Forgotten Weapons

Forgotten Weapons

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Forgotten Weapons
  • A Sneaky Swiss Sniper for Israel: the ZK-31

    In 1949, Israel was still fighting its was of independence, and purchasing arms internationally was difficult to do. The recently-formalized IDF wanted sniper rifles, and looked to Hammerli in Switzerland for a variant of the K-31 straight-pull bolt action action. Two different models were purcha...

  • Stocked Pistols: Great or Garbage?

    Stocked pistols: they have been around as long as pistols have been around, but are they really all that useful?

  • Vugrek's Cell Phone Gun for Organized Crime

    The Vugrek family of Croatia (Marko Sr, Marko Jr, and Ivan) were talented firearms designers, who ended up supplying organized crime. Their best-known development was the Agram 2000 submachine gun, a very well-built weapon submitted to Croatian military trials in the early 1990s. In the wake of p...

  • AMELI: Spain's Not-Mini-MG42 in 5.56mm

    The AMELI (which is a contraction of "ametralladora ligera", or light machine gun) was introduced by CETME in 1981, and adopted by the Spanish military as the MG82. It was a counterpart LMG to the new CETME-L 5.56mm rifles, and is a mechanically fascinating design.

    The AMELI is a roller-delayed ...

  • New Springfield Echelon: Croatia's Chassis System Pistol

    The Springfield Echelon pistol was released today, and it's a significant step forward for Croatian manufacturer HS Produkt. In an effort to appeal to new military and police tenders as well as introduce a forward-looking new design, the company has brought out a pistol based on a serialized chas...

  • The Post-War Legacy of the FG42

    If the FG-42 was such a great gun, then why didn't it get used after the war? Well, two answers...

    1) It was crazy expensive to make and there weren't very many lying around for people to use in quantity after the war.

    2) It was used; there was at least three post-war development projects based...

  • Mateba Unica 6: A Semiauto Revolver in .44 Magnum

    The Mateba 6 Unica is the culmination of a series of revolver development by Italian designer Emilio Ghisoni (1937-2008). The Unica 6 is one of only a few self-cocking revolvers to see commercial production and sales (the other two being the Union and the Webley-Fosbery). It was available in .357...

  • Italian GWOT Steel: the Beretta AR-70/90

    While the Italian military did adopt the AR-70, it did not actually issue them to all troops. Most continued to use the 7.62mm BM-59 until 1990 when the Beretta AR-70/90 was adopted. This rifle was a substantial rework and improvement of the AR-70, using AR-pattern magazines and a 1:7" twist barr...

  • Tara TM-9: What a Tangled Web of Intrigue for a Crappy Gun

    Tara Aerospace is an arms factory in Montenegro that was privatized around 2013 or 2014, and a major stake in it was purchased by one Heinrich Thomet (formerly of Brugger & Thomet, and then the basis for a character in "War Dogs"). The first firearm the new Tara produced was the TM-9, and it was ...

  • Introducing the BD-38: A New Production Copy of the German MP-38

    There has never been a proper semiauto version of the MP40 available in the US, until now. SSD (Sport-Systeme Dittrich) is a German company that has been making semiauto copies of German WW2 small arms for quite some time, and they now have a US partner in the DK Production Group. They plan to re...

  • Yugoslav M57: Tito's Tokarev

    Yugoslavia purchased both 1895 Nagant revolvers and TT33 Tokarev form the Soviet Union after World War Two, but this was only a holdover until domestic pistol production could begin. While Yugoslavia was formally communist, Tito was not a puppet of Moscow, and Yugoslavia did their own development...

  • MSBS "Grot" Ceremonial Parade Rifle (Honor Guard Version)

    The first version of the new MSBS "Grot" rifle purchased by the Polish government was actually a special version for ceremonial parade use. In order to make the gun suitable to that role, a surprising number of changes were made to it - almost every element is different than the standard service ...

  • The Rasheed: Egypt's Semiauto Battle Carbine From Sweden

    Egypt purchased tooling for the Swedish AG-42 Ljungman in 1952, and adapted it to their 8mm Mauser caliber as the Hakim rifle. Later, they scaled the rifle down to 7.62x39mm as the Rasheed, and manufactured about 7,300 of them between 1966 and 1968. These rifles were issued to the District Ward R...

  • Baghdad Carbine: Iraq's Super-Rare Copy of the Rasheed

    In 1974, Iraq and Egypt were still on good relations, and Egypt sold Iraq a batch of 300 Rasheed carbines and the production tooling to manufacture them. Iraq quickly set up production and began making their own copy of the Rasheed in 1974 or 1975, named the "Baghdad". Production ran until 1978, ...

  • Training Scars: Will Competition Habits Get You Kilt in Da Streetz?

    Training scars: the idea that your practice routine will dictate what you do under stress. Is it real? Yes. Does it need to be? No.

    The first objective of basic practice and training is to become proficient at specific tasks, like drawing a pistol or reloading a rifle. Unfortunately, that seems...

  • A Mystery MP-5 in .45ACP...Will it Run?

    The fine folks at DSA had this rather mysterious MP5 in their reference collection, and we decided to take it out to the range to see if it would run. It's an MP-5, but chambered for .45ACP using altered M3 Grease Gun magazines. The original manufacturer is unclear; it's marked as being imported ...

  • South Africa's Sci-Fi Bullpup: Vektor CR-21 at the Range

    Courtesy of DSA, I'm out at the range today with a Vektor CR-21 to see just how it handles compared to a regular Galil...

  • Lever-Delayed Prototype SMG: The MAS Mle 1948 Series

    When France decided to adopt a new 9x19mm submachine gun after World War Two, all three of the main French arsenals (St Etienne/MAS, Chatellerault/MAC, and Tulle/MAT) developed designs to compete for adoption. Tulle would eventually win and their design became the MAT-49, but the other lines of d...

  • "Hill's Patent" Stanley Bull-Dog Revolver: Blatant Patent Theft in 1878

    The Stanley Bull-Dog revolver is an English-production revolver which is marked as being "Hill's Patent". The gun uses an interesting simultaneous ejection system similar to the Fagnus - which one would assume was the subject of Hill's aforementioned patent. The guns were made in a variety of con...

  • Gewehr 29/40 Mauser

    Over the next couple weeks we will be looking at several Polish firearms, and the first one is today: the G29/40. When German forces overran the arms factory in Radom, Poland, they captured in nearly completely intact. One of the guns being produced there had been the wz. 29; a Polish version of ...

  • Q&A #8: Triple Locks, New gun development, and the .50 Cal Lewis Gun

    Thanks to all my great Patreon supporters who make this possible! We have a great selection of questions once again. Want to ask one yourself? Sign up over at Patreon!

    The tools I mention in today's second question are these:

    Screwdriver set: http://amzn.to/2gL9tLV
    Punch set: http://amzn.t...

  • Bendix-Hyde Second Model Prototype Carbine

    In late 1940, the US military opened a competition for what would become the M1 Carbine - a rifle that needed to use the .30 Carbine cartridge and weigh no more than 5 pounds (2.27kg). No fewer than 9 companies and designers entered the first round of competition in April 1941, including John Gar...

  • LeMat Grapeshot Revolvers: Design Evolution

    The LeMat grapeshot revolver is one of the most distinctive and powerful sidearms of the US Civil War, sporting both a 9-round .42 caliber cylinder of pistol bullets and a shotgun barrel as cylinder axis. Alexander LeMat received a contract for 15,000 of these guns for the Confederate military, b...

  • Q&A #4: These Are A Few of My Favorite Things

    Time for another monthly Q&A video - thanks to my supporters on Patreon for helping to make this possible! I have a whole bunch of questions this time, and have timestamps for each individual one here:

    0:52 - Barrel length in terms of bore diameter
    3:18 - Why did the XM8 fail?
    http://weapo...