Ron Smith (firearms designer)
Ron Smith | |
---|---|
Born |
Ronald Smith 8 April 1951 Glendale, California |
Residence | Tempe, Arizona |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Small arms designer, CEO |
Known for | Designer of the Smith Enterprise Inc. Vortex Flash Hider |
Spouse(s) | Sonja Sommers |
Ron Smith (born 8 April 1951) is an American small arms designer and President of Smith Enterprise Inc. Smith is most famous for developing the Vortex Flash Hider for use on a variety of small arms and developing the major upgrades and refinements found on the M14 rifle, particularly the United States Navy Mark 14 Enhanced Battle Rifle.[1]
Early life
Smith served in the US Army and the United States Marine Corps for a total of 16 years of active duty. While serving in the Army, Smith was stationed in South Korea as a Staff Sergeant and chief of a M109A3 Howitzer battery. He was certified with nuclear credentials to man the nuclear M109A3 in preparation for a possible invasion by North Korea.
Western Ordnance
Smith was a partner at Western Ordnance, a firearms manufacturing firm that specialized in rifles such as the M1 Garand and M14. Western Ordnance was founded in 1979 by Smith's father, Richard Smith, in Mesa, Arizona.[2] While at Western Ordnance, Smith became a Certified Journeyman in Ordinance and Metallurgy and was the first person to design and field a commercial flash suppressor. Smith would also invent a sound suppressor that could be rebuilt.[3]
Smith Enterprise Inc.
In 1993, Ron Smith reformed the company as Smith Enterprise, Inc. and relocated production to Tempe, Arizona.[4] The company is known for its Vortex Flash Hider, a proprietary heat treating processes, the Crazy Horse weapons upgrade and making numerous upgrades to the M14 rifle platform for the US Military; all of which came from Ron Smith's designs.[1][2]
Ron Smith is the owner of 3 awarded patents and over 10 more initiated patents or patents pending and 5 trademarks in the Sound Suppressor and Flash Hider industry including the following: Vortex Flash Hider, Crazy Horse rifle,[5] Good Iron Muzzle Brake[6] and Wind Talker sound suppressor[7]
References
- 1 2 Cutshaw, Charles Q (2006). "New-era M14 alleviates reliability issues". Jane's International Defence Review. Jane's Information Group. 39: 87. ISSN 0020-6512.
- 1 2 Thompson, Jim (2001). The Classic M1 Garand: An Ongoing Legacy For Shooters and Collectors. Boulder, Colorado: Paladin Press. p. 16. ISBN 9781581602609.
- ↑ Long, Duncan (1987). The Mini-14: The Plinker, Hunter, Assault, and Everything Else Rifle (11 ed.). Boulder, Colorado: Paladin Press. p. 87. ISBN 978-0873644075.
- ↑ Poyer (2006), p. 21
- ↑ Pushies, Fred (2009). "Smith Enterprise' Crazy Horse M21A5 7.62x51mm". Special Weapons for Military & Police. Harris Publishing. 20 (4).
- ↑ "Good Iron 5.56 Muzzle Brake from Smith Enterprise". AR15news. 06/04/2013. Check date values in:
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(help) - ↑ "Wind Talker™ Sound Suppressor,NSN 1005-LLL-997965, P/N 0001AK" (pdf). Retrieved 21 May 2013.
Bibliography
- Poyer, Joe (2006). The M14-Type Rifles: A Shooter's and Collector's Guide, 3rd Edition. Tustin, California: North Cape Publications Inc. ISBN 978-1882391424.
External links
- Smith Enterprise, Inc.
- Ron Smith on Facebook (Official)