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And along with the OSS, a few Johnsons, I believe.The Marines used the BAR.
A proper belt pouch/box setup is only marginally less convenient over the long haul than magazines, with the added advantage that belted ammunition is FAR lighter for the same quantity of ammunition than ammunition in magazines. Magazine fed weapons are usually at least somewhat handier in the moment, especially compared to belt fed weapons using NONdisintegrating feed links as the Germans did. A number of weapons have had the provision to use both magazines and belts, including the current FN Minimi/M249, the Czech Vz52 and the Stoner 63.Is a belt-fed gun really as mobile as a magazine fed gun?
Can a belt-fed gun truly be a one-man weapon?
For a SAW, might the BREN (or to some extent the BAR) have an advantage over a belt fed gun (MG34, MG42, M1919, etc) in terms of mobility?
Every squad member can carry a magazine or two.
And there needn't be a dedicated "crew" for the gun.
On the other hand, US Rangers and Airborne used M1919's in lieu of BAR's.
Anyone know what the Marines used for SAW's?
It's a pretty well respected gun, better respected in some cases than it's successor the AA52. Isn't it a partial copy of the BAR? I know that the French tested the BAR extensively after WWI. A lot of this is in "Rock and a Hard Place", the Collector Grade book on the BAR.The Chatelleraut FM 24/29 deserves honorable mention in this. A few years ago I went with a friend to the famous Knob Creek shoot and I got to see one "in action". The owner said he loved it. The weapon saw a lot of service too: From WW 2 onto Indochina, Suez, Algeria, and a bit afterwards. I would definately class it as an equal to the Bren and BAR. It had two triggers: one for semi-auto (forward trigger) and one for full auto (rear trigger).
FM 24/29 light machine gun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It's a pretty well respected gun, better respected in some cases than it's successor the AA52. Isn't it a partial copy of the BAR? I know that the French tested the BAR extensively after WWI. A lot of this is in "Rock and a Hard Place", the Collector Grade book on the BAR.
Actually, ammunitionwise, the French were influenced by the 7.5mm Swiss and the 7.92x57mm Mauser. The original round for the FM 24/29 was basically a 7.5x58mm version of the 7.92 Mauser. A rash of serious explosions during service testing were tentatively attributed to users inadvertently attempting to fire 7.92 Mauser ammunition (which was being used in captured German weapons utilized for training) in the 7.5mm weapon. This led to the case being shortened slightly to 54mm to make it impossible to chamber the Mauser round.I'm not sure how much of the BAR design was incorporated into the FM 24/29 if at all - outwardly it certainly appears to resemble the Bren in appearance, though again I'm not sure if it resembes the Bren mechanically. It was my impression that as the BAR used a rimless cartridge, it was the ammunition that helped convince the French military to look for a replacement to the old rimmed 8mm Lebel cartridge, so I wonder if the 30-06 did more to influence the adoption of the FM 24/29 than the actual BAR design. I'll have to pull out the few books I have on this weapon and reread a few pages.
Ivan, I don't understand your description of a BAR with a" top magazine sticking out of the gun." Would you elaborate, please?
By definition, an "assault rifle" can't be "full power". An assault rifle fires an "intermediate" cartridge, between a pistol round and a rifle round. Examples are the 7.92x33mm, 7.62x39mm, and 5.56x45mm.If I wanted a mobile full power assault rifle then I'd go with the FG-42
By definition, an "assault rifle" can't be "full power". An assault rifle fires an "intermediate" cartridge, between a pistol round and a rifle round. Examples are the 7.92x33mm, 7.62x39mm, and 5.56x45mm.
One reason why the FG42 failed was the great difficulty with which all full power long guns are controlled in fully automatic fire. The Collector Grade book "Sturmgewehr!" goes into excruciating detail on the development of the German assault rifles, as well as their competitors, such as the FG42.
Actually, the MKb42(H and W). Some would argue the Federov before them, although calling the 6.5x50mm Japanese an "intermediate" round is stretching things.I know Dean, I was merely responding to Ivan's post. The first true assault rifle was the StG.44.
The FG-42 didn't fail, the gun was superb and loved by the troops, but it was too expensive to manufacture. Yet it was kept in limited production until the end of the war. But the introduction of the StG.44 made it unnecessary really, as the StG.44 made every other miltary rifle in the world obsolete over night.
But it's true that the FG-42 wasn't an assault rifle, it was an LMG.
Not unlike what happened in the US Army and Marines with the M14, albeit the FG42 was somewhat easier to control in full-auto due to design. Both the FG42 and the full-auto capable Garand offshoots culminating in the M14 are far too light for truly effective full-auto fire.My understanding is that the FG-42 combined the functions of the rifle (whether main battle rifle or assault rifle) and SAW.
For example, in a typical US Army squad, imagine a FG-42 type gun replacing all M-1 Garands and BAR's.