Operating mechanism The SG 550 is a
selective-fire 5.56×45mm NATO
assault rifle firing from a
closed bolt. It has a
gas-actuated piston-driven
long-stroke operating system derived from the
SIG SG 540 series of rifles, which uses burnt powder gases vented through a port in the
barrel to power the weapon's moving parts. Once inside the gas cylinder, propellant gases pass through an L-shaped channel machined in the piston head and are directed forward towards the gas valve. The pressure build-up in front of the piston head pushes the piston and bolt carrier rearward. As the piston is driven back, the gas port and the L-shaped channel move out of alignment, cutting off the supply of gas to the cylinder. Surplus gas and powder residues are evacuated through an exhaust port in the gas cylinder. The manually adjustable gas valve has two settings, one for normal operation, and the second setting for use in the presence of heavy fouling or icing. The
rotary bolt locking mechanism consists of two steel locking lugs that engage locking recesses in the breech, and is identical to that used in the SG 540. A spring-loaded
extractor is incorporated into the bolt while a fixed protrusion on one of the receiver's internal guide rails ejects the spent cartridge casings.
Features The rifle is hammer-fired and has a trigger mechanism with an
ambidextrous safety and
fire selector switch that has 4 settings: "S"—safe, "1"—single fire, "3"—3-round
burst and "20"—fully
automatic fire. The 3-round burst mode "3" and the fully automatic "20" position can be disabled by a rotating safety guard to avert accidentally activating the continuous fire mode. The
trigger is enclosed in a pivoting trigger guard which can be folded down to the left or right side allowing for unhindered operation with winter gloves. The trigger pull is approximately . The firearm is fed by lightweight 20-round box magazines, 30-, 10- and 5-round magazines are also available. The magazines are
molded from a translucent polymer and can be locked together using studs in order to facilitate quicker reloading (
Jungle style). The empty weight of a 20-round magazine is and for a 30-round magazine. A bolt hold-open device locks the bolt carrier assembly open after expending the last cartridge from the
magazine and is released by lifting the bolt catch lever located on the left side of the
receiver. Alternatively, a left-handed shooter may release the bolt by pulling the rubber-coated charging handle to rear a short distance. The SG 550 has a side-folding skeletonized
buttstock (folds to the right side of the receiver) and a
lightweight aluminium bipod that folds into grooves in the lower handguard. The hinged stock is firmly locked in the folded position by a socket in the butt which clips into a plastic stud on the handguard; a firm pull will release the stock which is then swung into the closed position and locked by a button catch. A collapsible side-folding stock is also available. The stock,
pistol grip, and handguards are made of a high-strength
polymer, and are produced in either green or black colour options. The
steel receiver housing and several other components are manufactured using stamping and welding; external steel surfaces are finished with a ceramic-reinforced enamel coat known as Ilaflon. The heavy, cold hammer-forged barrel is screwed into the receiver and is equipped with a slotted "bird cage" type
flash suppressor that is also used to launch
rifle grenades (using standard, live
ammunition) or attach a knife
bayonet (the bayonet is supported by a lug located at the base of the gas block). The rifled barrel has 6 right-hand grooves and the Swiss Army specification 254 mm (1:10 in) rifling twist rate is optimized for Swiss military GP 90 ammunition. An export-oriented
5.56×45mm NATO barrel configuration with a 178 mm (1:7 in) twist rate is also available, to adequately stabilize the relatively long NATO L110/M856 5.56×45mm NATO tracer projectile. All rifles are
test fired for accuracy and function prior to leaving the factory at the manufacturer's underground 300 m test range. Random new rifles out of production were tested on a machine rest. In a 24 single shot string starting with a cold weapon and using GP 90 ammunition, the R50 or 50%
windage and
elevation dispersion of any individual weapon must have been within an group at 300 m, the 50% windage and elevation dispersion must have averaged . The employed
circular error probable method cannot be converted and is not comparable to US military methods for determining rifle accuracy. When the R50 results are doubled the hit probability increases to 93.7%. The gas system's components are made of
stainless steel. The barrel, bolt, bolt carrier, and firing pin are all made with steel that has been
gas nitrided, hardened and tempered. The bolt and carrier, along with most other components internal to the receiver undergo a
phosphating process.
Sights night sights. The SG 550 series rifles have a long sight radius and are equipped with
iron sights adjustable for both windage and elevation. The sights are similar to those on some
Heckler & Koch weapons, such as the
HK G3 or
HK MP5. The sights consist of a rear, rotating
diopter drum soldered to the receiver and a hooded front post installed in the gas block. The rear sight has an open notch setting marked "1" designed for immediate firing up to 100 m but also contains apertures with settings "2", "3" and "4" corresponding to 200, 300 and 400 m firing ranges. The 400 m setting has a removable iris for sportive shooting. The sights are adjustable via micrometer screws with windage and elevation increments of 0.15
mil (≈0.52
moa), or at 100 m. For night use, the dedicated "1" notch setting in the rear sight drum is provided with two self-luminous
tritium-powered inserts fitted laterally on each side of the notch and additionally in a flip-up post attached to the foresight. When firing rifle grenades the front sight hood is aligned with the uppermost edge of the grenade's warhead, this provides an estimated point of impact up to 75 m. The rifle grenades intended for this purpose were FN/Luchaire Type 58-N bullet-though
anti-tank grenades. For designated marksman use, the SG 550 is equipped with a Kern 4×24
telescopic sight on a quick-detachable mount. The sight weighs and includes a variety of features, such as
STANAG 2324/MIL-STD-1913 compliant mounting components, a
Bullet Drop Compensation (BDC) elevation adjustment knob for ranges from 100 to 600 m, a tritium-illuminated
reticle that enables target acquisition in low-light conditions and a diopter eyesight correction adjustment. Included with the sight is a lens hood for mounting on the ocular that reduces image quality-impairing stray light and a gray filter for glare reduction. The basic model of this optical sight was already used on the Stgw 57. The upper receiver can accept quick-detachable
rails and adapters used to mount optics (STANAG 2324 compliant). The
scope mounting system consists of a centering hole located on the front face of the rear sight assembly and a
dovetail-like mounting point at the front end of the receiver. Swiss Arms (respectively
Brügger & Thomet) offer several types of quick-release scope mounts and
Picatinny rails. A version of the rifle with an integral receiver-mounted Picatinny rail is also offered; in this configuration the weapon is fitted with flip-up emergency battle sights—a rear aperture sight which folds down into a recess in the rail and a folding front blade.
Accessories Both the rifle and carbine come standard with a spare magazine,
sling,
cleaning kit and a loading aid for rapid magazine filling. The full-sized SG 550/551 will accept SIG's 40 mm
GL 5040/5140 grenade launcher (Swiss military designation: 40 mm
Gewehraufsatz 97), which is mounted under the barrel via an eccentric latch and replaces the lower
handguard. The grenade launcher is a single-shot
breech-loaded weapon that is supplied with a leaf sight that attaches to the rifle's rear sight base and enables accurate firing out to 200 m. The lightweight
aluminium launcher weighs unloaded, and is operated independently of the rifle. It can use a wide array of 40×46mm grenades, including extended range high-pressure types and non-lethal baton or anti-riot projectiles. The compact SG 552/553 can be fitted with smaller GL 5340 underbarrel grenade launcher. An Stgw 90
bayonet can also be mounted to the rifle. The bayonet has an overall length of 310 mm and a muzzle ring diameter of 22 mm. The 177 mm long blade is single-edged and it has no
fuller. The bayonets are manufactured exclusively for the Swiss Army by
Victorinox and in the past by
Wenger until Victorinox acquired Wenger in 2005. With a proper lug adaptor, the rifle will also accept a NATO-pattern
KCB-77 (made originally by Carl Eickhorn of
Solingen,
West Germany) or the American
M9. ==Variants==