New Delhi: The Defence Research and Development Organisation has officially launched an ambitious project to design and develop polymer cased ammunition for small arms, marking a significant transition away from the traditional brass cartridges that have been standard in global militaries for nearly two centuries. The modern technology replaces the heavy, shiny golden-coloured metal shells with high tensile composite polymers capable of enduring the immense thermal and physical stresses generated during firing, loading, and ejection sequences. While the body shell switches to a lightweight fibre composition, the base rim and the forward-facing slug or projectile will retain their standard metallic structure to ensure proper mechanical operation within the weapon chamber.
This technological leap yields an estimated reduction of twenty-five to thirty percent in total cartridge weight, directly addressing the physical burden carried by frontline infantry personnel and fundamentally altering military logistics. A standard 5.56 mm brass cartridge utilized by the Indian Small Arms System rifle weighs roughly 185 grams, while a 7.62 mm AK-47 round registers at approximately 250 grams. Given that standard military operational protocols typically authorize a minimum of 100 rounds per rifleman depending on the mission profile, the cumulative weight savings will significantly enhance battlefield endurance. Furthermore, comparative global operational data indicates that polymer components excel at absorbing and expelling residual heat from the weapon casing, thereby drastically reducing weapon overheating and facilitating prolonged firing periods during high-intensity combat operations.
The critical modernization program is being actively spearheaded by the Armament Research and Development Establishment, Pune, the specialized laboratory responsible for conventional weapon designs, working in close operational collaboration with private domestic defence production partners. The baseline phase of the project remains targeted at engineering dependable ammunition variants for infantry small arms including pistols, carbines, and standard assault rifles, before potentially scaling up the architecture to accommodate larger caliber weapon platforms. Officials emphasize that this lethal ammunition structure is entirely distinct from the non-lethal plastic or rubber bullets deployed by internal law enforcement agencies for civilian crowd control, as the polymer cased system fires a standard metal slug engineered for full lethality.
Though polymer-cased ammunition concepts originally emerged in the 1950s for commercial shotgun shells, the system has recently witnessed widespread operational transition in modern forces like the United States Marine Corps and the Australian military. The ongoing shift signals the gradual phasing out of the traditional integrated brass cartridge, a legacy technology originally developed in 1812 by French engineer Jean Samuel Pauly and later perfected into a self-contained metallic round by Louis-Nicolas Flobert in 1845. By successfully pioneering indigenous composite cases, the defense establishment aims to achieve a vital breakthrough in self-reliance, drastically lowering domestic production expenditures while substantially increasing the strategic mobility and ammunition carrying capacity of soldiers on the ground.