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What was it? A slow firing, awkward machine gun with the wrong feed system for what they were trying to do with it?The Hotchkiss 13.2 gun was good for what it was, the reasons they were being moved away from by France and Italy didn't have to do with the performance.
The chronology is backwards. First use of the Type 3 is in the A6M5b fighter in place of one the 7.7mm cowl guns. The A6M5a had already shifted to the Type 99 Mark II type 4 gun in the wings. The Type 3 remained in use in the A6M5s until the end of the war, The A6M5B and later went to one type 3 in the fuselage and one type 3 in each wing in addition to the type 99 cannon. The thinking was to get more firepower. A gun that fired faster (800rpm) and higher velocity than the older 20mm guns.As for Japan, I have no idea what they were thinking with the Type 3. I believe they decided to abandon it because it was heavier than the Type 99 mark 1?
Fastest way to get a good LMG was to swallow national pride and order/license the ZB 26. You get what was arguably the best LMG used in WW II, by anybody. It is available 13 years before WW II starts. Just license it and then don't mess with it!It might be a good idea to rechamber it for 8x59mmRB Breda then - it's the closest in dimensions to .303 British and was already in circulation.
I'm pushing for the Breda-SAFAT to be turned into an infantry LMG due to the fact that it would require the least amount of changes to become man-portable compared to other LMGs like the Breda M37/38 or Fiat-Revelli mod 35. It was already sufficiently light (similar in weight to the Bren Mk 1 and MG 42, great deal lighter than the M1919A6), fired quickly (800-900 rpm), fired from belts instead of magazines and was highly reliable.
It may take a bit to get there, but it beats being stuck with that cruel joke of a weapon that is the Breda 30.
Genuinely? Yes.What was it? A slow firing, awkward machine gun with the wrong feed system for what they were trying to do with it?
I hear you and understand completely. But I also have a counterpoint; licensing the ZB 26 is boringFastest way to get a good LMG was to swallow national pride and order/license the ZB 26. You get what was arguably the best LMG used in WW II, by anybody. It is available 13 years before WW II starts. Just license it and then don't mess with it!
Converted aircraft belt feed Browning's are NOT a good idea. There was a reason the M1919A6 was as heavy as it was. Air cooled LMGs have a serious problem with heat. A very, very serious problem with heat. The M1919A6 used a heavier barrel than the M1917. That gun used the water jacket and water to solve the heat problem. Without the water jacket and water the US went to the heavy barrel to use as a heat sink to keep from damaging the barrels. If you want to use a lighter/skinner barrel you have to train the troops to fire fewer rounds per minute (shorter bursts or more time between bursts). The Browning guns had user changeable barrels but they were NOT quick change like the ZB 26, Bren, MG 34/42 or even the Breda 30. Using an ex aircraft gun with it's higher rate of fire just made things worse. The US could afford to throw away barrels in short order (or even throw away the guns in some battles) to get a fire advantage. The Italians didn't have that luxury.
Ask your self in the MG 42 was really that good of a solution to the problem/s The Italians (or many other people) faced. This is heresy to a lot of peopleIf you disagree still, what existing indigenous platform do you propose would be the best for a belt-fed MG42 equivalent?
This displays the same dilemma faced by the breech loading rifle and magazine rifle when a sailing ship then wooden cart or pack horse was first the only way to get ammunition from the factory to the front line to resupply the soldier. Later with some railway help. A fast rate of fire is that which can be supplied with ammunition not the rate of fire of the gun. Napoleonic battles simple muskets and muzzle loaded cannon ate up powder and bullets/cannon balls by the many tens if not of tons and all of which was moved by horse and resupply began with a man on a horse (at best) hand carrying a piece of paper saying load up your wagons and walk your horses across unmade roads to the regiment rear. By Plevna the Turkish soldier in the entrenchments was supplied with 80 rounds and open boxes of a 1,000 placed about, but that was in a fortified position with the reserves plentiful and close at hand.Ask your self in the MG 42 was really that good of a solution to the problem/s The Italians (or many other people) faced. This is heresy to a lot of people
The High rate of fire sounds like a cool Idea, but it needs a crap load of ammo, the gun fires more bullets but it also misses the target more. It needs more spare barrels. It needs more men to carry the ammo.
The MG was a 2nd generation GP machine gun, that is General Purpose machine gun. It was supposed to do everything. Squad machine gun on bipod, company (battalion) machine gun on tripod, AA machinegun on different tripod ( or same one folded up by an origami master). AA machine gun on multiple dedicated mount. AFV machine gun. It was better at somethings than others. The 1200rpm firing rate was real good for AA work, it wasn't so good for a lot of other roles. If you had the manufacturing faculties (the ability to to make a stamped sheet metal receiver) it was cheap to make. The stamping machinery was not cheap. You are trying to make a high cycle rate full powered belt feed machine gun. Manufacturing techniques that work on a 9mm submachine gun don't work anymore.
Italy was already producing the Big Breda 37 machine gun for the army in the company/battalion role and the AFV role. It seemed to do fairly well in those roles. Not ideal but it was generally considered to be reliable which goes a long way with infantrymen. They will put up with heavy, slow firing and even strange (idiotic) feed systems if the gun will fire when they need it to fire. Germans and just about everybody else was moving to heavier guns for AA work pretty quick during the war, assuming the factory capacity to do so.
Belt feed light machine guns look a lot cooler in movies than in real life. Dragging belts through dirt, sand, foliage and other "stuff" usually leads to jams/stoppages with Mr Murphy sitting in a camp stool nearby. Which means there were all sorts drums, boxes, bags and sleeves showing up to hold the ammo as the guns moved (Germans usually unloaded the gun or only left a short belt exposed with moving)Practical Rate of fire of a bipod mounted machinegun is usually down around 120-150rpm due to cooling issues rather than feed issues or actual cycle rate of the gun mechanism.
Italians used the MG 42 (MG 3)for quite a while after WW II, they also came up with a different bolt that would lower the cycle rate to 900rpm. There was also a spring plunger that could reversed and lower spring action also lowered the firing rate. One recommendation for the MG 42 when firing at a rate of 225-250 round per minute (trigger held back for about 20% of the time) was to change the barrel after firing three 50 round belts. Think about that oneStart with cold barrel, fire at 225-250 rounds per minute and change barrels twice in the first 2 minutes. At the end of 3 minutes you have fired off every belt the squad was carrying for the gunner.
MG 42s work a lot better when the gunners are riding in APCs or trucks.
I actually was going to say GMPG but I decided against it as the term didn't exist at the time.Ask your self in the MG 42 was really that good of a solution to the problem/s The Italians (or many other people) faced. This is heresy to a lot of people
The High rate of fire sounds like a cool Idea, but it needs a crap load of ammo, the gun fires more bullets but it also misses the target more. It needs more spare barrels. It needs more men to carry the ammo.
The MG was a 2nd generation GP machine gun, that is General Purpose machine gun. It was supposed to do everything. Squad machine gun on bipod, company (battalion) machine gun on tripod, AA machinegun on different tripod ( or same one folded up by an origami master). AA machine gun on multiple dedicated mount. AFV machine gun. It was better at somethings than others. The 1200rpm firing rate was real good for AA work, it wasn't so good for a lot of other roles. If you had the manufacturing faculties (the ability to to make a stamped sheet metal receiver) it was cheap to make. The stamping machinery was not cheap. You are trying to make a high cycle rate full powered belt feed machine gun. Manufacturing techniques that work on a 9mm submachine gun don't work anymore.
Italy was already producing the Big Breda 37 machine gun for the army in the company/battalion role and the AFV role. It seemed to do fairly well in those roles. Not ideal but it was generally considered to be reliable which goes a long way with infantrymen. They will put up with heavy, slow firing and even strange (idiotic) feed systems if the gun will fire when they need it to fire. Germans and just about everybody else was moving to heavier guns for AA work pretty quick during the war, assuming the factory capacity to do so.
Belt feed light machine guns look a lot cooler in movies than in real life. Dragging belts through dirt, sand, foliage and other "stuff" usually leads to jams/stoppages with Mr Murphy sitting in a camp stool nearby. Which means there were all sorts drums, boxes, bags and sleeves showing up to hold the ammo as the guns moved (Germans usually unloaded the gun or only left a short belt exposed with moving)Practical Rate of fire of a bipod mounted machinegun is usually down around 120-150rpm due to cooling issues rather than feed issues or actual cycle rate of the gun mechanism.
Italians used the MG 42 (MG 3)for quite a while after WW II, they also came up with a different bolt that would lower the cycle rate to 900rpm. There was also a spring plunger that could reversed and lower spring action also lowered the firing rate. One recommendation for the MG 42 when firing at a rate of 225-250 round per minute (trigger held back for about 20% of the time) was to change the barrel after firing three 50 round belts. Think about that oneStart with cold barrel, fire at 225-250 rounds per minute and change barrels twice in the first 2 minutes. At the end of 3 minutes you have fired off every belt the squad was carrying for the gunner.
MG 42s work a lot better when the gunners are riding in APCs or trucks.
From what I can remember for old war games or find quickly on line the Italians used a rather oddball platoon structure. There were two "squads" in each platoon which complicated fire and movement. What really screwed things up was that each "squad" was 18-20 men and had two "sections". The machine gun section of 9 (?) men with a leader and two man machine gun teams, each with a Breda 30 (gunner, loader and two riflemen/ammo carriers). The other 9 man section was all rifles with the platoon leader. Sprinkle in a Sub machine gun or two?Does anyone know how the Italian infantry squad was organized and their normal tactical methods - ie were they MG-centric like the Germans, rifle-centric like the US (for most of the war), or in-between like the UK?
To be honest I've never been sold on 7.35 mm Carcano in general - it seems like a waste of time given the other options Italy had during the period. It might've been a better choice to adopt 8 mm Mauser en masse given the superior performance and significant headstart.I don't know some of the reasons that the Italians changed from the 6.5mm to the 7.35mm caliber. Some of the reasons given in some sources make no sense to me.
I have stated a number of times before that I am a fan of the 6.5mm bore size.
For some reason/s the Italians never updated the cartridge keeping the original 10.5gram (162 grain) round nose bullet until the end of production. Many other major nation (and few minor ones) had changed to Spitzer nose bullets before WW I with better ballistics and less recoil (and less raw materials). Sweden changed their 6.5mm over in 1941.
A problem the Italians had was that it may have been difficult to cut off the old long rife barrels to shorter carbine barrels and still keep accuracy. The Italians used gain twist rifling. Little or no twist right in front of the chamber with increasing rate of twist as it approached the muzzle. Which means if you take an existing 780mm rifle barrel and cut off about 250mm to turn it into a carbine, the shorter barrel not only has less velocity it may not be spinning the bullet fast enough to stabilize well for accuracy.
Boring the barrel out a bit and re-rifling it 7.35mm and uniform twist may solve that problem? It obviously introduced others.
Italy was not foreign to the concept of auto-loading rifles even prior to WW1. Theoretically you could go back even further to the Cei-Rigotti of the 1890's which also used 6.5 mm Carcano. While possibly disruptive to the supply chain, any planner worth their salt would see the value in something like that.Spending a lot of money on semi-automatic rifles may not be where Italy want's to spend their resources. The 1938 7.35mm Carcano were often a cheap conversion and the idea of issuing an infantry rifle with fixed sight for 200meters underscores the low level of importance the Italian authorities were placing on the infantry rifle.
With a spitzer bullet and even a 2 position rear sight effective range could have been increased by several hundred meters. But that means trying to change over/replace a lot of the existing ammo.
From the manufacturing and logistical standpoint, that's a far superior solution than the introduction of a new 7.35 mm cartridge. End one does not loose basically anything wrt. the ballistic performance.Not to mention that said supply chain issues would've been completely negated had they converted the 6.5 to a spitzer design shortly after or during WW1 like every other cartridge manufacture elsewhere.
Hell, even the 8x59 mm Rb Breda might've been less disruptive due to it already existing in the supply chain along with giving the advantage of carrying ammunition compatible with the main two infantry-level MMG's - that being the Fiat-Revelli 35 and Breda 37/38.
The next problem for the Italian infantry was the 45mm Brixia mortar.
Once again, way way too much money for it's combat effect. A 0.45kg bomb launched to 530 meters? It used blank cartridges feed by the magazine to launch the bombs.
I am not saying there never any other rounds than HE but they are not mentioned most of the time.
The British 2in was a lighter, much simpler device that fired an HE bomb of about twice the weight to 460meters. It also fire two types of smoke, an illuminating round and signaling star shells in four colors. All types of ammo may not have been available to a particular use at all times but it was, on the whole, a much more useful weapon (AT batteries had one 2in mortar for both smoke and for firing illuminating rounds for night attacks.
Italians also have had in their arsenal the long & heavy 81mm bombs, more than twice the weight of the normal, short bombs (6.825 kg vs. 3.3 kg). Weight of the explosive charge was 2 kg, vs. the light bombs having just 0.45 kg.As noted earlier, the Italian 81mm mortar out ranged the British 3in by a large margin for most of the desert war.
But they never introduced a modern spitzer type bullet for the 6.5, was there any technical reason why this wasn't possible like needing a different kind of rifling, or different length of cartridge requiring redoing magazines and feed mechanisms etc.?
A large factor contributing to the inadequacy of Italy's artillery was due to them basing their ground strategy off the mountainous terrain the country was surrounded by. This mountain-based thinking bled into tank design, weapon design, artillery design and so on.On the related issue: Italian production artillery pieces was really pathetic.
That problem had a lot to do with Italy not being a rich country, and the expenses they made during the SCW (seems like Italians spent even more than Germans there, helping the Nationalists) and the Abyssinia war.