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Reproduced from the January 2009 issue of GUNS Magazine.

     
FN's Spacy Bullpup
Is This The Short, Handy Rifle Of The Future?
     
Story By Holt Bodison
Photos By Robbie Barrkman
     
Short, sweet and loud. Most bullpup designs would benefit from having some sort of
suppressor to minimize noise. Don’t be like Holt — wear hearing and eye protection.
         
In today’s highly mobile, mechanized style of combat in which you often find yourself cramped inside an armored vehicle or chopper and weighed down with body armor, ammunition, grenades and whatnot, a compact weapon is a distinct advantage. There’s none more compact than a bullpup. Starting with a blank piece of paper, FN’s engineers have given us a dilly, known as the F2000 in military circles and as the FS2000 in its civilian form.
     
     
 
   
The FS2000 is standard with a 1.6X optical sight. Note the back-up iron sights atop the scope’s housing for quick shooting. The charging handle is on the left side of the receiver.
     
 
About the only things conventional about this high tech, modular bullpup are its caliber, 5.56 NATO, and its use of standard M16/NATO/STANAG magazines. This rest is right out of Star Wars.

To really appreciate the design, you have to look at the image of the FS2000 broken down into its main assemblies. The frame is a clamshell, consisting of two, complex polymer halves bolted together. The other sub-assemblies are fully modular. The barrel and receiver group and the bolt and bolt carrier assembly slide into the front of the frame and the hammer group assembly slides into the rear of the buttstock. In short, you can break this little bullpup down in seconds, replace or clean any of the modular assemblies and keep on shooting.

The use of polymer parts and contact points and the lack of metal in the overall design are remarkable. See the image of the hammer group assembly. Here you have the assembly housing, the hammer, and the sear mechanism made entirely of polymers. The only metal used in the assembly is in the springs, retaining cross-pins and drop safety. While the owner’s manual recommends oiling the springs, I think you could run this assembly dry all year with a minimum of wear.

Similarly, there are many examples in the design in which the engineers have been able to substitute precision castings for machined parts, notably the bolt carrier assembly, gas block and plug and stripping pin.
Other examples of modularity built into the design are the 10" Picatinny rail, which in this example is mounted with a 1.6X optical sight, and the front handguard that can be replaced with a 40mm grenade launcher, laser designator, flashlight, or non-lethal assembly. The F2000/FS2000 was designed from the get-go to be readily adapted to a variety of tactical missions.

Weighing 7.86 pounds empty with an overall length of 29.1", the FS2000 is slightly shorter but about a pound heavier than the M4 carbine. The barrel is 17.4" long, sports a permanently attached flash suppressor and is rifled with a 1:7" twist. The bolt follows closely the design of the M16 and features 6 lugs locking into a barrel extension. Upon firing, gas is bled off near the muzzle to operate a short-stroke piston to activate the bolt carrier assembly.

One of the classic issues plaguing earlier bullpup designs, the ejection of hot cases near the face of the shooter, has been overcome in the F2000/FS2000 design. The spent cases are ejected down-and-out a tube positioned above the breech of the bullpup. The end of the tube emerges on the right front side of the forearm and is covered by a self-activating polymer door. In use, spent cases are ejected vigorously to the right front of the carbine and well away from the face of the shooter.

The engineering is pretty clever. The extractor actually retains the spent case as the bolt begins to cycle forward on its return-to-battery. A cam activated, polymer switch mechanism flips into play and guides the case into the anti-return ejection tube where the case is propelled further by a lever on top of the forward moving bolt assembly. It’s a patented FN design, and it works perfectly.

Not overcome as successfully in the design is another classic, bullpup challenge — a light, crisp trigger pull. The challenge is linking a forward mounted trigger to a rear mounted sear. In the F2000/FS2000 design, the engineers used a double-ended, U-shaped rod running from the trigger along both sides of the frame and contacts the front arms of the polymer sear at two points. The distance from trigger to the sear is about 9". The result is a mushy trigger pull that breaks cleanly, however, at approximately 9-1/2 pounds.

Another significant challenge in a bullpup design is muzzleblast, generated by a short barrel, which seems to get shorter and louder since the muzzle is positioned further to the rear. Bullpups are tough on a shooter’s ears. In a combat situation, there’s no getting around it, short of adding a suppressor.

The smooth, rounded contours of the FS2000 stock make a comfortable fit. It’s an easy stock to get into and feels good between the hands. The weight distribution is excellent, and the bullpup feels lighter than it actually is.

What I missed was a carrying handle. Sexy curves are nice, but you need something to grab onto. By the time the FS2000 reached me, the factory sling had disappeared. The FS2000 needs a sling to make it “handy.”

I liked the location of the rocking safety right at the tip of your trigger finger, the charging handle conveniently located for a right-handed shooter, the chamber inspection cover, the 1.6X optical scope with its typical European, three-picket-post reticle and the ease of disassembling and maintaining the FS2000.

Magazine fit, however, threw me at first. The M16 magazines were hard to insert and had to be pulled out once the magazine release was depressed. Then I realized there were two rubber gaskets mounted inside the walls of the magazine well to keep dirt and water out. They can be removed if you want the magazines to fall free once the release is hit.

The FS2000 really shoots with the right ammunition. Off the bench at 100 yards, the best 3-shot groups measuring 1/2" to 3/4" were turned in by CorBon’s 62-grain DPX load at 2,878 fps and Hornady’s 55-grain VX loading at 3,023 fps. For military ball, the FS2000 favored NATO 62-grain M855 ammunition over 55-grain M193 ball. The IMI M855 load averaged 1-1/2" for 3-shot groups and moved right along at 3,054 fps.
If you like Glocks, you’ll love the FS2000. It’s a high tech, accurate, corrosion resistant, tough, little, FN Wunderkind.
The ejection port is at the front of the clamshell receiver and spent cases are ejected forward and out. The 17.4" barrel
also has a flash hider attached. The modular hammer group assembly is almost entirely composed of polymer parts.
 
 
Only the springs and pins are metal. The trigger pull was a bit mushy and heavy at 9-1/2 pounds, but the safety is positive and
easy to use.
 
 
The optical sight can be removed and replaced with any suitable optic equipped to fit on the provided Picatinny rail.
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
   
DISASSEMBLY/REASSEMBLY
Remove the magazine, open the chamber inspection cover, cycle the charging handle to cock the hammer and confirm the chamber is empty. Push in the disassembly latch on the right side of the receiver and pull it fully out on the left (1) Pull the barrel and receiver group forward out of the frame (2) Pull the bolt and bolt carrier assembly forward out of the frame (3) Pull the lower edge of the buttplate out, slide the butt plate up and off, grasp the hammer group assembly and remove it to the rear (4) The FS2000 is now fieldstripped (5) Reassemble in reverse order.
 
     
     
The FS2000 accepts plentiful and common 20- or 30-round M16 and AR-15 magazines.
       
   
 
FS2000
MAKER: FN Herstal, Belgium
IMPORTER: FNH USA, P.O. Box 697
McLean, VA 22101, www.fnhusa.com
     
 
ACTION TYPE:
Semi-auto
 
CALIBER:
5.56x45
 
CAPACITY:
30
 
BARREL LENGTH:
17.4"
 
OVERALL LENGTH:
29.1"
 
WEIGHT:
7.86 pounds unloaded
 
FINISH:
Black
 
SIGHTS:
1.6X scope, plus
back-up iron sights
 
STOCK:
Polymer
 
PRICE:
: $2,199
     
 
       
  Order Your Copy
Of The January
Issue Today!
 
       
       

This column is sponsored by:

Ruger
www.ruger.com

Taurus
www.taurususa.com
 
       
   
       
             
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