It was announced in October 1983 that FN was seeking to develop a more powerful replacement for the .50 BMG, better able to penetrate light armoured vehicles (in effect, a Western equivalent to the
Soviet 14.5mm
KPV heavy machine gun). FN initially selected the 20mm Hispano case as a basis and
necked it down to 15mm for the FN-BRG (15x115). The weapon and its ammunition had a protracted development and finally emerged as a 15.5mm because of fast barrel wear. The 15.5x106 was FN's second effort to make a KPV competitor in the BRG-15, appropriately by necking out the KPV's case. It also utilized an unusual
dual feed device, with link ammunition belts feeding from both the right and left. Spent shell casings were ejected out of the bottom of the gun, as in FN's later
P90 personal defense weapon. The quick-change barrel assembly developed for the BRG-15 was redesigned for use in an updated version of the M2HB. The project was cancelled in the early 1990s, as FN shifted its focus to the
P90 personal defense weapon. The subcaliber bullet fired from an FN BRG-15 15.5mm round had a muzzle energy of 40,000 J (more than double that of the
M2HB at 18,000 J of bullet energy at the muzzle). ==See also==