Project Grayburn, the programme to replace the British Army’s SA80 rifle, is funded despite not appearing as a specific line in the Defence Investment Plan.

The programme does not appear in the published document. Asked about its status, a senior defence official confirmed it remains funded. “Grayburn is funded. I don’t think we’ve got the specific line in the document, but the funding is there,” the official said, adding that the department does not yet have specific dates for the transition to a new weapon and that these would be set out over time.

The SA80 family has been the British Army’s standard individual weapon since its introduction in 1985. A bullpup design chambered in 5.56x45mm NATO, with the action set behind the trigger to keep overall length short, the rifle suffered well-documented reliability problems in its original L85A1 form before a major rework by Heckler and Koch in the early 2000s produced the L85A2.

The current L85A3 standard, introduced from 2018, added a new full-length upper receiver and handguard to improve accuracy and allow modern optics and accessories to be mounted, along with internal improvements. The weapon is expected to remain in service into the early 2030s.

UK weapon manufacturing major aim for Project Grayburn

Project Grayburn is intended to deliver the SA80’s replacement across the armed forces. The question put to officials also asked whether the current rifle’s service life would be extended, a point the answer did not directly address.

On the level of detail in the document more broadly, a senior defence official said the plan sets out four-year totals for major capability areas, with some broken down by year, and does not specify what the department will be procuring in five to ten years’ time in granular detail, on the grounds that technology is changing too fast. The UK has not manufactured a standard-issue service rifle at scale since SA80 production ended.

George Allison
George Allison is the founder and editor of the UK Defence Journal. He holds a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and specialises in naval and cyber security topics. George has appeared on national radio and television to provide commentary on defence and security issues. Twitter: @geoallison

8 COMMENTS

  1. It will become to old we will extend until the next parliament as we need more information……etc etc untill the late 2030 as the A3 upgrade is fantastic etc.

  2. They should delay this project until we have a better understanding of intermediate rounds like the 6.8mm. No point on spending hundreds of millions on a new 5.56mm weapon only to find out NATO standard is changing. The SA80 A3 is perfectly adequate and still enjoys a significant range advantage over any of the AR 15 based rifles being proposed without using higher chamber pressure.

    No reason to rush into this.

    I understand lefties won’t approve 😀

    • The NATO standard isn’t changing. France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Norway, the USMC and others have all recently brought new 5.56 service rifles into service.

      The move is increasingly looking at more powerful 5.56mm cartridges with AP rounds rather than larger calibers as per the M7 and M8.

    • I agree , the newer SA80 marks are meant to be quite good if a bit heavy talking to the people in the know , our armed force have much more
      higher priorities.

  3. In the grand scheme of things it’s small money compared to the headline items so I’m not surprised it wasn’t mentioned by name. I do wonder if this is the right time though, it might be better to let the US experiment more with alternative calibres and see what the mood is with NATO allies before making a change.

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