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TL;DR: USSOCOM’s HICAR program aims to double the effective range of compact M4A1 carbines to 600 meters by using an ultra-high-pressure “hypervelocity” 5.56 round, while avoiding a switch to larger calibers. The effort focuses on a new upper receiver that can withstand roughly 82,000 psi—far above current standards—without sacrificing compatibility with existing M4 components, magazines, and accessories. Engineers must solve major durability and pressure challenges in short-barrel systems through advanced materials, redesigned gas and recoil systems, and reinforced components. If successful, HICAR could significantly boost lethality and range across existing M4 inventories without overhauling logistics or weapon ergonomics.
USSOCOM Starts HICAR Effort for Extended-Range M4A1
U.S. Special Operations Command on May 18, 2026 released a Naval Surface Warfare Center solicitation for the Hypervelocity Improved Capability Assault Rifle, or HICAR, a pressure-tolerant upper receiver for the M4A1 family. The program aims to extend the practical combat range of URG-I-configured M4 carbines from about 300 meters to 600 meters while preserving the existing 5.56×45mm NATO ecosystem.
Rather than moving to the 6.8×51mm cartridge used in the Army’s XM7, HICAR is designed to keep compatibility with current M4A1 lower receivers, STANAG magazines, SOCOM optics, suppressors, laser aiming devices, and support equipment. USSOCOM’s approach reflects a requirement to retain compact handling for close-quarters battle, vehicle use, airborne operations, and maritime missions while avoiding a separate ammunition and sustainment chain.
Hypervelocity 5.56 at Much Higher Pressure
The key enabler is an experimental M855A1+ hypervelocity round loaded to about 82,000 psi, or 5,654 bar. Standard M855A1 operates at roughly 62,000 psi, or 4,275 bar. USSOCOM expects the higher pressure to increase muzzle velocity from 11- to 12-inch barrels, improving velocity retention, terminal energy, barrier penetration, and supersonic flight at longer distance.
The solicitation requires the new upper to fire both standard 5.56 NATO ammunition and the M855A1+ load. By prioritizing velocity growth instead of a larger caliber, USSOCOM is seeking greater lethality without reducing magazine capacity or changing AR-pattern ergonomics and ammunition dimensions.
Tight Performance, Size, and Durability Requirements
The requirement places significant limits on size and mass. Barrel length is fixed at 11 to 12 inches, unloaded weight must stay below 8 pounds without a suppressor, with 6.5 pounds listed as the objective, and overall length is capped at 31 inches, with a 28-inch objective depending on configuration.
HICAR rifles must also function with the HUXWRX Flow 556k Black Magic suppressor, remain compatible with Gen3 PMAGs and M1913 rails, and operate after seawater immersion in temperatures from -40 to 165 degrees Fahrenheit. Accuracy standards call for a 1 MOA average mean radius threshold and a 0.5 MOA objective using Black Hills Mk262 ammunition at 100 meters. Reliability targets include 800 mean rounds between stoppages and 5,000 mean rounds between failure, with barrel life set at 8,000 rounds minimum and a 20,000-round objective under sustained M855A1+ use.
Engineering Challenge Centers on Pressure Management
Those targets create a substantial design problem. Sustained 82,000 psi operation increases bolt thrust and cyclic stress on locking lugs, extractor assemblies, bolt faces, barrel extensions, gas systems, suppressors, and receiver interfaces. Short barrels further complicate the issue because extraction begins under higher residual pressure while dwell time is reduced.
As a result, vendors are expected to propose new steels, coatings, barrel technologies, revised gas timing, modified recoil systems, and reinforced locking or extension designs. Recent industry work that aligns with the requirement includes high-pressure 5.56 concepts from SIG Sauer, NAS3 steel-alloy case technology from Shell Shock Technologies, and PROOF Research’s PXT barrel technology for roughly 80,000 psi-class cartridges.
Timeline and Broader Implications
White papers are due June 8, 2026, with selected vendors to be notified June 29. Live-fire demonstrations using government-furnished M855A1+ ammunition are scheduled for Sept. 15-16 at the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit Parks Range at Fort Moore, Georgia. The effort is being managed through Other Transaction Authority and Commercial Solutions Opening procedures intended to shorten development timelines and broaden participation.
HICAR is advancing alongside other USSOCOM small-arms efforts, including the 6.5 Creedmoor MRGG-A and limited evaluation of the SIG MG338. If successful, the upper receiver concept could offer a modernization path for a large existing M4/M4A1 inventory without replacing serialized lower receivers, provided...
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