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Book Review: Weapons Mounts for Secondary Armament
"Weapon Mounts for Secondary Armament" is a nearly 1200-page reference on all manner of machine gun mounting systems for tanks, aircraft,t light vehicles, and ground mounts. The book was commissioned in 1957 by the Detroit Arsenal as a reference for engineers tasked with designing the secondary w...
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Book Review: Arms & Accoutrements of the Mounted Police 1873-1973
The Royal North West Mounted Police (later merged with the Dominion Police to become the RCMP - Royal Canadian Mounted Police) are an interesting and often overlooked element of the western frontier. We Americans tend to only think about the Old West up to northern Montana and Idaho, but of cours...
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Book Review: Machine Gun Accessories & Support Equipment
Robert Segel, long-time editor of Small Arms Review magazine, has just published a book on machine gun accessories and equipment, and it's a very valuable new piece of reference material for the community. Mr. Segel has long been a machine gun collector, and has paid particular attention to acces...
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Book Review: The Martini Henry, For Queen and Empire
One of the perennial challenges facing authors of firearms reference books is balancing the very technical nit-pickery with the broad historical view of a gun and its context in world events. The emphasis is usually tending towards the technical, but Neil Alpinshaw has done an excellent job of ba...
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Book Review: The US Rifle M14 - The Last Steel Warrior
The M14 rifle is a rather controversial arm in American military service. As Frank Iannamico's title says, it was the last steel-and-wood infantry rifle to be adopted by the US military, and it has a great many very loyal and dedicated fans. At the same time, it had the shortest production span o...
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Book Review: German Military Rifles and Machine Pistols 1871-1945
I have had several people ask if I might write a book on the development of German military rifles in the same format as my book on French rifles. I do not plan to, in large part because there is a lot of literature on the subject already published in English. In particular, Hans Dieter Gotz' boo...
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Book Review: French Tanks of the Great War
Having recently finished guiding a WW1 battlefield tour in France and Belgium, I found myself curious to learn more about the details of French tank development and service. We are used to seeing and hearing about the British tanks, but it was actually the French Renault FT-17 light tank that wou...
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Book Review: Foundations of Sniper Marksmanship
John C. Simpson has been teaching military and police sniper training since 1985 - nearly as long as I have been alive. I encountered him back when I filmed a video on a Confederate Whitworth sniper, and he helped me correct my explanation of how the British were measuring rifle accuracy and prec...
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Book Review: FN49 - The Last Elegant Old World Military Rifle (New Edition)
I have been impatiently awaiting the expanded second edition of Wayne Johnson’s “The FN-49: The Last Elegant Old-World Military Rifle” ever since I heard a rumor that it was in the works. The first edition was printed in 2004, and sold out before I started looking for a copy. There was also a Col...
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Book Review: Flayderman's Guide to Antique American Firearms
Norm Flayderman opened an antique gun shop in 1952, and a few years later expanded his marketing to a mail-order catalog. He would ultimately print 119 such catalogs by 1998, researching and documenting a tremendous amount of information on antique American firearms. In 1977 he published the firs...
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Book Review: Echoes of an African War
Chas Lotter was 22 when, in 1971, he enlisted as a field medic in the Rhodesian Army. He served until 1980, leaving as a Sergeant and emigrating to South Africa. His book, "Echoes of an African War" is a collection of poetry he wrote throughout his military service and in the years after. It show...
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Book Review: The Dreyse Military Needle-Ignition System
Leonard and Guy A-R-West have released the second book in their series on antique military rifles, this time on the Dreyse system. As anyone interested in the Dreyse has probably already learned, there is very little written in English about them, and this book a welcome addition! It includes an ...
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Book Review: Amateur's Guide to the Colt's Thompson SMG
Tom Davis Jr, having previously written on the history of the Thompson SMG in British WWII use, has recently released a buyer's guide to the Colt's Thompson SMG. This is not intended to be a history of the gun - although it does include some elements of that, like a remarkably thorough section on...
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Book Review: History of the Mauser Rifle in Chile, by David Nielsen
David Nielsen's newly released book on Chilean Mauser rifles is a tremendous piece of academic work - which is both good and bad. It is 192 pages dedicated to the testing and procurement of the Models 1895, 1912, and 1935 Chilean Model Mauser rifles and carbines (although the focus is much more o...
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Book Review: Carvings From the Veldt (3 Volumes)
Over the past 15 year, Dave C. George has compiled three volumes of his book "Carvings From the Veldt", documenting nearly a thousand carved rifles from the Boer War. This is feature almost unique to the Boer War, in which the Boers were really much more of a civilian militia than a formal standi...
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Book Review: The British Sniper - A Century of Evolution
Steve Houghton's newly released book "The British Sniper: A Century of Evolution" is an excellent reference on British sniper rifles, accessory equipment, and training from World War One through the present. Where Skennerton's work ends in the 1980s, some of Houghton's best information covers the...
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Book Review: Browning Auto-5 Shotguns
I am normally more interested in military small arms than sporting ones, but the Browning Auto-5 is such an important firearm that it deserves the recognition of and proper small arms enthusiast. It was not only the first long recoil firearm, but also the first viable semiautomatic shotgun - and ...
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Book Review: Arming the West
Published in 2008, "Arming the West" is, as it self-describes, "a fresh new look at the guns that were actually carried on the frontier." Herbert Houze used the sales records of the Shuyler, Hartley, and Graham company to compile a survey of the makes and models of firearms actually shipped to th...
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Book Review: US Aerial Armament in World War II
Aircraft armament is an area of firearms study that is vastly under appreciated by most people, largely because it's difficult to study aircraft guns without the aircraft themselves (and those take up a lot of storage space, among other things). William Wolf's book on US WWII aircraft armament is...
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Does the Boberg/Bullpup9 Design Reduce Recoil?
If you ask Bond Arms, they will tell you that their Bullpup9 (previously the Boberg XR9S) gets multiple benefits from its unique operating mechanism. Most everyone familiar with the gun knows about the idea that it provides and extra cartridge-length worth of barrel for the same overall length as...
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French Mle 1892 Revolver in Competition
Today at the Backup Gun Match, I'm shooting a French Modèle 1892 service revolver. It's a 6-shot revolver with a swing-out cylinder, chambered for the 8x27mm cartridge (often called 8mm Lebel, although it really shouldn't be). I'll be shooting in a mix of single action and double action as seems ...
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Bernardon-Martin: France's First Commercial Semiautomatic Pistol
The Bernardon-Martin was the first commercially viable semiautomatic pistol manufactured in France; a .32ACP (7.65mm Browning) striker-fired pocket pistol competing with the FN Browning 1899/1900. The first model was introduced in 1907 with a fixed magazine, which rather quickly was changed to a ...
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Beretta 57: Italy Makes a .30 Carbine SMG for Morocco
The Model 57 is a select-fire carbine made by Beretta around the .30 Carbine cartridge. It uses a newly designed magazine much more durable that the American M1/M2 Carbine magazines, and has a tilting bolt locking system coupled with a gas tappet style of piston. Many of the features are distinct...
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Benelli B76 vs MP3S at the Range
The Benelli MP3S is a very rare pistol in .32 S&W, and a nearly unheard of one in 9mm Parabellum. Well, thanks to viewer Todd we have one of those 9mm examples to take to the range today - thanks, Todd! I figured it would be interesting to try it side by side with my standard Benelli B76 and see ...