M99 Stanchion

The M99 Special Application Scoped Rifle, also referred to as the M99 Stanchion Gauss Rifle or simply the Stanchion, was a United Nations Space Command anti-matériel rifle.

Design details
The technology used in the M99 is practically the same concept used on the larger mass drivers and MAC, but on a much smaller scale. This system works through using a series of electromagnetic coils (an Asynchronous Linear-Induction Motor) rather than chemical propellants as a source of kinetic energy, and is very similar to the M68 Asynchronous Linear-Induction Motor. The M99's weight and bulk limited the weapon's use to only highly specialized long-range precision sniping roles.

The M99 can be used with a portable computer to provide the ballistic calculations necessary to engage long range targets. The rifle can also be integrated with other systems, such as ARGUS drones for trajectory and ballistic data. The M99 also uses the ATLAS+ system developed by Ohana Prescient Systems.

It must be noted that the M99 is a specialized, dedicated support weapon, and would be a rare sight on the battlefield, as it requires power on a level that only a vehicle or other fixed power source could provide.

Ammunition
The 5.4mm/.21 caliber round is very small in comparison to most standard firearms of the era, but using the Gauss technology, the small rounds have the ability to rip targets apart, even through office buildings. This is due to the high force imparted on the round via the Gauss acceleration method. The round creates shockwaves as it passes through the target. In the case of material targets, this is a minor explosion and the creation of structural fractures. In the case of personnel targets, it simultaneously rips apart and pulverizes the body around the impact area. Even hits in an extremity or near-misses can be deadly.

The rounds have been known to have the ability to travel great distances without affecting the trajectory, delivering enough force to punch through instacrete pylons, blow a human apart, and continue on course through an abandoned parking lot.

Development history
The Model 99 Special Application Scoped Rifle first entered production in 2491, and its production was ceased in 2521. It appears to have been a popular rifle, as per its production length, and it was used mainly for anti-matériel operations. However, the .21 caliber round shot at a velocity of 15,000 meters per second was very effective against "soft" targets.

Operational use
In March 2502, then-Corporal Avery Johnson used an M99 Stanchion to assassinate Jerald Mulkey Ander, the leader of the Secessionist Union. Johnson took the shot as the terrorist leader was driven by in an open-topped truck; Ander's head and upper torso were severed by the impact. In 2524 during Operation: TREBUCHET, Johnson used a Stanchion to kill an Insurrectionist terrorist driving a bomb-rigged truck; his first target was torn apart by the impact force. However, Johnson's second target detonated a bomb inside a Jim Dandy restaurant, killing herself, three special warfare Marines, and thirty-eight civilians.

Trivia
The M99 shares its designation with the real-life Barrett Model 99 single shot sniper rifle, a derivative of the M82 anti-material rifle.

List of appearances

 * Halo Graphic Novel
 * Page 122
 * Halo: Contact Harvest