOWN AS
THE BACKBONE OF THE ARMY. I AM PROUD OF THE
COURE OF NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICERS, AND WILL AT
ALL TIMES CONDUCT MYSELF SO AS TO BRING CREDIT
UPON THE CORPS, THE MILITARY SERVICE, AND MY
COUNTRY REGARDLESS OF THE SITUATION IN WHICH I
FIND MYSELF. I WILL NOT USE MY GRADE OR POSITION
TO ATTAIN PLEASURE, PROFIT OR PERSONAL
SAFETY. COMPETENCE IS MY WATCHWORD. MY TWO BASIC
RESPONSIBILITIES WILL ALWAYS BE UPPERMOST IN MY
MIND-ACCOMPLISHMENT OF MY MISSION AND THE WELFARE
OF MY SOLDIERS. I WILL STRIVE TO REMAIN
TECHNICALLY AND TACTICALLY PROFICIENT. I AM WARE
OF MY ROLE AS A NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICER. I WILL
FULFILL MY RESPONSIBILITIES INHERENT IN THAT
ROLL. ALL SOLDIERS ARE ENTITLED TO OUTSTANDING
LEADERSHIP I WILL PROVIDE THAT LEADERSHIP. I
KNOW MY SOLDIERS AND I WILL ALWAYS PLACE THEIR
NEEDS ABOVE MY OWN. I WILL COMMUNICATE
CONSISTENTLY WITH MY SOLDIERS AND NEVER LEAVE
THEM UNINFORMED. I WILL BE FAIR AND IMPARTIAL
WHEN RECOMMENDING BOTH REWARD AND
PUNISHMENT. OFFICERS OF MY UNIT WILL HAVE MAXIMUM
TIME TO ACCOMPLISH THEIR DUTIES THEY WILL NOT
HAVE TO ACCOMPLISH MINE. I WILL EARN THEIR
RESPECT AND CONFIDENCE AS WELL AS THOSE OF MY
SOLDIERS. I WILL BE LOYAL TO THOSE WITH WHOM I
SERVE SENIORS, PEERS, AND SUBORDINATES ALIKE. I
WILL EXERCISE INITIATIVE BY TAKING APPROPRIATE
ACTION IN THE ABSENCE OF ORDERS. I WILL NOT
COMPROMISE MY INTEGRITY NOR MY MORAL COURAGE. I
WILL NOT FORGET, NOR WILL I ALLOW MY COMRADES TO
FORGET THAT WE ARE PROFESSIONALS, NONCOMMISSIONED
OFFICERS, LEADERS!
3TASK CONDITIONS AND STANDARDS
TASK TO CONDUCT NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICER
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENTGOVERNING THE MK 19,
40-MM GRENADE MACHINE GUN, MOD 3 CONDITIONS GIVEN
THE NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICERS OF THE CONSOLIDATED
49TH SPECIAL TROOPS BATTALION, A CLASSROOM
ENVIRONMENT, AND ALL NECESSASRY MATERIALS, REVIEW
THE APPLICATION, OPERATION AND FUNCION, PMCS,
CREW DRILLS, EMPLACEMENT, ZEROING, MARKSMANSHIP,
RANGE CARD, APPLICATION AND TECHNIQUES OF FIRE,
AND CORRECTIVE FEEDING ACTION (FM 23-27, PS
578) STANDARDS TO FAITHFULLY EXCECUTE THE DUTIES
AND RESPONSIBILITIES INHERENT IN THE ROLES OF THE
NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICER IN THE LEADING AND
TRAINING OF SOLDIERS ASSIGNED TO THE MK 19
4RISK ASSESSMENT
TASK ID HAZARDS ASSESS HAZARDS
DEVELOP CONTROLS RES RISK IMPLEMENT CONTROLS
POSTED FIRE PLAN
SEE NEXT SLIDE
NCOPD
FIRE
L
L
TRIPPING HAZARD
L
MINIMIZE WIRES IN WALKWAYS
L
AVOID WIRES ON FLOOR LEADING TO OUTLETS
L
L
THREATCON
IDENTIFY SUSPICIOUS INDIVIDUALS ENTERING BUILDING
REPORT ANY SUSPECIOUS INDIVIDUALS ATTEMPTING TO
ENTER THE 240TH CLASSROOM
5FIRE PLAN
6AGENDA
- CREED OF THE NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICER
- TASK CONDITIONS AND STANDARDS
- RISK ASSESSMENT
- FIRE PLAN
- AGENDA
- DUTIES, RESPONSIBILITIES
- HISTORY OF THE MK 19
- INTRODUCTION
- OPERATION AND FUNCTION
- CREW DRILLS
- MARKSMANSHIP FIRING POSITIONS
- TRAVERSING BAR AND TE MECHANISM
- SIGHTING AND AIMING
- RANGE CARD
- ANNUAL GUNNERY TRAINING PROGRAM
- SUMMARY
- QUESTIONS
7DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITES
WHY ARE NCOS RECEIVING NCOPD ON A WEAPON SYSTEM
THAT WILL NOT BE OUR ASSIGNED WEAPON?
- WE ARE LEADERS! If our soldiers are tasked to
operate this piece of equipment, we must be
proficient enough to train them on this piece of
equipment!
- BE, KNOW, DO! If we are to BE a leader of
soldiers, we need to KNOW how to operate this
piece of equipment, clear malfunctions, train
soldiers on its use, PMCS, clear malfunctions,
set emplacements, dig fighting positions, give
fire commands, determine sectors, complete range
card. We must be able to DO all of the above
in order to lead by examplewe cant tell a
soldier to perform a task we cannot perform
ourselves!
8HISTORY OF THE MK 19
- Development began in 1963 with a preliminary
version that was a hand cranked grenade launcher
called the MK 18. In 1966 the MK 19 Mod 0 was
developed, however the MOD 0 was not reliable or
safe to be placed in the Armys inventory.
Improvements in 1971 led to the Navys adoption
of the MOD 1 in 1972 and worked well during the
Vietnam conflict. In 1976, the weapon was
redesigned as the MK 19 MOD 3, that was adopted
for Army use in 1983. The Army has expanded the
use of the MK 19 for tactical defense,
retrograde, patrolling, rear area security, MOUT,
and Spec Ops.
9INTRODUCTION
- THE MK 19 SUPPORTS THE SOLDIER IN BOTH THE
OFFENSE AND DEFENSE. IT GIVES THE UNIT A HEAVY
VOLUME OF CLOSE, ACCURATE, AND CONTINUOUS FIRE.
IT CAN ALSO BE USED TO - Protect motor movements, assembly areas and
supply trains - Defend against hovering rotary aircraft
- Destroy lightly armored vehicles
- Fire on suspected enemy positions
- Provide high volumes of fire into an engagement
area - Cover obstacles
- Provide indirect fires from defilade positions.
10INTRODUCTION
The MK 19 is an air-cooled, blowback-operated
machine gun, with five major assemblies that is
belt-fed through the left side of the weapon by a
disintegrating metallic link belt.
11INTRODUCTION
Leaf type rear sight mounted on a spring dovetail
base, which should be folded forward to a
horizontal position when the weapon is moved the
range increment of 100 meters from 300 to 1500m.
Range changes by slide release or the elevation
wheel slide release for major changes in
elevation slide wheel for fine adjustments. Rear
sight adjusts for windage, turning the windage
screws right or left equals a 1-mil change.
12INTRODUCTION
13INTRODUCTION
The HEDP (High Explosive, dual purpose) M430
cartridge, joined with M16A2 links is the
standard round for the MK 19. The impact-type
round penetrates 2 inches of steel armor at a
0-degree obliquity and inflicts personnel
casualties in the target area. The two HE (High
Explosive) cartridges inflict personnel
casualties in the target area with ground burst
effects. HE M383 and M383E1 are packed 50 per
box. The M385 practice rounds are joined by M16A1
or M16A2 links in 50 rounds per box. M992 dummy
cartridges are joined with M16A2 links with a 10
round belt used to check weapon function for crew
training.
14INTRODUCTION
15OPERATION AND FUNCTION
NOTE CLEARING IS DIFFERENT BETWEEN FIRING AND
NONFIRING SITUATIONS!
- Firing Situation
- Move safety switch to SAFE (S). If all of the
ammunition has NOT been fired, the bolt is to the
rear and a round is on the bolt face. - Open the top cover assembly.
- Take the ammo from the feed tray by reaching
beneath the feed tray and pressing the primary
and secondary positioning pawls. At the same time
slide the linked rounds out of the MK 19 through
the feed throat.
16OPERATION AND FUNCTION
17OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(4) Insert a section of the cleaning rod or
bayonet through either side of the receiver rail.
Place it on top of the live round or cartridge
case, as close to the bolt face as possible, and
push down, this action forces the round out of
the MK 19use extreme caution and catch round
with handdo not allow it to hit the ground! (5)
Lower and pull charging handle to the rear.
18OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(6) Inspect the chamber and bolt face again to
insure that no live rounds are in the weapon. (7)
Place the safety switch on FIRE (F). (8) While
maintaining rearward pressure on the charging
handle, press the trigger and ease the bolt
forward. (9) Place the safety switch on SAFE
(S).
19OPERATION AND FUNCTION
- Nonfiring Situation
- Place the safety switch on SAFE.
- Open the top cover assembly.
- Lower one charger handle.
- Pull the charger handle slightly to the rear,
allowing sufficient space between the face of the
bold and the chamber to see both (Check for
ammo). - Ride the bolt forward.
- Return charging handle to its original upright
position.
20OPERATION AND FUNCTION
21OPERATION AND FUNCTION
- Disassembly
- Clear the Weapon
- Take out the secondary drive lever
- (a) Raise the top cover assembly and push the
secondary drive lever pivot post from the outside
of the top cover assembly. Separate the secondary
drive lever from the top cover assembly.
22OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(b) Take the secondary drive lever from the
slide assembly, and allow the feed slide and
tray assembly to close. (3) Take off the top
cover assembly. Hold it straight up with one
hand and pull the top cover pins from both sides.
Lift the top cover assembly straight up and off.
23OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(4) Take out the feed slide assembly and feed
tray (a) Alight the tabs on the feed slide
assembly with the slots in the feed tray and
lift them straight up. (b) Take out the feed
tray by lifting straight up.
24OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(5) Take out the bold and backplate
assembly (a) Place the safety switch to the
FIRE position. (b) Take out the backplate pin
using the rim of a spent cartridge case or metal
link. Pry outward on the pin lip and remove the
pin with the fingers.
25OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(c) Grasp control grips with both hands and lift
up slightly to disengage the backplate from the
locking lugs in the receiver. Pull the bolt and
backplate assembly to the rear. Once the bolt
clears the sear, catch the bolt in one hand to
prevent damage to he backplate assembly.
26OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(6) Take off the primary drive lever and vertical
cam (a) Reach under the top of the receiver and
locate the drive lever lock. Slide the lock a
quarter inch to the rear. (b) Press down on the
primary drive lever pivot post, which releases
both the primary drive and vertical cam. (C)
Pull the primary drive lever from the front of
the weapon and the vertical cam from the back.
27OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(7) Take off the sear assembly (a) Turn the MK
19 on its side or upside down and use the rim of
a spent cartridge case to lift the sear lock
plunger. At the same time squeeze the sear and
rotate the assembly 90 degrees to the right (or
left). Take off the sear assembly by pulling it
away from the weapon. Keep pressure on the sear
until the assembly comes off. Switch to SAFE.
28OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(8) Take off the alignment guide (a) Depress
the tip of the alignment guide spring with the
finger. (b) Slide the alignment guide out of
the receiver, pulling the assembly slightly
rearward.
29OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(9) Take out the ogive plunger, by pulling the
ogive plunger assembly out through the inside
wall of the receiver.
30OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(10) Take off the round-positioning block by
pushing it into the side of the gun, sliding it
forward and releasing it from the keyslots in the
receiver wall.
31OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(11) Take out the charger assemblies from both
sides. Place the charger assemblies in the
upright position. Using a metallic object,
retract the lock plunger at the base of the
charger arm. Slide the charger housing rearward
to disengage the lugs from the keyslots in the
receiver. Lift the charger assembly away from the
receiver.
32OPERATION AND FUNCTION
33OPERATION AND FUNCTION
- To assemble the gun, replace the groups in
reverse order - Replace charger assemblies
- Replace the round-positioning block
- Replace the ogive plunger
- Replace the alignment guide
- Replace the primary drive lever and vertical cam
- Attach the sear assembly depress the sear spring
and turn assembly 90º toward barrel center line
until locks into position - Insert the bolt and backplate assembly
- (a) Ensure the cocking lever is forward and
insert the bolt and backplate assembly into the
receiver.
34OPERATION AND FUNCTION
NOTE Before inserting the assembly, place the
cocking lever in the forward position. Ensure
that the safety switch is on FIRE so the sear can
easily be depressed. (b) Press the receiver
sear and slide the bolt assembly forward until
the retainer pin holes in the backplate and
receiver are aligned.
35OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(c) Insert the backplate retainer pin to lock
the assembly into position. (8) Place the feed
tray assembly on the receiver. Place the feed
slide assembly into the cutout slots on the feed
tray. (9) Attach the top cover assembly (a)
Align the pinholes in the top cover assembly with
the pinholes in the feed tray. (b) Hold the
cover straight up and insert the pins into both
sides of the cover. (10) Replace the secondary
driver lever (a) Lift the feed slide assembly
and feed tray.
36OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(b) Place the forked end of the secondary drive
lever on the inner feed slide pin.
(c) Press the raised pivot post through the hole
in the top cover assembly. Press the secondary
drive lever firmly against the top cover
assembly.
37BREAK
AT THIS TIME, TAKE A 10 MINUTE BREAK. BE BACK AND
READY TO RESUME INSTRUCTION AT THE END OF 10
MINUTES!
38OPERATION AND FUNCTION
LOADING Ensure the weapon is on SAFE, the bolt in
the forward position, and the feed throat is
attached to the weapon and is pointing in a
downward direction.
39OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(1) Insert the first round into the feeder
(female link first).
(2) Push the round across the secondary feed
pawl. To move the feed slide assembly to the
left, push the secondary drive lever to the right
and close the cover.
40OPERATION AND FUNCTION
41OPERATION AND FUNCTION
42OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(3) Grasp the charger handles with the palms
down. Press in on the charger handle locks.
Rotate the handles down and pull them sharply to
the rear (A). After locking the bolt to the rear,
return the charger handles to their original
upright position (B).
43OPERATION AND FUNCTION
(4) Place the safety switch on FIRE and press the
trigger. The bolt slams forward and grasps the
first round in the bolt extractors. (5) Grasp,
unlock and turn downward the charging handles to
their original upright position. (6) Ensure the
safety switch is on SAFE. (7) Return the charger
handles to their original upright position. (8)
The MK 19 is ready to fire.
44OPERATION AND FUNCTION
- Precautions
- Ensure the top cover is closed
- Ensure the muzzle of the MK 19 is pointed
downrange at all times. In the event of a runaway
gun, lower one of the charging handles. - Use the suggested three-to five-round bursts.
- After firing
- Unload and clear
- Perform after PMCS and report deficiencies to the
armorer - Clean and lubricate the MK 19 before storage
45OPERATION AND FUNCTION
Malfunctions and corrections NOTE Defective
ammo nor soldier head-space-and-timing is
considered a weapon malfunction. The two
malfunctions are sluggish gun, and runaway
gun.
Sluggish Gun Caused by excessive friction from
dirt, carbon build-up, lack of lubrication, or
burred parts. Conduct a proper PMCS, replace worn
and or damaged parts, as necessary. Runaway
Gun Weapon continues to fire after the trigger
has been released. Caused by worn parts or short
recoil of the bolt assembly. If ammo is not low
and gun is in the free mode, keep rounds on
target until all the rounds on the belt have been
fired. If mounted on tripod with TE, hold the
grip with one hand, press the charger handle
locks and lower one charging handle. This
interrupts the cycle causing the weapon to cease
firing.
46OPERATION AND FUNCTION
IMMEDIATE ACTION In the event of a stoppage in
the MK 19, take immediate action recharge it and
try to fire once. REMEDIAL ACTION A stoppage is
any interruption in the cycle of operation caused
by faulty action of the weapon or ammunition.
Take remedial action if immediate action does not
end the stoppage. (1) Unload and clear MK
19. (2) Inspect the weapon and ammo to find the
cause of stoppage. CORRECTIVE ACTION Take
corrective action to correct the stoppage one the
cause has been found. If possible, correct the
cause of the stoppage, reload and try to fire the
weapon. If it still does not fire, or cannot be
repaired at the operator level contact the unit
armorer.
47CREW DRILLS
Crew drills build precision, speed, skill and
teamwork in checking equipment, placing the MK 19
into and taking it out of action, and moving it
to a new position. Precisionthe main goal is
achieved by following prescribed procedures.
Speed, skill, and teamwork grow with practice.
During the crew drill, all oral and visual
signals are repeated. Once crew members can
perform their duties well, they rotate to allow
each member of the crew to learn the duties of
the others. The ground mounted MK 19 has three
crew members the gunner, the assistant gunner,
and the ammo bearer. A vehicle assigned to the
crew carries the ammo and equipment to the firing
position. The terrain and enemy situation dictate
how close the vehicle may be brought to the
firing position. To assist your soldiers, you
may follow the step by step guidelines found in
Chapter 4, of FM 23-27
48CREW DRILLS
Leader Command FORM FOR CREW DRILL TASK Partici
pate as MK 19 Crew member in the crew drill
formation CONDITION In a classroom environment,
given a MK 19 gunner, assistant gunner, ammo
bearer, the weapon system, ammo, and the command,
FORM CREW DRILL STANDARD Upon hearing the
leaders command, the crew forms in a column,
five paces apart, in the following order
Assistant gunner, gunner, and ammo bearer.
49CREW DRILLS
50CREW DRILLS
51CREW DRILLS
52CREW DRILLS
53CREW DRILLS
54CREW DRILLS
55CREW DRILLS
56CREW DRILLS
57CREW DRILLS
58CREW DRILLS
59CREW DRILLS
60CREW DRILLS
61MARKSMANSHIP FIRING POSITIONS
FIRING POSITIONS Seated, Legs extended, legs
crossed, and legs braced methods
62MARKSMANSHIP FIRING POSITIONS
63MARKSMANSHIP FIRING POSITIONS
FIRING POSITIONS Kneeling, in a fighting or
hasty tripod-mounted position.
64MARKSMANSHIP FIRING POSITIONS
- FIGHTING POSITIONS
- Position MK 19 in the center of the assigned
sector of fire. Mark the position of the tripod
legs and trace the outline of the firing
platform, which will be dug approximately 3
deep. - Dig the position in the shape of an L around the
firing platform. Chest deep and wide enough to
allow for operation of equipment throughout the
sector of fire. Position can be made so gunner
can fire from the kneeling position by digging
the desired depth behind gun. - Use dirt from the hole to build flank parapets
18 thick. Dig the ammo storage area into the
left wall of the L and close to the ground. - Make sure wall behind is sloped to allow for
entrance and exit.
65MARKSMANSHIP FIRING POSITIONS
66MARKSMANSHIP FIRING POSITIONS
- OVERHEAD COVER
- Put flank support logs, 4 to 6 in diameter, on
top of each other along the entire length of the
flank parapets. - Put logs (same type as above), side by side
across the support logs as the base for the
overhead cover. - Put a waterproof layer over the base logs.
- Put 18 of dirt on top of the waterproof material
- Mold and camouflage the cover to blend with the
terrain.
67TRAVERSING BAR AND TE MECHANISM
TRAVERSING BAR AND TE MECHANISM The TE
mechanism is for use to engage preselected target
areas at night or during degraded conditions.
Record elevation readings from the traversing bar
and TE mechanism. All readings are in mils.
Zero the TE (1) Hold the TE so that the
traversing handwheel is on your left as you look
at it. Turn the traversing handwheel toward you
until it stops. Loosen the locking nut slightly.
Align the 0 on the scale with the 0 on the
elevation screw yoke. Hold the scale with the 0s
aligned, and tighten the locking nut. Make sure
the 0s stay aligned. Turn the traversing
handwheel two complete revolutions away from you,
or count 50 clicks away from you.
68TRAVERSING BAR AND TE MECHANISM
69TRAVERSING BAR AND TE MECHANISM
(2) To zero the elevating handwheel to the upper
elevating screw, align the two 0s. Rotate the
elevating handwheel up or down until a 0 with a
line below it is visible in the upper elevating
screw. Position the elevating handwheel so the
indicator is pointing at the 0 on the handwheel.
(3) Zero the elevating mechanism sleeve to the
lower elevating screw. Rotate the elevating
mechanism sleeve all the way up rotate it down
until it stops note the number of complete
turns. Rotate the elevating mechanism sleeve up
half that many turns. Position the slide lock
lever to face you. Attach the TE to the tripod
and gun.
70TRAVERSING BAR AND TE MECHANISM
Place weapon and choose sector of fire. Pick up
the rear legs of the tripod and shift the MK 19
until the muzzle points to the center of the
sector of fire stamp feet and place sandbags on
the legs for stability. Obtain and record
direction readings to all targets within the
sector of fire, by loosening the traversing slide
lock and sliding along until the muzzle is
centered on a point target. Lock in place and
read the direction from the scale on the
traversing barif the left edge of the traversing
bar does not read exactly on a 5-mil tick mark,
move the left edge back to the next smaller mil
reading. Record readings as right or left of
muzzle center, then measure the width of the
target in mils using the traversing handwheel to
move across the target.
71TRAVERSING BAR AND TE MECHANISM
72TRAVERSING BAR AND TE MECHANISM
ELEVATION READINGS Ensure the MK 19 is laid on
the center base of the target. Read the elevation
from two scales Major and Minor part from
elevating screw plate scale, and the elevating
handwheel. Separate the two with a / i.e.,
-50/3.
73SIGHTING AND AIMING
74RANGE CARD
75RANGE CARD
76RANGE CARD
TARGETS IN RANGE
TARGETS IN RANGE
77RANGE CARD
78RANGE CARD
79RANGE CARD
80RANGE CARD
81ANNUAL GUNNERY TRAINING PROGRAM
- QUARTERLY for CSS
- Preliminary Marksmanship training, crew drills,
skills test - First Quarter Only
- No additional training during this quarter
- Second Quarter Only
- No additional training during this quarter
- Third Quarter Only
- Live fire qualification
- Fourth Quarter Only
- No additional training during this quarter
82SUMMARY
DUTIES, RESPONSIBILITIES HISTORY OF THE MK 19
INTRODUCTION OPERATION AND FUNCTION CREW
DRILLS MARKSMANSHIP FIRING POSITIONS TRAVERSING
BAR AND TE MECHANISM SIGHTING AND AIMING RANGE
CARD ANNUAL GUNNERY TRAINING PROGRAM
83QUESTIONS