Knowledge

M1917 Enfield

Source đź“ť

885:, the bolt handle recesses into a notch in the receiver, which serves as an emergency locking lug in the event of failure of the frontal locking lugs. This change saved machine time needed on the rifle bolt, cutting costs and improving production rates, and this alteration has since been adopted by many commercial bolt-action rifle designs for the same reasons. The unusual 'dog-leg' shaped bolt handle is low profile and places the bolt knob just rearwards of the trigger close to the firer's hand, facilitating rapid cycling and fire. Like the Lee–Enfield, P13 and P14, the safety falls under the firer's thumb and can be operated silently. The M1917 Enfield bolt locking lugs had a 4 degree helical angle with matching angles on the receiver lug seats (the technical term is interrupted threading). This means that final head space is not achieved until the bolt handle is turned down all the way. The design probably used helical locking lugs to allow for chambering imperfect or dirty ammunition and that the closing cam action is distributed over the entire mating faces of both bolt and receiver lugs. This is one reason the bolt closure feels smooth. The angled lugs had no tendency to unwind with chamber pressure since the "angle of repose" of smooth, lubricated steel surfaces is approximately 8 degrees. One advantage was that when the bolt handle was turned up the lugs cleared each other immediately so full effort was applied to the extraction cam. The trigger had a mechanical interlock to prevent firing unless the bolt was fully locked. The location of the safety on the right rear of the receiver has also been copied by most sporting bolt-action rifles since, as it falls easily under the firer's thumb. The trigger pull is ≥ 3  523:, but due to the difficulties in production, rather than re-tool the Pattern 14 factories to produce the standard U.S. rifle, the M1903 Springfield, it was realized that it would be much quicker to adapt the British design. Although it might have been faster to retain chambering for the .303 British military cartridge, the design was modified for the U.S. .30-06 Springfield cartridge to simplify ammunition logistics. The Enfield design was well suited to the .30-06 Springfield; it was a big, strong action and was originally intended to employ a long, powerful, rimless bottlenecked cartridge. Accordingly, Remington Arms Co. altered the design for caliber .30-06 Springfield, under the close supervision of the U.S. Army Ordnance Department, which was formally adopted as the 387: 42: 1266: 1076: 1037: 1199: 1238: 909:
9 lb 3 oz (4.17 kg) empty – the M1903 Springfield weighed 8 lb 11 oz (3.94 kg) empty – and a rifle with sling, oiler, and fixed bayonet weighed over 11 lb (4.99 kg). The M1917's long barrel and issued 16.5 in (419 mm) blade bayonet proved too lengthy and cumbersome for trench fighting, while its weight and overall length made the rifle difficult to use for some smaller-statured soldiers. During World War I the average height of United States soldiers was 5 ft 7.5 in (1.71 m).
840: 428: 1024: 1010: 864:, would all use similar rear sights. The front sighting element consisted of a wing-protected front post, and was adjusted laterally and locked into position during assembly at the arsenal. The M1917 rear sight element was situated on an elongated receiver bridge, which added weight to the action, as well as lengthening the bolt. The M1917 has a 31.76 in (806.7 mm) sight radius. The battle sight radius is slightly shorter at 31.69 in (804.9 mm). The M1917 action weighs 58  744:
initially allotted to Canadian Army Basic and Advanced Training Centres, the Royal Military College of Canada and Canadian Army (Reserve) units. They would also be issued to the Veterans Guard of Canada, the Pacific Coast Militia Rangers and the Royal Canadian Air Force. The M1917 would fill a critical role in Canada's war effort, freeing .303-calibre weapons for front-line use or to be supplied to the UK after Dunkirk, when Canada provided 75,000 Ross Mark III rifles beginning on 22 May 1940.
1252: 1166: 1225: 1153: 987: 1122: 1287: 1050: 1184: 1108: 1090: 1139: 856:
50 yd (46 m) increments. The ladder aperture sight moves vertically on a slide, and hence was not able to correct for wind drift. The rear sight element was protected by sturdy "ears" and proved to be faster and more accurate than the typical mid-barrel sight offered by Mauser, Enfield or the Buffington battle sight of the M1903 Springfield. Future American rifles, such as the M1903A3 Springfield,
824: 832: 896:). One notable design flaw was the leaf spring that powered the ejector, which could break off and render the ejector inoperable. A combat-expedient repair method was to slip a bit of rubber under the bolt stop spring. A redesigned ejector, incorporating a small coil spring in place of the fragile leaf spring, was developed and can be fitted to the M1917 to remedy this issue. 406: 439:(SMLE) as their main rifle. Compared to the German Mausers or U.S. 1903 Springfield, the SMLE's .303 rimmed cartridge, originally a black powder cartridge, was ill-suited for feeding in magazine or belt-fed weapons and the SMLE was thought to be less accurate than its competition at longer ranges. The long-range accuracy of the German 908:
and other US designed arms. The M1917 had a long 26-inch heavyweight barrel compared to the lighter 24-inch barrel of the M1903 Springfield. With the longer sighting plane, the M1917 proved generally more accurate at long distances than the M1903, at the expense of greater weight. The M1917 weighed
478:
cartridge. The design carried over a Lee–Enfield type safety at the rear of the action and a bolt that cocked on closing to ease unlocking of the bolt during rapid fire. An advanced design, for the era, of aperture rear sight and a long sight radius were incorporated to maximize accuracy potential.
855:
line consisting of rear receiver aperture battle sight calibrated for 400 yd (366 m) with an additional ladder aperture sight that could be flipped up and was calibrated for 200–900 yd (183–823 m) in 100 yd (91 m) increments and 900–1,600 yd (823–1,463 m) in
739:
during World War II, these were part-time soldiers akin to the British Home Guard. In an ironic reversal of names, in Irish service the M1917 was often referred to as the "Springfield"; presumably since an "Enfield" rifle was assumed to be the standard Irish MkIII Short Magazine Lee–Enfield, while
552:
feed, internal box magazine, bolt face, chamber and rifling dimensions were altered to suit the .30-06 Springfield cartridge and the US pattern 5-round stripper clips, the stock was slightly redesigned, lightening it somewhat, and the volley fire sights on the left side of the weapon were deleted.
539:
plant, a combined total more than twice the 1903's production, and was the unofficial service rifle. Eddystone made 1,181,908 rifles – more than the production of Remington (545,541 rifles) and Winchester (465,980 rifles) combined. Although standardization with interchangeable parts was intended,
974:
was the name given to a portion of the Chinese Army equipped and trained by the US during World War II. One of the weapons given to X Force was the M1917 rifle. These rifles were too big for the small-statured Chinese soldiers so the barrels and stocks were shortened from an overall length of 46
920:
The M1917 action made from nickel-steel proved very strong, and was used as the basis for a variety of commercial and gunsmith-made sporting rifles in standard and magnum calibers between the world wars and after. Later, Remington Arms redesigned the M1917, removing the "ears" and changing it to
880:
mechanism, which when engaged permits the feeding and extraction of single cartridges only while keeping the cartridges in the magazine in reserve. In a manufacturing change from the Mauser 98 and the derivative Springfield, the bolt is not equipped with a third 'safety' lug. Instead, as on the
875:
The rifle maintains the British cock-on-closing feature, in which the bolt's mainspring is loaded and the rifle cocked as part of the return stroke of the bolt, which aided rapid fire, especially as the action heated up. Most bolt action designs after the Mauser 98 cocked as part of the opening
743:
As with all belligerents, Canada entered the Second World War short of small arms to equip its expanding military. 80,000 M1917s, designated “Rifle, Enfield .30/06,” were purchased in July 1940, along with 5,000,000 rounds of .30-06 ammunition. A further 20,000 were purchased in 1941. They were
454:
ammunition with pointed (spitzer) projectiles entered service after the Boer War in 1910, a committee was formed to develop an entirely new design of rifle and cartridge. The starting point was to copy many of the features of the Mauser system. The rifle was developed at the
731:, to indigenous forces in the China-Burma-India theater, to Filipino soldiers under the Philippine Army and Constabulary units and the local guerrilla forces and to the Free French Army, which can occasionally be seen in wartime photographs. The M1917 was also issued to the 847:
Due to the original P13 action being designed for a high-powered .276 Enfield round with a larger diameter case than the .30-06 Springfield, the magazine capacity for the smaller diameter .30-06 Springfield was six rounds, although stripper clips held only five cartridges.
899:
The M1917 was well-suited to the rimless .30-06 Springfield round which came closer in overall length and muzzle energy to the original .276 Enfield high-velocity round for which the rifle had been designed than the rimmed, less powerful .303 British round of the
727:; 615,000 arrived in Britain in the summer of 1940, followed by a further 119,000 in 1941. These were prominently marked with a red paint stripe around the stock to avoid confusion with the earlier P14 that used the British .303 round. Others were supplied to the 627:
After the armistice, most M1917 rifles were placed in storage, although Chemical Mortar units continued to be issued them. During the 1920s and 1930s, many M1917 rifles were released for civilian use through the NRA, or were sold as surplus. Many were
479:
Ease of manufacture was also an important criterion. However, the onset of World War I came too quickly for the UK to put it into production before the new cartridge could be perfected, as it suffered from overheating in rapid fire and bore fouling.
1436: 486:
in the United States. They decided to ask these companies to produce the new rifle design in the old .303 British chambering for convenience of ammunition logistics. The new rifle was termed the "Pattern 14". In the case of the P14 rifle,
876:
stroke. The rifle has a characteristic "belly" due to a deeper magazine, allowing the rifle to hold six rounds of the US .30-06 cartridge in the magazine, and one in the chamber. The M1917 Enfield like the Mauser Gewehr 98 had no
696:. After the fall of the Philippines, M1917 rifles were used by Japanese police forces as well as by U.S. and Filipino soldiers with the local guerrillas before the liberation of the Philippines. These rifles were also used by the 944:
elected in 1932 started a military modernization program. Remington Model 1934 rifles based on Model 30 actions with M1917 leftover parts, but fitted with a Mauser-type V sight, more familiar for soldiers using Honduran
544:
on the receiver rather than Winchester) used slightly differing parts, causing interchangeability issues with the rifles produced by Remington and Eddystone until Winchester corrected the problem in later production.
1433: 904:. The M1917's barrel had a 1 in 10 in (254 mm) twist rate and retained the 5-groove left hand twist Enfield-type rifling of the P14, in contrast to the 4-groove right hand twist rifling of the 912:
Many M1917 Enfield rifles were refurbished during World War II with newly manufactured High Standard barrels with 4-groove rifling and Johnson Automatics barrels which had 2-groove rifling.
2261: 715:). Some of these rifles were reconditioned with new bolts manufactured by the United Shoe Machinery Company that were stamped “USMC,” leading to the mistaken impression these were 1434:
http://www.nramuseum.org/the-museum/the-galleries/america-ascending/case-57-world-war-i-allies-the-world-at-war,-1914-1918/us-winchester-model-1917-bolt-action-rifle.aspx
366:(P14) rifle (listed in British Service as Rifle No. 3), which was developed and manufactured during the period 1917–1918. Numerically, it was the main rifle used by the 3141: 2225: 936:
Model 30s weren't selling well, and the company decided to develop a M1917 derivative targeted to Central and South American militaries. This found only one buyer in
450:(1899-1902) made an impression on the British Army, and a more powerful, modern rifle was desired. Thus, even though improved Lee–Enfield variants (the SMLE) and 1443:| National Firearms Museum "U.S. Army Sergeant Alvin York carried an Enfield in 1917 when he won the Medal of Honor for capturing nearly the whole German army." 2242:
THE UK PATTERN 1913, PATTERN 1914, and THE US MODEL OF 1917; A Short History of the “American Enfield” By Marc Gorelick Virginia Gun Collector’s Association
3146: 1318: 3161: 676:) shortages at the start of the war, the M1917 was also issued to artillerymen, and both mortarmen and artillerymen carried the M1917 in North Africa. 602:
while training with the British in the north of France, then were reissued M1917 rifles (Eddystone). According to his diary, Sergeant York also used a
2585: 2026: 3131: 1453: 1192:: In 1952 Norway received 24,992 P-17 rifles from Britain in exchange for their inventory of .303 rifles which were acquired during and after WW2. 815:
by the Danish, as their service weapon, due to the high reliability of these bolt-action rifles in the harsh conditions of high Arctic Greenland.
1945: 2001: 1851:
The US M1917 Springfield Rifle which Springfield Armory produced for the British Army in World War I. The Mujahideen called them the G3 rifle.
1498: 2774: 1741: 1533: 2473: 2210: 1681: 2268: 771:. This rifle was also used, unofficially, in small Middle-East and African conflicts as a military-assistance program supplied rifle. 684:
in the 101st Airborne in the Normandy action, reported seeing some M1917 rifles issued to rear-echelon U.S. troops in France during
598:(which York was a part of) official history states the division had been issued the M1917 (Eddystone), then replaced them with the 3151: 1555: 1823: 1665: 1629: 1611: 1405: 971: 474:
or P13, included a front locking, dual lug bolt action with Mauser type claw extractor as well as a new, powerful rimless
2608: 1868: 3126: 2812: 2767: 2156: 2131: 2106: 2057: 1928: 1029: 488: 183: 2241: 2220: 1778: 2466: 732: 599: 1481: 482:
As it entered World War I, the UK had an urgent need for rifles, and contracts for the new rifle were placed with
1977: 1657:
Korean War Order of Battle: United States, United Nations, and Communist Ground, Naval, and Air Forces, 1950–1953
3012: 2613: 2580: 2081: 436: 747:
The M1917 was supplied to both Denmark and Norway after WWII as an interim weapon prior to the arrival of the
1641:
Edgecombe, David Walter, 1940- Defending The Dominion: Canadian Military Rifles 1855-1955, ISBN 1-894581-15-6
877: 720: 580: 367: 2618: 3156: 2760: 2459: 728: 724: 378:
in Greenland still use the M1917, which performs reliably in Arctic conditions, as their service weapon.
2339: 3136: 3017: 3007: 2827: 2783: 2623: 2384: 2254: 2236: 1457: 1279: 716: 507:. Thus, three variations of the P14 and M1917 exist, labeled "Winchester," "Remington" or "Eddystone". 2215: 3022: 2347: 1846: 1578: 1313: 1175: 941: 640:. It was so popular as a sporting weapon that Remington manufactured about 30,000 new rifles as the 500: 456: 2752: 703:
Before and during World War II, stored rifles were reconditioned for use as reserve, training and
553:
The markings were changed to reflect the model and caliber change. A 16.5-inch blade bayonet, the
2897: 2180: 1897: 1243: 693: 532: 504: 386: 141: 1375: 851:
Both P14 and M1917 rifles are noted for several design features. The rifle was designed with an
1063: 804: 637: 595: 557:
was produced for use on the rifle; it was later used on several other small arms including the
536: 375: 41: 1920: 1655: 2988: 2973: 2963: 2650: 2645: 2424: 2420: 2205: 2196: 562: 558: 160: 1811:
Afghanistan, Arms and Conflict: Armed Groups, Disarmament and Security in a Post-War Society
391: 3057: 2837: 2713: 1527: 901: 608: 471: 420: 363: 264: 133: 1624:
Stephen M Cullen, In Search of the Real Dad's Army, Pern & Sword Books Linmited 2011,
8: 2945: 2879: 2678: 2359: 780: 137: 121: 2002:"The military rifle cartridges of Honduras from Cortez to zelaya. - Free Online Library" 1499:"The military rifle cartridges of Honduras from Cortez to zelaya. - Free Online Library" 961: 632:", sometimes including rechambering to more powerful magnum hunting cartridges, such as 279: 3100: 2983: 2917: 2741: 2660: 1275: 922: 677: 641: 633: 576: 516: 431:.30-06 Springfield (7.62Ă—63mm) rifle cartridge for which the M1917 Enfield was adapted. 395: 269: 220: 155: 1729: 3047: 2907: 2859: 2817: 2600: 2567: 2529: 2451: 2392: 2319: 2152: 2127: 2102: 2098: 2077: 2053: 1924: 1913: 1819: 1805: 1661: 1625: 1602: 1537: 1396: 1362: 1213: 1000: 996: 965: 960:
Additional surplus rifles were bought by European arms distributors and converted to
946: 905: 784: 764: 673: 617: 572: 520: 496: 443: 291: 283: 191: 150: 125: 113: 1523: 839: 579:
design in numbers produced and units issued. By November 11, 1918, about 75% of the
427: 3065: 2832: 2799: 2721: 2703: 2506: 2488: 2327: 2295: 2291: 1840: 1582: 1081: 933: 21: 2351: 1337: 668:, the U.S. Army was still issuing the M1917 to chemical mortarmen. Perhaps due to 274: 3042: 2978: 2655: 2534: 2388: 2047: 1809: 1485: 1440: 926: 707:
weapons; these rifles are identified by having refinished metal (sandblasted and
689: 528: 447: 301: 17: 1730:
Trends in Heights and Weights, YEARBOOK OF AGRICULTURE1959, Miligent L. Hathaway
2889: 2822: 2546: 2501: 2335: 1765:"Remington - Model 1934 7x57mm Enfield Honduran Military Contract...C&R Ok" 1257: 591: 565: 492: 413: 187: 2230: 2201: 2027:"From Arisaka to assault rifle: The military rifle cartridges of Japan part 2" 3120: 2736: 2441: 2408: 2315: 2287: 1296: 1271: 1230: 893: 886: 587: 554: 549: 483: 69: 2172: 1889: 47: 2935: 2927: 2807: 2787: 2693: 2688: 2496: 2307: 2206:
FM 23-6 Basic Field Manual: U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, M1917, 20 October 1943
2197:
FM 23-6 Basic Field Manual: U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, M1917, 20 October 1943
2031: 1842:
The Other Side of the Mountain: Mujahideen Tactics in the Soviet-Afghan War
1478: 760: 685: 681: 665: 629: 621: 603: 475: 460: 451: 409: 360: 117: 3095: 3090: 3027: 2998: 2940: 2912: 2698: 2556: 2437: 2303: 1946:"Ethiopian military rifle cartridges: Part 2: from Mauser to Kalashnikov" 1919:(11 ed.). Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: The Stackpole Company. pp.  1764: 1209: 1204: 1171: 1158: 992: 796: 613: 540:
early Winchester rifles (including the first five-thousand with a simple
371: 343: 315: 145: 109: 105: 59: 2149:
French Foreign Légionnaire vs Viet Minh Insurgent: North Vietnam 1948–52
2874: 2791: 2683: 2511: 2299: 1586: 861: 852: 768: 736: 708: 704: 697: 398: 248: 129: 3032: 2968: 2869: 2590: 2416: 2396: 2355: 2311: 1815: 1745: 1705: 1300: 1217: 1067: 957:. In 1934 500 Remington Model 1934 were delivered and in 1935 2,500. 857: 792: 788: 748: 669: 515:
When the U.S. entered the war, it had a similar need for rifles. The
2246: 1131: 950: 649: 440: 3080: 2782: 2731: 2575: 1127: 954: 937: 800: 645: 2173:"Model 1917 Enfield Rifle : North Vietnamese Military Forces" 795:. For military purposes, mainly as last resort against aggressive 590:
on October 8, 1918, during the event for which he was awarded the
3105: 3085: 3075: 3037: 2955: 2902: 2851: 2726: 2670: 2637: 2376: 2331: 1292: 1055: 464: 1575:
The Filipino Way of War: Irregular Warfare through the Centuries
1541: 3070: 2412: 2404: 2380: 1189: 1095: 1015: 882: 872:) versus 45 oz (1,276 g) for the M1903 Springfield. 823: 2847: 2521: 2363: 1376:
http://www.guns.com/2012/10/24/remington-m1917-enfield-rifle/
1144: 1113: 1042: 865: 712: 417: 405: 831: 763:, the M1917 went out of front-line duty with the US forces. 740:"Springfield" was known to be an American military arsenal. 1978:"Military rifle cartridges of Haiti. - Free Online Library" 929:, which were produced from leftover receivers and barrels. 869: 719:
rifles. Many were bought by the United Kingdom through the
1339:
FM 23-6 Basic Field Manual: U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, M1917
2400: 2343: 1394:
Canfield, Bruce N. (2018). "One of the Great Decisions".
1299:, some sold by the Nationalist Chinese. Also used by the 306:
2,800 ft/s (853 m/s) with Cartridge .30 M2 Ball
1532:. United States Army in World War II. Washington D.C.C: 1706:
The U.S. Rifle, caliber .30, M1917 ©2003 By Dick Culver
1382:
The Remington M1917 Enfield Rifle: A forgotten veteran?
1212:
The Philippines used the M1917 Enfield, along with the
325:
5,500 yd (5,029 m) with .30 M1 Ball cartridge
2481: 2232:
Small Arms of WWI Primer 028: U.S. Rifle Model of 1917
1966:(in French). Berger-Levrault. 1956-03-19. p. 218. 2124:
The Spanish Civil War 1936–39 (2): Republican Forces
1529:
The War in the Pacific - The Fall of the Philippines
359:" is an American modification and production of the 1573:Reyeg, Fernando M.; Marsh, Ned B. (December 2011). 1319:
List of individual weapons of the U.S. Armed Forces
499:– a subsidiary of Remington – was tooled up at the 2126:. Men-at-Arms 498. Osprey Publishing. p. 38. 1912: 975:inches for the standard M1917 to a 41-inch rifle. 680:Charles E. Peterson (USAR, retired; 1920–2005), a 3142:World War I infantry weapons of the United States 2202:SurplusRifle.com – United States Rifle Model 1917 1600:Canfield, Bruce N. (2004). "Marine M1917? Not!". 3118: 2151:. Combat 36. Osprey Publishing. pp. 24–25. 1248: 1863: 1861: 1859: 1804:Bhatia, Michael Vinai; Sedra, Mark (May 2008). 1556:"Philippines pt.2: WWII weapons used 1946–2018" 1102:(Repeating rifle 7.62mm (calibre .30) model 17) 648:procured a version of the rifle chambered for 282:(Modified by European arms dealers during the 2768: 2467: 2262: 1479:"Sgt. Alvin C. York's Diary: October 8, 1918" 1342:. War Department. 20 October 1943. p. 41 1195: 1130:: Remington Model 1934 variant chambered for 423:for which the action was originally designed. 1856: 1454:""The Diary of Alvin York" by Alvin C. York" 586:An M1917 Enfield rifle was used by Sergeant 46:M1917 Enfield rifle from the collections of 1803: 1753:. Civilian Marksmanship Program. p. 9. 527:. In addition to Remington's production at 357:United States Rifle, cal .30, Model of 1917 3147:World War II firearms of the United States 2775: 2761: 2474: 2460: 2269: 2255: 2221:Modern Firearms – The M-1917 Enfield rifle 2121: 2049:Royal Netherlands East Indies Army 1936–42 1734: 1572: 1412: 355:, the "American Enfield", formally named " 3162:Weapons and ammunition introduced in 1917 2140: 2045: 535:, Winchester produced the rifle at their 446:in the hands of Boer marksmen during the 2024: 1943: 1649: 1647: 1599: 1393: 1100:Fusil Ă  rĂ©pĂ©tition 7 mm 62 (C. 30) M. 17 1006: 838: 830: 822: 711:) and sometimes replacement wood (often 688:. Other M1917 rifles were issued to the 435:Before World War I, the British had the 426: 404: 385: 3132:Bolt-action rifles of the United States 2211:Slædepatruljen Sirius showing the M1917 2146: 2092: 1869:"M1917 rifle in 21st-century Greenland" 1653: 754: 664:At the time of the American entry into 3119: 2813:Colt Model 1903/1908 Pocket Hammerless 1884: 1882: 1779:"The M1917 Carbine - The Firearm Blog" 1536:, United States Army. pp. 28–29. 1521: 525:U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, Model of 1917 2828:Smith & Wesson "Victory" revolver 2756: 2455: 2276: 2250: 2216:Olive-Drab.Com – M-1917 Enfield rifle 2122:de Quesada, Alejandro (20 Jan 2015). 1910: 1644: 1612:National Rifle Association of America 1406:National Rifle Association of America 949:already in service, were produced in 811:) still use the M1917, designated as 616:in the title role, had York using an 571:The new rifle was used alongside the 495:were selected. A third manufacturer, 235:9.187 lb (4.167 kg) (empty) 2039: 1654:Rottman, Gordon L. (December 2002). 1477:Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation: 767:forces used M1917 rifles during the 519:had delivered approximately 843,000 34:US Rifle, Model of 1917, Caliber 30 2283:Clip only (internal/fixed magazine) 1879: 1116:: Issued to Gendamerie in the 1930s 1058:: Received after 1945 and known as 774: 13: 2482:US infantry weapons of World War I 1838: 1747:The U.S. Rifle, caliber .30, M1917 1387: 583:in France were armed with M1917s. 14: 3173: 2190: 2074:Norske Militærgeværer etter 1867. 1682:"Hærens Kamp- og Ildstøttecenter" 1421:United States Rifle Model of 1917 818: 184:Winchester Repeating Arms Company 2095:The French Indochina War 1946–54 2025:Scarlata, Paul (November 2013). 1285: 1264: 1250: 1236: 1223: 1197: 1182: 1164: 1151: 1137: 1120: 1106: 1088: 1074: 1062:. Currently in service with the 1048: 1035: 1022: 1008: 985: 604:Colt M1911 semi-automatic pistol 311:Effective firing range 296:Modified Mauser type bolt-action 40: 2165: 2147:Windrow, Martin (20 Sep 2018). 2115: 2093:Windrow, Martin (15 Nov 1998). 2086: 2066: 2052:. Men-at-Arms 521. p. 22. 2046:Lohnstein, Marc (23 Aug 2018). 2018: 1994: 1970: 1956: 1937: 1904: 1832: 1797: 1771: 1757: 1723: 1720:, Samworth Press (1948), p. 301 1710: 1699: 1674: 1635: 1618: 1593: 1566: 1548: 1515: 659: 3152:Weapons of the Philippine Army 2898:M1928/M1928A1/M1/M1A1 Thompson 1944:Scarlata, Paul (Mar 1, 2009). 1491: 1471: 1446: 1427: 1369: 1354: 1330: 1147:: Captured during World War II 1084:: received after World War II. 510: 322:Maximum firing range 314:550 m (601 yd) with 206: 1: 2226:US Rifle M1917 (Enfield 1917) 1488:, accessed September 25, 2010 1324: 881:earlier Model 1895 (Chilean) 781:ceremonial and drilling rifle 721:British Purchasing Commission 548:Design changes were few; the 390:Left to right: .303 British, 368:American Expeditionary Forces 2372:Dual use (clip and magazine) 1524:"U.S. Army Forces, Far East" 921:cock-on-open, to become the 690:Philippine Commonwealth Army 644:from 1921 to 1940. In 1934, 575:, and quickly surpassed the 243:46.3 in (1,180 mm) 7: 2512:Colt M1892 series revolvers 1740: 1560:wwiiafterwwii.wordpress.com 1418: 1307: 964:, then sold for use in the 915: 843:M1917 ladder aperture sight 470:This development named the 10: 3178: 2072:Karl Egil Hanevik (1998). 1890:"Model 1917 Enfield Rifle" 1873:wwiiafterwwii.blogspot.com 1534:Center of Military History 1484:November 27, 2010, at the 1384:by Chris Eger (10/24/2012) 1280:United States Marine Corps 1043:People's Republic of China 940:, where strongman general 835:M1917 Mauser M98 type bolt 729:Nationalist Chinese forces 717:United States Marine Corps 437:Short Magazine Lee–Enfield 381: 95: 15: 3127:.30-06 Springfield rifles 3056: 2997: 2954: 2926: 2888: 2846: 2798: 2712: 2669: 2636: 2599: 2566: 2555: 2520: 2487: 2432: 2371: 2282: 1911:Smith, Joseph E. (1969). 1579:Naval Postgraduate School 1314:List of clip-fed firearms 1176:Dutch government-in-exile 995:: Called the "G3" by the 467:) in the United Kingdom. 339: 329: 321: 310: 300: 290: 263: 258: 247: 239: 231: 226: 216: 205: 197: 179: 171: 166: 101: 90: 80: 75: 66:Place of origin 65: 55: 39: 32: 2340:Schönberger-Laumann 1892 1660:. Praeger. p. 199. 978: 925:series of rifles in the 521:M1903 Springfield rifles 501:Baldwin Locomotive Works 457:Royal Small Arms Factory 254:26 in (660 mm) 84:1917–1945 (U.S. Service) 16:Not to be confused with 2181:Australian War Memorial 2076:Hanevik VĂĄpen. p. 371. 1964:Manuel du Grade TTA 116 1915:Small Arms of the World 1898:Australian War Memorial 1174:: 20,000 bought by the 779:The M1917 is used as a 694:Philippine Constabulary 606:on that day. (The film 600:No 1 Mk III Lee-Enfield 533:Eddystone, Pennsylvania 505:Eddystone, Pennsylvania 142:Portuguese Colonial War 2006:www.thefreelibrary.com 1982:www.thefreelibrary.com 1718:Ordnance Went Up Front 1581:. pp. 79–80, 97. 1522:Morton, Louis (1953). 1503:www.thefreelibrary.com 1064:Sirius Dog Sled Patrol 953:as service rifles for 844: 836: 828: 805:Sirius Dog Sled Patrol 638:.300 Winchester Magnum 537:New Haven, Connecticut 432: 424: 402: 376:Sirius Dog Sled Patrol 277:(Remington Model 1934) 2974:Winchester Model 1912 2964:Winchester Model 1897 2651:Winchester Model 1912 2646:Winchester Model 1897 842: 834: 826: 809:Slædepatruljen Sirius 452:.303 British Mark VII 430: 408: 389: 335:5-round stripper clip 2989:Stevens M520-30/M620 2908:M3/M3A1 'Grease gun' 2838:Colt Official Police 2808:M1911/M1911A1 pistol 2786:infantry weapons of 1562:. November 18, 2018. 827:M1917 Enfield breech 755:Korean War and after 472:Pattern 1913 Enfield 364:Pattern 1914 Enfield 302:Muzzle velocity 134:Hukbalahap Rebellion 3157:World War II rifles 2946:M7 grenade launcher 2880:M1941 Johnson Rifle 2609:M1895 Colt–Browning 2097:. Men-at-Arms 322. 1839:Jalali, Ali Ahmad. 1366:(January 2009) p.80 733:Local Defence Force 634:.300 H&H Magnum 138:1958 Lebanon crisis 122:First Indochina War 50:, Stockholm, Sweden 3101:.30-06 Springfield 2984:Remington Model 31 2918:United Defense M42 2742:.30-06 Springfield 2661:Remington Model 10 2619:Colt–Vickers M1915 2601:Heavy machine guns 2586:M1909 BenĂ©t–MerciĂ© 2568:Light machine guns 1783:thefirearmblog.com 1439:2013-05-10 at the 1276:United States Army 968:during the 1930s. 966:civil war in Spain 923:Remington Model 30 845: 837: 829: 678:Lieutenant Colonel 517:Springfield Armory 433: 425: 403: 396:.30-06 Springfield 392:6.5Ă—50mmSR Arisaka 361:.303-inch (7.7 mm) 270:.30-06 Springfield 221:Remington Model 30 167:Production history 156:Lebanese Civil War 3137:Clip-fed firearms 3114: 3113: 3048:M1A1 flamethrower 3023:M1941 Johnson LMG 2860:M1903 Springfield 2818:High Standard HDM 2750: 2749: 2632: 2631: 2530:M1903 Springfield 2449: 2448: 2393:Mauser Model 1889 2320:M1903 Springfield 2277:Clip-fed firearms 2099:Osprey Publishing 1825:978-0-415-45308-0 1806:Small Arms Survey 1785:. 16 January 2015 1667:978-0-275-97835-8 1630:978-1-84884-269-4 1603:American Rifleman 1577:(Master Thesis). 1397:American Rifleman 1363:American Rifleman 1360:Schreier, Philip 1214:M1903 Springfield 1030:Republic of China 1001:Soviet-Afghan War 997:Afghan Mujahideen 947:Mauser Model 1895 906:M1903 Springfield 765:Chinese Communist 618:M1903 Springfield 573:M1903 Springfield 497:Eddystone Arsenal 444:Mauser Model 1895 370:in Europe during 349: 348: 284:Spanish Civil War 192:Eddystone Arsenal 161:Soviet–Afghan War 151:Laotian Civil War 126:Chinese Civil War 114:Spanish Civil War 60:Bolt-action rifle 27:Bolt-action rifle 3169: 2833:Colt New Service 2777: 2770: 2763: 2754: 2753: 2704:VB rifle grenade 2564: 2563: 2476: 2469: 2462: 2453: 2452: 2328:Mannlicher M1895 2296:Roth-Steyr M1907 2292:Mannlicher M1894 2271: 2264: 2257: 2248: 2247: 2233: 2185: 2184: 2169: 2163: 2162: 2144: 2138: 2137: 2119: 2113: 2112: 2090: 2084: 2070: 2064: 2063: 2043: 2037: 2036: 2022: 2016: 2015: 2013: 2012: 1998: 1992: 1991: 1989: 1988: 1974: 1968: 1967: 1960: 1954: 1953: 1941: 1935: 1934: 1918: 1908: 1902: 1901: 1886: 1877: 1876: 1875:. July 24, 2015. 1865: 1854: 1853: 1836: 1830: 1829: 1801: 1795: 1794: 1792: 1790: 1775: 1769: 1768: 1761: 1755: 1754: 1752: 1738: 1732: 1727: 1721: 1714: 1708: 1703: 1697: 1696: 1694: 1692: 1686:www.facebook.com 1678: 1672: 1671: 1651: 1642: 1639: 1633: 1622: 1616: 1615: 1597: 1591: 1590: 1570: 1564: 1563: 1552: 1546: 1545: 1519: 1513: 1512: 1510: 1509: 1495: 1489: 1475: 1469: 1468: 1466: 1465: 1456:. Archived from 1450: 1444: 1431: 1425: 1424: 1416: 1410: 1409: 1391: 1385: 1373: 1367: 1358: 1352: 1351: 1349: 1347: 1334: 1291: 1289: 1288: 1270: 1268: 1267: 1260: 1256: 1254: 1253: 1244:Spanish Republic 1242: 1240: 1239: 1229: 1227: 1226: 1207: 1203: 1201: 1200: 1188: 1186: 1185: 1170: 1168: 1167: 1157: 1155: 1154: 1143: 1141: 1140: 1126: 1124: 1123: 1112: 1110: 1109: 1094: 1092: 1091: 1082:Ethiopian Empire 1080: 1078: 1077: 1054: 1052: 1051: 1041: 1039: 1038: 1028: 1026: 1025: 1018: 1014: 1012: 1011: 991: 989: 988: 962:7.92Ă—57mm Mauser 934:Great Depression 878:magazine cut-off 775:Contemporary use 333:6-round magazine 330:Feed system 280:7.92Ă—57mm Mauser 208: 44: 35: 30: 29: 22:M1917 light tank 3177: 3176: 3172: 3171: 3170: 3168: 3167: 3166: 3117: 3116: 3115: 3110: 3052: 3043:M2 flamethrower 2993: 2979:Browning Auto-5 2950: 2922: 2913:Reising M50/M55 2890:Submachine guns 2884: 2842: 2794: 2781: 2751: 2746: 2708: 2665: 2656:Browning Auto-5 2628: 2614:M1914 Hotchkiss 2595: 2558: 2551: 2535:Pedersen Device 2516: 2483: 2480: 2450: 2445: 2428: 2385:Bergmann–Bayard 2367: 2278: 2275: 2231: 2193: 2188: 2171: 2170: 2166: 2159: 2145: 2141: 2134: 2120: 2116: 2109: 2091: 2087: 2071: 2067: 2060: 2044: 2040: 2023: 2019: 2010: 2008: 2000: 1999: 1995: 1986: 1984: 1976: 1975: 1971: 1962: 1961: 1957: 1942: 1938: 1931: 1909: 1905: 1888: 1887: 1880: 1867: 1866: 1857: 1837: 1833: 1826: 1802: 1798: 1788: 1786: 1777: 1776: 1772: 1763: 1762: 1758: 1750: 1739: 1735: 1728: 1724: 1715: 1711: 1704: 1700: 1690: 1688: 1680: 1679: 1675: 1668: 1652: 1645: 1640: 1636: 1623: 1619: 1598: 1594: 1571: 1567: 1554: 1553: 1549: 1520: 1516: 1507: 1505: 1497: 1496: 1492: 1486:Wayback Machine 1476: 1472: 1463: 1461: 1452: 1451: 1447: 1441:Wayback Machine 1432: 1428: 1417: 1413: 1408:: 43–46&70. 1392: 1388: 1374: 1370: 1359: 1355: 1345: 1343: 1336: 1335: 1331: 1327: 1310: 1286: 1284: 1265: 1263: 1251: 1249: 1237: 1235: 1224: 1222: 1198: 1196: 1183: 1181: 1165: 1163: 1152: 1150: 1138: 1136: 1121: 1119: 1107: 1105: 1098:: Known as the 1089: 1087: 1075: 1073: 1049: 1047: 1036: 1034: 1023: 1021: 1009: 1007: 986: 984: 981: 927:interwar period 918: 890: 821: 813:Gevær M/53 (17) 777: 757: 723:for use by the 662: 596:82nd Division's 566:trench shotguns 529:Ilion, New York 513: 384: 334: 278: 273: 259: 212:2,193,429 total 190: 186: 159: 154: 149: 144: 140: 136: 132: 128: 124: 120: 116: 112: 108: 85: 81:In service 76:Service history 51: 33: 28: 25: 12: 11: 5: 3175: 3165: 3164: 3159: 3154: 3149: 3144: 3139: 3134: 3129: 3112: 3111: 3109: 3108: 3103: 3098: 3093: 3088: 3083: 3078: 3073: 3068: 3062: 3060: 3054: 3053: 3051: 3050: 3045: 3040: 3035: 3030: 3025: 3020: 3018:M1919 Browning 3015: 3010: 3008:M1917 Browning 3004: 3002: 2995: 2994: 2992: 2991: 2986: 2981: 2976: 2971: 2966: 2960: 2958: 2952: 2951: 2949: 2948: 2943: 2938: 2932: 2930: 2924: 2923: 2921: 2920: 2915: 2910: 2905: 2900: 2894: 2892: 2886: 2885: 2883: 2882: 2877: 2872: 2867: 2862: 2856: 2854: 2844: 2843: 2841: 2840: 2835: 2830: 2825: 2823:M1917 revolver 2820: 2815: 2810: 2804: 2802: 2796: 2795: 2780: 2779: 2772: 2765: 2757: 2748: 2747: 2745: 2744: 2739: 2734: 2729: 2724: 2718: 2716: 2710: 2709: 2707: 2706: 2701: 2696: 2691: 2686: 2681: 2675: 2673: 2667: 2666: 2664: 2663: 2658: 2653: 2648: 2642: 2640: 2634: 2633: 2630: 2629: 2627: 2626: 2624:M1917 Browning 2621: 2616: 2611: 2605: 2603: 2597: 2596: 2594: 2593: 2588: 2583: 2578: 2572: 2570: 2561: 2553: 2552: 2550: 2549: 2547:Berthier rifle 2544: 2539: 2538: 2537: 2526: 2524: 2518: 2517: 2515: 2514: 2509: 2507:M1909 revolver 2504: 2502:M1917 Revolver 2499: 2493: 2491: 2485: 2484: 2479: 2478: 2471: 2464: 2456: 2447: 2446: 2436: 2434: 2430: 2429: 2375: 2373: 2369: 2368: 2286: 2284: 2280: 2279: 2274: 2273: 2266: 2259: 2251: 2245: 2244: 2239: 2228: 2223: 2218: 2213: 2208: 2199: 2192: 2191:External links 2189: 2187: 2186: 2164: 2157: 2139: 2132: 2114: 2107: 2101:. p. 41. 2085: 2065: 2058: 2038: 2017: 1993: 1969: 1955: 1936: 1929: 1903: 1878: 1855: 1831: 1824: 1818:. p. 65. 1796: 1770: 1756: 1733: 1722: 1709: 1698: 1673: 1666: 1643: 1634: 1617: 1592: 1565: 1547: 1544:. CMH Pub 5-2. 1514: 1490: 1470: 1445: 1426: 1411: 1386: 1368: 1353: 1328: 1326: 1323: 1322: 1321: 1316: 1309: 1306: 1305: 1304: 1282: 1261: 1258:United Kingdom 1246: 1233: 1220: 1193: 1179: 1161: 1148: 1134: 1117: 1103: 1085: 1071: 1045: 1032: 1019: 1004: 980: 977: 917: 914: 888: 820: 819:Design details 817: 783:, as with the 776: 773: 756: 753: 661: 658: 594:, as the U.S. 592:Medal of Honor 512: 509: 484:arms companies 383: 380: 347: 346: 341: 337: 336: 331: 327: 326: 323: 319: 318: 312: 308: 307: 304: 298: 297: 294: 288: 287: 267: 261: 260: 256: 255: 252: 245: 244: 241: 237: 236: 233: 229: 228: 227:Specifications 224: 223: 218: 214: 213: 210: 203: 202: 199: 195: 194: 188:Remington Arms 181: 177: 176: 173: 169: 168: 164: 163: 103: 99: 98: 92: 88: 87: 82: 78: 77: 73: 72: 67: 63: 62: 57: 53: 52: 45: 37: 36: 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 3174: 3163: 3160: 3158: 3155: 3153: 3150: 3148: 3145: 3143: 3140: 3138: 3135: 3133: 3130: 3128: 3125: 3124: 3122: 3107: 3104: 3102: 3099: 3097: 3094: 3092: 3089: 3087: 3084: 3082: 3079: 3077: 3074: 3072: 3069: 3067: 3064: 3063: 3061: 3059: 3055: 3049: 3046: 3044: 3041: 3039: 3036: 3034: 3031: 3029: 3026: 3024: 3021: 3019: 3016: 3014: 3011: 3009: 3006: 3005: 3003: 3000: 2996: 2990: 2987: 2985: 2982: 2980: 2977: 2975: 2972: 2970: 2967: 2965: 2962: 2961: 2959: 2957: 2953: 2947: 2944: 2942: 2939: 2937: 2934: 2933: 2931: 2929: 2925: 2919: 2916: 2914: 2911: 2909: 2906: 2904: 2901: 2899: 2896: 2895: 2893: 2891: 2887: 2881: 2878: 2876: 2873: 2871: 2868: 2866: 2865:M1917 Enfield 2863: 2861: 2858: 2857: 2855: 2853: 2849: 2845: 2839: 2836: 2834: 2831: 2829: 2826: 2824: 2821: 2819: 2816: 2814: 2811: 2809: 2806: 2805: 2803: 2801: 2797: 2793: 2789: 2785: 2778: 2773: 2771: 2766: 2764: 2759: 2758: 2755: 2743: 2740: 2738: 2737:.38 Long Colt 2735: 2733: 2730: 2728: 2725: 2723: 2720: 2719: 2717: 2715: 2711: 2705: 2702: 2700: 2697: 2695: 2692: 2690: 2687: 2685: 2682: 2680: 2677: 2676: 2674: 2672: 2668: 2662: 2659: 2657: 2654: 2652: 2649: 2647: 2644: 2643: 2641: 2639: 2635: 2625: 2622: 2620: 2617: 2615: 2612: 2610: 2607: 2606: 2604: 2602: 2598: 2592: 2589: 2587: 2584: 2582: 2579: 2577: 2574: 2573: 2571: 2569: 2565: 2562: 2560: 2554: 2548: 2545: 2543: 2542:M1917 Enfield 2540: 2536: 2533: 2532: 2531: 2528: 2527: 2525: 2523: 2519: 2513: 2510: 2508: 2505: 2503: 2500: 2498: 2495: 2494: 2492: 2490: 2486: 2477: 2472: 2470: 2465: 2463: 2458: 2457: 2454: 2443: 2442:Stripper clip 2439: 2435: 2431: 2426: 2422: 2418: 2414: 2410: 2409:Ruger Mini-14 2406: 2402: 2398: 2394: 2390: 2386: 2382: 2378: 2374: 2370: 2365: 2364:OA-96 carbine 2361: 2360:M1941 Johnson 2357: 2353: 2349: 2345: 2341: 2337: 2333: 2329: 2325: 2324:M1917 Enfield 2321: 2317: 2316:Karabiner 98k 2313: 2309: 2305: 2301: 2297: 2293: 2289: 2288:Bergmann 1896 2285: 2281: 2272: 2267: 2265: 2260: 2258: 2253: 2252: 2249: 2243: 2240: 2238: 2234: 2229: 2227: 2224: 2222: 2219: 2217: 2214: 2212: 2209: 2207: 2203: 2200: 2198: 2195: 2194: 2182: 2178: 2174: 2168: 2160: 2158:9781472828910 2154: 2150: 2143: 2135: 2133:9781782007852 2129: 2125: 2118: 2110: 2108:9781855327894 2104: 2100: 2096: 2089: 2083: 2079: 2075: 2069: 2061: 2059:9781472833754 2055: 2051: 2050: 2042: 2034: 2033: 2028: 2021: 2007: 2003: 1997: 1983: 1979: 1973: 1965: 1959: 1951: 1947: 1940: 1932: 1930:9780811715669 1926: 1922: 1917: 1916: 1907: 1899: 1895: 1891: 1885: 1883: 1874: 1870: 1864: 1862: 1860: 1852: 1848: 1844: 1843: 1835: 1827: 1821: 1817: 1813: 1812: 1807: 1800: 1784: 1780: 1774: 1766: 1760: 1749: 1748: 1743: 1737: 1731: 1726: 1719: 1716:Dunlap, Roy, 1713: 1707: 1702: 1687: 1683: 1677: 1669: 1663: 1659: 1658: 1650: 1648: 1638: 1631: 1627: 1621: 1613: 1609: 1605: 1604: 1596: 1588: 1584: 1580: 1576: 1569: 1561: 1557: 1551: 1543: 1539: 1535: 1531: 1530: 1525: 1518: 1504: 1500: 1494: 1487: 1483: 1480: 1474: 1460:on 2013-09-21 1459: 1455: 1449: 1442: 1438: 1435: 1430: 1423:. p. 54. 1422: 1419:Ferris, C.S. 1415: 1407: 1403: 1399: 1398: 1390: 1383: 1380: 1377: 1372: 1365: 1364: 1357: 1341: 1340: 1333: 1329: 1320: 1317: 1315: 1312: 1311: 1302: 1298: 1294: 1283: 1281: 1277: 1273: 1272:United States 1262: 1259: 1247: 1245: 1234: 1232: 1231:South Vietnam 1221: 1219: 1215: 1211: 1206: 1194: 1191: 1180: 1177: 1173: 1162: 1160: 1149: 1146: 1135: 1133: 1129: 1118: 1115: 1104: 1101: 1097: 1086: 1083: 1072: 1069: 1065: 1061: 1060:7.62mm G M/53 1057: 1046: 1044: 1033: 1031: 1020: 1017: 1005: 1002: 998: 994: 983: 982: 976: 973: 969: 967: 963: 958: 956: 952: 948: 943: 939: 935: 930: 928: 924: 913: 910: 907: 903: 897: 895: 891: 884: 879: 873: 871: 867: 863: 859: 854: 849: 841: 833: 825: 816: 814: 810: 806: 803:, the Danish 802: 798: 794: 790: 786: 782: 772: 770: 766: 762: 752: 750: 745: 741: 738: 734: 730: 726: 722: 718: 714: 710: 706: 701: 699: 695: 691: 687: 683: 679: 675: 671: 667: 657: 655: 651: 647: 643: 639: 635: 631: 625: 623: 620:and a German 619: 615: 611: 610: 609:Sergeant York 605: 601: 597: 593: 589: 588:Alvin C. York 584: 582: 578: 574: 569: 567: 564: 560: 556: 555:M1917 bayonet 551: 550:stripper clip 546: 543: 538: 534: 530: 526: 522: 518: 508: 506: 502: 498: 494: 490: 485: 480: 477: 473: 468: 466: 462: 458: 453: 449: 445: 442: 438: 429: 422: 419: 416:bottlenecked 415: 411: 407: 400: 397: 393: 388: 379: 377: 374:. The Danish 373: 369: 365: 362: 358: 354: 353:M1917 Enfield 345: 342: 338: 332: 328: 324: 320: 317: 313: 309: 305: 303: 299: 295: 293: 289: 285: 281: 276: 275:7Ă—57mm Mauser 271: 268: 266: 262: 257: 253: 250: 246: 242: 238: 234: 230: 225: 222: 219: 215: 211: 204: 200: 196: 193: 189: 185: 182: 178: 174: 170: 165: 162: 157: 152: 147: 143: 139: 135: 131: 127: 123: 119: 115: 111: 107: 104: 100: 97: 93: 89: 83: 79: 74: 71: 70:United States 68: 64: 61: 58: 54: 49: 43: 38: 31: 23: 19: 2999:Machine guns 2864: 2788:World War II 2541: 2497:M1911 pistol 2323: 2308:Mosin-Nagant 2176: 2167: 2148: 2142: 2123: 2117: 2094: 2088: 2073: 2068: 2048: 2041: 2032:Shotgun News 2030: 2020: 2009:. Retrieved 2005: 1996: 1985:. Retrieved 1981: 1972: 1963: 1958: 1950:Shotgun News 1949: 1939: 1914: 1906: 1893: 1872: 1850: 1841: 1834: 1810: 1799: 1787:. Retrieved 1782: 1773: 1759: 1746: 1742:Culver, Dick 1736: 1725: 1717: 1712: 1701: 1689:. Retrieved 1685: 1676: 1656: 1637: 1620: 1607: 1601: 1595: 1574: 1568: 1559: 1550: 1528: 1517: 1506:. Retrieved 1502: 1493: 1473: 1462:. Retrieved 1458:the original 1448: 1429: 1420: 1414: 1401: 1395: 1389: 1381: 1378: 1371: 1361: 1356: 1344:. Retrieved 1338: 1332: 1099: 1059: 970: 959: 942:T. C. Andino 931: 919: 911: 898: 874: 868:(1,644  850: 846: 812: 808: 778: 761:World War II 758: 746: 742: 702: 686:World War II 666:World War II 663: 660:World War II 653: 626: 622:Luger pistol 607: 585: 570: 547: 541: 524: 514: 481: 476:.276 Enfield 469: 434: 410:.276 Enfield 356: 352: 350: 251: length 180:Manufacturer 118:World War II 91:Used by 86:1917–present 3096:.30 carbine 3091:.38 Special 3028:M2 Browning 2438:Speedloader 2389:Lee–Enfield 2348:Type 11 LMG 2304:Steyr M1912 1587:10945/10681 1210:World War 2 1205:Philippines 1172:Netherlands 1159:North Korea 999:during the 993:Afghanistan 932:During the 892:(13.3  797:polar bears 630:sporterized 614:Gary Cooper 577:Springfield 511:World War I 372:World War I 344:Iron sights 316:iron sights 272:(7.62Ă—63mm) 209: built 146:Vietnam War 110:Banana Wars 106:World War I 18:Lee–Enfield 3121:Categories 3058:Cartridges 3001:and larger 2969:Ithaca M37 2875:M1 carbine 2714:Cartridges 2684:Mills bomb 2300:Mauser C96 2177:awm.gov.au 2082:8299314313 2011:2022-12-14 1987:2022-12-14 1894:awm.gov.au 1845:. p.  1508:2022-12-14 1464:2010-08-31 1325:References 1295:: Used by 1274:: Used by 862:M1 carbine 853:iron sight 769:Korean War 737:Irish Army 725:Home Guard 709:Parkerized 705:Lend-Lease 698:Hukbalahap 654:Model 1934 489:Winchester 401:ammunition 399:soft point 130:Korean War 48:ArmĂ©museum 3033:Lewis gun 3013:M1918 BAR 2870:M1 Garand 2591:Lewis gun 2581:M1918 BAR 2417:T48 rifle 2397:Gewehr 43 2356:M1 Garand 2312:Gewehr 98 1816:Routledge 1301:Viet Cong 1297:Việt Minh 1218:M1 Garand 1208:: During 1068:Greenland 858:M1 Garand 789:M1 Garand 749:M1 Garand 670:M1 Garand 652:known as 612:starring 493:Remington 421:cartridge 412:(7Ă—60mm) 265:Cartridge 201:1917–1919 158:(limited) 153:(limited) 148:(limited) 3081:.380 ACP 3066:12 Gauge 2956:Shotguns 2928:Grenades 2852:carbines 2800:Sidearms 2732:.45 Colt 2722:12 Gauge 2671:Grenades 2638:Shotguns 2576:Chauchat 2489:Sidearms 2336:Pedersen 1789:23 March 1744:(2003). 1691:23 March 1542:53-63678 1482:Archived 1437:Archived 1379:Guns.com 1308:See also 1216:and the 1128:Honduras 955:Honduras 938:Honduras 916:Variants 801:muskoxen 646:Honduras 642:Model 30 448:Boer War 217:Variants 198:Produced 172:Designed 3106:.50 BMG 3086:.45 ACP 3076:.32 ACP 3038:Bazooka 2903:M2 Hyde 2727:.45 ACP 2557:Machine 2425:Type 81 2421:Type 63 2377:Ag m/42 2352:Type KĹŤ 2332:Carcano 2237:YouTube 1921:326-327 1808:(ed.). 1632:(p.132) 1293:Vietnam 1178:in 1941 1056:Denmark 972:X Force 735:of the 674:M1903A3 465:arsenal 461:Enfield 414:rimless 382:History 3071:.22 LR 2848:Rifles 2522:Rifles 2413:SVT-40 2405:MAS-49 2381:AVS-36 2155:  2130:  2105:  2080:  2056:  1927:  1822:  1664:  1628:  1540:  1346:9 June 1290:  1269:  1255:  1241:  1228:  1202:  1190:Norway 1187:  1169:  1156:  1142:  1132:7Ă—57mm 1125:  1111:  1096:France 1093:  1079:  1053:  1040:  1027:  1016:Canada 1013:  990:  951:7Ă—57mm 883:Mauser 791:, and 759:After 650:7Ă—57mm 441:7Ă—57mm 394:, and 340:Sights 292:Action 249:Barrel 240:Length 2792:Korea 2433:Other 1751:(PDF) 1614:: 29. 1610:(5). 1404:(8). 1145:Japan 1114:Haiti 979:Users 785:M1903 713:birch 682:Major 418:rifle 96:Users 2941:Mk 3 2936:Mk 2 2850:and 2790:and 2784:U.S. 2699:Mk 3 2694:Mk 2 2689:Mk 1 2559:guns 2153:ISBN 2128:ISBN 2103:ISBN 2078:ISBN 2054:ISBN 1925:ISBN 1820:ISBN 1791:2018 1693:2018 1662:ISBN 1626:ISBN 1538:LCCN 1348:2023 1278:and 860:and 799:and 692:and 672:(or 636:and 561:and 531:and 491:and 351:The 232:Mass 175:1917 102:Wars 94:See 56:Type 2401:K31 2344:SKS 2235:on 1847:251 1608:152 1583:hdl 1402:166 1066:in 902:P14 793:M14 624:.) 581:AEF 563:M12 559:M97 503:in 459:at 207:No. 20:or 3123:: 2679:F1 2440:• 2423:• 2419:• 2415:• 2411:• 2407:• 2403:• 2399:• 2395:• 2391:• 2387:• 2383:• 2379:• 2362:• 2358:• 2354:• 2350:• 2346:• 2342:• 2338:• 2334:• 2330:• 2326:• 2322:• 2318:• 2314:• 2310:• 2306:• 2302:• 2298:• 2294:• 2290:• 2179:. 2175:. 2029:. 2004:. 1980:. 1948:. 1923:. 1896:. 1892:. 1881:^ 1871:. 1858:^ 1849:. 1814:. 1781:. 1684:. 1646:^ 1606:. 1558:. 1526:. 1501:. 1400:. 1003:. 887:lb 866:oz 787:, 751:. 700:. 656:. 568:. 2776:e 2769:t 2762:v 2475:e 2468:t 2461:v 2444:• 2427:• 2366:• 2270:e 2263:t 2256:v 2204:* 2183:. 2161:. 2136:. 2111:. 2062:. 2035:. 2014:. 1990:. 1952:. 1933:. 1900:. 1828:. 1793:. 1767:. 1695:. 1670:. 1589:. 1585:: 1511:. 1467:. 1350:. 1303:. 1070:. 894:N 889:f 870:g 807:( 628:" 542:W 463:( 286:) 24:.

Index

Lee–Enfield
M1917 light tank

Armémuseum
Bolt-action rifle
United States
Users
World War I
Banana Wars
Spanish Civil War
World War II
First Indochina War
Chinese Civil War
Korean War
Hukbalahap Rebellion
1958 Lebanon crisis
Portuguese Colonial War
Vietnam War
Laotian Civil War
Lebanese Civil War
Soviet–Afghan War
Winchester Repeating Arms Company
Remington Arms
Eddystone Arsenal
Remington Model 30
Barrel
Cartridge
.30-06 Springfield
7Ă—57mm Mauser
7.92Ă—57mm Mauser

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑