Forgotten Weapons

Forgotten Weapons

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Forgotten Weapons
  • St Petersburg Cavalry School Mosin Carbine

    This is a rather mysterious - or at least poorly documented - Mosin Nagant carbine variation. Made from an assortment of rifles dated from 1896 through 1920, these carbines were designed to fit Gulkevich folding bayonets. They have a barrel just slightly longer than a 1907 carbine, but were fitte...

  • William Soper's Direct Action Breech Loader

    William Soper of Reading, England designed this "Direct Action Breech Loader" and attempted to have it tested for British military adoption - but he was one day too late to have his rifle included in the tests and the Martini-Henry was ultimately adopted. The intent of Soper's system was to have ...

  • Polish and German Police Silenced CZ-27 Pistols

    Today we are looking at two suppressed CZ-27 pistols, one Polish and one German. The Polish one was issued by the Ministry of Public Security, an agency which only existed from 1945 until 1954. It uses an aluminum suppressor with 5 baffles and 5 rubber wipes, threaded onto an extended barrel. It ...

  • Development of the SIG P220, aka the Swiss P75 Army Pistol

    The SIG 210, aka the P49, was a magnificent pistol, but really too expensive for a modern military sidearm. In the 1960s, the Swiss military began looking for a new service sidearm that would be a bit less costly, and SIG developed the 220 in response, which would ultimately be adopted as the P75...

  • SIG's Pump Action 550 Rifle: the 550 VRB

    In many countries, manually operated rifles are substantially easier for civilians to own than semiautomatic ones - and this was not lost on firearms manufacturers. In an effort to potentially open a new market, SIG experimented with manufacturing a pump action version of their very successful 55...

  • Short: Revolvers with Manual Safeties

    One of the classic mistakes make by authors who are not "gunnies" is to have a character threateningly click off the safety catch...on a revolver (sound effects editors do it in movies and TV, too). Argh! That's not a thing!

    Except that, well, it sometimes is a thing. The Webley-Fosbery autom...

  • Short: How to Pronounce "Garand" (and why)

    Is it "GUH-rand" or "GAIR-end"? Well, let's find out by asking John Cantius himself...

  • H&K VP-70M on the Range: How Useful is the Burst Fire?

    After looking at the history and mechanics of the VP-70 yesterday, we are heading out to the range to try it out (and thanks to Trijicon for generously offering use of their range!). I am curious to see just what that 2200 rpm rate of fire is like to shoot, and whether the awful trigger is as muc...

  • Shooting a Type 99 Nambu in 7.62mm NATO

    Some older footage from the vault - this was a gun I bid on, but did not win. Didn't want to have the whole audience thinking about bidding against me...but now that it's been sold there's no reason not to post the video.

    The conversion of the Type 99 Nambu form 7.7x58mm Japanese to 7.62mm NAT...

  • Shooting the HK G41: Like an HK33 But Worse

    We took a look at the history and mechanics of the G41 yesterday; now it's time to actually try it out on the range!

    It, ah, did not go so well. But I did get to see a cool new malfunction I had never seen before! In fairness to HK, this was a demo gun that has been used and abused. On the ot...

  • Shooting the Berthier Cuirassier Carbine

    The Cuirassier carbine is one of the very scarcest versions of the Berthier in the world, yet Patrick here is going to let me shoot a few rounds through his. My target is a steel plate at 300 meters, with a "feldgrau" silhouette - not visible through the camera, unfortunately.

    Thanks, Patrick!

  • Semiauto M2 Hyde Reproduction: The Interim US WW2 Subgun

    George Hyde designed the gun that would eventually be adopted as the M2 submachine gun in the late 1930s, and it was first tested at Aberdeen Proving Grounds in October of 1939. At that time, the gun had many good traits (weight, handlings, etc) but suffered from parts breakage and unreliability....

  • Dutch Mannlicher Plus Lewis Gun Bolt Equals Semiauto...?

    Basically nothing is known about this rifle in terms of who created it or when - but it is a pretty interesting example of an attempt to convert a bolt action rifle to semiautomatic. This rifle began life as a standard Dutch Mannlicher rifle. The conversion was done here be splicing a Lewis Gun g...

  • South African Army .22 Rimfire Conversion for the R4

    In order to allow cheaper and simpler training of troops, the South African Defense Forces adopted a .22 rimfire conversion kit for their R4 rifles. The system was developed by an engineer named Willie Klotz working for Thor Engineering. It is an open-bolt firing system which is quite complex, an...

  • Overview of South African Gun Laws

    Basic gun ownership in South Africa - what does it involve and how does it work? Dedicated collectors, sportsmen, and hunters? Self-dense and concealed carry? Well, when I was in South Africa I figured I'd get the scoop from a local..

  • RP46 Variations: Russian, North Korean, and US Reproduction

    The RP-46 was the final iteration of the Degtyarev DP27/DPM light machine gun, modified to feed from Maxim/SG43/PK belts instead of pan magazines. As such, it was able to serve the role of a universal machine gun like the MG34 and MG42 until the Soviet Union was able to develop a true purpose-bui...

  • Romagne 14-18 Museum Tour

    Jean-Paul de Vries runs a very interesting private World War One museum in the village of Romagne-sous-Montfaucon in the Meuse region of northeastern France. It is the exact opposite of typical modern museums, as it has a massive number of artifacts on display with almost no printed explanation. ...

  • Holy Mother of Muzzle Flash, the Rico Special

    Rico is a gunsmith at SIG Neuhausen who likes to tinker. He put together this SIG 510 (aka Stgw 57), with a modern collapsing stock, quad rail foreend, Aimpoint red dot, heavy barrel, and massive muzzle brake. And we just happen to have some 7.5 Swiss and a full-auto grip assembly. How hard can i...

  • Ribeyrolles 1918 - France's First Assault Rifle or a Failed Prototype?

    Paul Ribeyrolles was the manager of the Gladiator bicycle factory, and by 1918 he had significant experience in small arms design, having been a core member of the team that designed and built the 1915 CSRG Chauchat automatic rifle and the RSC-1917 semiautomatic rifle. These were forward-looking ...

  • SITES Spectre: Think of it as an SMG, not a pistol

    The SITES Spectre was originally developed by the SITES company (Societa Italiana a Technologie Speciali SPA) of Torino to be the best police and counterterrorist submachine gun on the market. To this end, they studied the other guns on the market and what made a good SMG. The results were rolle...

  • Rollin White's Own Revolver Production

    While Rollin White’s patent for the bored-through cylinder was a massively important element in the development of Smith & Wesson as a company, White’s actual firearms design was impractical and never produced. In fact, there is only one firearm that actually bears his name - the solid frame .22...

  • Pietta's PPS/50 - A Popular PPSh Plinker

    Introduced by the Italian Pietta company in the 1970s (yes, the same Pietta that makes all those reproduction Old West revolvers and lever action rifles), the PPS/50 has been a continuously popular firearm for more than 40 years now. Designed to roughly resemble a Soviet PPSh-41 submachine gun, t...

  • How to Identify a Real M1A1 Carbine vs a Fake

    Looking for a light and compact weapon to equip its new Airborne units, the US military adopted the M1A1 Carbine in May of 1942. This was mechanically identical to the existing M1 Carbine but with a wire-frame side folding stock in place of the standard wooden stock. This allowed the M1A1 to fit ...

  • The Jet Li Maneuver: Beretta Disassembly at Gunpoint

    In Lethal Weapon IV, Jet Li's character is caught at gunpoint by Mel Gibson's character...until he turns the tables by stripping the slide right off Gibson's Beretta 92FS. I wonder how feasible that really is? Also, I wonder if perhaps Jet Li's character was not the first to do it...?