Improved Optic To Identify Threats From Longer Distances
by Matt Gonzales, U.S. Marine Corps
Systems Command February
20,
2021
Marines recently received an innovative new optic that better
prepares them to engage adversaries from longer distances.
In
January 2021, Marine Corps Systems Command’s Program Manager for Infantry
Weapons began fielding the Squad Common Optic ... a magnified day optic
comprising an illuminated and non-illuminated aim-point designed to
improve target acquisition and probability-of-hit with infantry
assault rifles.

February 10, 2021 - CWO4 Dave Tomlinson, infantry weapons officer at Marine Corps Systems Command, demonstrates the Squad Common Optic attached to the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle aboard Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia. The SCO is an improved optic that improves target acquisition and probability of hit with infantry assault rifles. Marine Corps Systems Command began fielding the system to infantry and infantry-like units this year. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Matt Gonzales)
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The SCO can be attached to the M4 and M4A1
Carbine as well as the M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle. It will
supplement the attrition and replacement of the Rifle Combat Optic
and the Squad Day Optic for each of those weapons for close-combat
Marines.
“The Squad Common Optic provides an improved day
optic to infantry and infantry-like communities, including
reconnaissance units” said Tom Dever, project officer for Combat
Optics at MCSC. “It’s a system that improves situational awareness
and decreases engagement times, greatly benefiting Marines.”
SCO An Improvement Over RCO
The SCO enables Marines to
identify targets from farther distances than the existing RCO
system.
Roger Boughton, MCSC’s lead engineer for the SCO
program, said the RCO has a fixed magnification, whereas the SCO
provides a variable power. This means Marines can use the SCO to
identify targets at both close and far distances, providing twice
the visual range of the RCO.
“Having an optic that can reach
out to longer distances will ultimately make the Marine a more
lethal first-shot shooter,” said Boughton. “This means they can use
less rounds to overwhelm an enemy.”
Maj. Kyle Padilla, MCSC’s
optics team lead and an infantry officer, said the SCO is agnostic
to the round and weapon system, which provides additional
flexibility for Marines. This allows for movement to a different
host weapon and accommodates the employment of the M855, M855A1 or
future ammunition.
“It’s all about making an accurate
decision,” said Padilla. “The SCO gives squad leaders or individual
riflemen more time to make a decision to eliminate that threat if
necessary.”
The system is also easy to assemble. The SCO
includes a mount that prevents Marines from needing to carry tools
to remove or exchange the optic, lightening the load for Marines.
“If you want to mount it onto the rail of the weapon, you don’t
need a wrench to tighten anything,” said Boughton. “You just need
your hands.”
A Step In The
Right Direction
The SCO
program moved rapidly from program designation to fielding in just
16 months. After awarding a contract, PM IW conducted various user
assessments, including a simulated 10,000-round fire exercise,
during production verification testing to confirm performance and
resolve issues.
During these evaluations, Marines raved about
the benefits of the SCO and its improvement over the existing
system.
“Being able to shoot farther, identify targets at
greater ranges and be more accurate will make them more lethal,”
said CWO4 David Tomlinson, MCSC’s infantry weapons officer. “Marines
have expressed excitement over this capability.”
CWO4 Gerald
Eggers, the infantry weapons officer at The Basic School,
participated in the system’s fielding in January, aboard Marine
Corps Base Quantico, Virginia. He commended the scope’s variable
power magnification as well as its ability to be employed with
different ammunition and weapons.
“Marines with M27s will
greatly benefit with this scope,” said Eggers. “I certainly believe
the SCO fielding is a step in the right direction.”
Dever
said the fielding of the SCO puts an improved capability into
Marines’ hands more quickly and enables them to carry out their
missions more efficiently and effectively.
“The rapid
acquisition and fielding of improved capabilities is vital to
equipping the Marine Corps to operate inside actively contested
maritime spaces in support of fleet operations,” said Dever.
The program office anticipates the weapon reaching Full Operational
Capability in fiscal year 2022.
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