Eugene Stoner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eugene Stoner
Mr. Eugene M. Stoner.jpg
Born(1922-11-22)November 22, 1922
DiedApril 24, 1997(1997-04-24) (aged 74)
OccupationEngineer
Engineering career
Significant designAR-15 and other small arms

Eugene Morrison Stoner (November 22, 1922 – April 24, 1997) was an American firearms designer who is most associated with the development of the ArmaLite AR-15 rifle that was redesigned and modified by Colt's Patent Firearm Company (now known as Colt's Manufacturing Company, LLC) for the US military as the M16 rifle.

Early life[]

The son of Lloyd Lester Stoner and Billie Morrison,[1] Stoner attended high school in Long Beach and upon graduation worked for the Vega Aircraft Company installing armament.

During World War II, he enlisted for Aviation Ordnance in the U.S. Marine Corps and served in the South Pacific and northern China.

Engineer[]

In late 1945 Stoner began working in the machine shop for Whittaker, an aircraft equipment company, and ultimately became a Design Engineer.

In 1954 he came to work as chief engineer for ArmaLite, a division of Fairchild Engine & Airplane Corporation. While at ArmaLite, he designed a series of prototype small arms, including the AR-3, AR-9, AR-11, and AR-12, none of which saw significant production. Their only real success during this period was the AR-5 survival rifle, which was adopted by the United States Air Force.[2]

The Stoner bolt and carrier piston system is a widely known gas system designed by Eugene Stoner. The gas operated bolt and carrier system was filled in 1956 and subsequently patented by ArmaLite for use in the AR-10. The original AR-10 action (later developed into the ArmaLite AR-15, M16 rifle and M4 carbine). It is commonly called a direct impingement system, but it does not utilize a conventional direct impingement system. In U.S. Patent 2,951,424, the designer states: ″This invention is a true expanding gas system instead of the conventional impinging gas system.″ Gas is routed from a port in the barrel through a gas tube, directly to a chamber inside the bolt carrier. The bolt within the bolt carrier is fitted with piston rings to contain the gas. In effect, the bolt and carrier act as a gas piston and cylinder. The subtleties involved in ArmaLite's patent on the gas system[3] significantly diverge from classical direct impingement; upon firing, the pressurized propellant gasses exit the barrel via the gas port and travel the length of the gas tube, but instead of simply applying the inertia necessary to cycle the weapon directly to the bolt carrier, the gas is funneled inside the bolt carrier wherein the increase in pressure results in the bolt itself acting as a piston, forcing the bolt carrier away from the barrel face.[4]

ArmaLite AR-10

In 1955, Stoner completed initial design work on the revolutionary ArmaLite AR-10, a lightweight (7.25 lbs.) select-fire infantry rifle in 7.62×51mm NATO caliber. The AR-10 was submitted for rifle evaluation trials to the US Army's Aberdeen Proving Ground late in 1956. In comparison with competing rifle designs previously submitted for evaluation, the AR-10 was smaller, easier to fire in automatic, and much lighter. However it arrived very late in the testing cycle, and the army rejected the AR-10 in favor of the more conventional T44, which became the M14. The AR-10's design was later licensed to the Dutch firm of Artillerie Inrichtingen, which produced the AR-10 until 1960 for sale to various military forces.[5]

M16A1 rifle
ArmaLite AR-15

At the request of the U.S. military, Stoner's chief assistant, Robert Fremont along with Jim Sullivan designed the Armalite AR-15 from the basic AR-10 model, scaling it down to fire the small-caliber .223 Remington cartridge. The AR-15 was later adopted by United States military forces as the M16 rifle.[5][6]

After ArmaLite sold the rights to the AR-15 to the Colt Firearms Company, Stoner turned his attention to the AR-16 design. This was another advanced 7.62 mm rifle but used a more conventional piston and a number of stamped parts to reduce cost. This weapon saw only prototype development but adaptation to .223 resulted in the somewhat successful and often imitated Armalite AR-18.[5]

Stoner 63 rifle

Stoner left ArmaLite in 1961 to serve as a consultant for Colt. He eventually accepted a position with Cadillac Gage where he designed the Stoner 63 Weapons System.

[5] This was a modular weapons system which could be reconfigured to be a standard automatic rifle, a light machine gun, a medium machine gun, or a solenoid-fired fixed machine gun.

The Stoner Weapons System used a piston-operated gas impingement system patented as US PAT No. 2,951,424 and granted in September 1960. Once again, Robert Fremont and Jim Sullivan took a Stoner rifle and redesigned it for the .223 Remington cartridge, to create the Stoner 63 Weapons System.[7]

Oerlikon KBA 25mm, originally developed by TRW Inc. (TRW-6425) with the project lead of Eugene Stoner

Stoner then worked with TRW by designing the TRW 6425 25 mm Bushmaster[8] auto cannon, which was later manufactured by Oerlikon-Bührle as the Oerlikon KBA 25mm.[2]

KAC SR-25 rifle

He co-founded ARES Incorporated of Port Clinton, Ohio, in 1972, but left the company in 1989, after designing the , sometimes known as the Stoner 86. It was an evolved version of the Stoner 63. At Ares, he also designed the (FARC).[2]

In 1990, he joined Knight's Armament Company (KAC) to create the Stoner Rifle-25 (SR-25), which currently sees military service as the United States Navy Mark 11 Mod 0 Sniper Weapon System. While at KAC, he also worked on yet another version of the Stoner Weapons System, called the Stoner 96. Among his last designs were the SR-50 rifle and the Colt 2000.[9]


Meeting with Kalashnikov[]

Stoner (left) and Kalashnikov hold the rifles they designed, 22 May 1990.

On May 16, 1990, Stoner and Mikhail Kalashnikov, inventor of the AK-47 and its derivatives, would meet for the first time. They would spend the next few days talking, sharing stories, shopping, going out to dinner and touring Washington D.C. They visited the Smithsonian Institution, the NRA's National Firearms Museum, and a hunting lodge owned by the gun club at Star Tannery, where they went shooting. They would also visit the Marine Corps base in Quantico, Virginia, where they watched new weapons being tested. During this short visit, both men, intimately familiar with the other's work, shared a common bond and became friends, "not needing an interpreter to get their thoughts across."[10]

Death[]

Eugene Stoner died of cancer at the age of 74 on April 24, 1997, and was later interred in the Quantico National Cemetery, Quantico, Virginia.

He was survived by his wife, Barbara Hitt Stoner, whom he married in 1965; his first wife, Jean Stoner Mahony of Newport Beach, California, from whom he was divorced in 1962; four children from his first marriage, seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

Weapon designs[]

Armalite designs[]

Other designs[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Eugene Stoner". GENi.
  2. ^ a b c Rottman, Gordon (2011). The M16. Osprey Publishing. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-84908-690-5. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  3. ^ Eugene Stoner, 1956, Gas operated bolt and carrier system, US2951424A, https://patents.google.com/patent/US2951424A/en
  4. ^ "ARMALITE TECHNICAL NOTE 54: DIRECT IMPINGEMENT VERSUS PISTON DRIVE" (PDF). Armalite. 3 July 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 September 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d Chivers, C. J. (2010). The Gun. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 292–295. ISBN 978-0-7432-7076-2.
  6. ^ Cutshaw, Charles Q. (2011). "Assault Rifles". Tactical Small Arms of the 21st Century: A Complete Guide to Small Arms From Around the World. Iola, Wisconsin: Gun Digest Books. p. 235. ISBN 978-1-4402-2482-9. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  7. ^ Johnston, Gary Paul (2006). "New from DPMS A 308 That Delivers the Goods". Soldier of Fortune. Vol. 31. Boulder, Colorado: Omega Group, Limited. p. 24. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  8. ^ ""Philco-Ford PFB-25 (Bushmaster 25mm)"" (PDF).
  9. ^ Lewis, Jack (1 January 2004). "Colt's All American 2000". The Gun Digest Book of Assault Weapons. Iola, Wisconsin: Krause Publications Craft. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-87349-658-2. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  10. ^ Kahane, Larry (2007), AK 47: The Weapon That Changed the Face of War Paperback

External links[]

Retrieved from ""