XXX4Fans
ForgottenWeapons from patreon

ForgottenWeapons

patreon


ForgottenWeapons posts

Beretta 93R: The Best Machine Pistol? (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Beretta 93R: The Best Machine Pistol? (Ad-free) from patreon

The Beretta 93R ("Raffica") was developed in the 1970s by Beretta engineer Paolo Parola at the request of Italian military special forces. It took the basic Beretta 92 pistol design and added a well-thought-out burst mechanism under the right-side grip panel. It does not have a plain full-auto setting, but only semiauto and 3...

View Post

Sten MkII vs Ingram M10/9 (w/ John Keene) (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Sten MkII vs Ingram M10/9 (w/ John Keene) (Ad-free) from patreon

If you had to pick one, would you take a Sten MkII or an Ingram M10/9? This applies specifically to the guns in their original factory configurations; no Lage products allowed! It's hard to come up with a mass-production SMG that isn't obviously better than a MkII Sten, but the stock Ingrams might make the cut...the MAC is a ...

View Post

Books Now Shipping From Headstamp Publishing!

ForgottenWeapons post Books Now Shipping From Headstamp Publishing! from patreon

https://www.headstamppublishing.com

We have a huge variety of beautiful and informative firearms books available and shipping right now from Headstamp Publishing! From Japanese tobacco to British bullpups to Chinese mystery pistols, there really...

View Post

Steyrs for the Luftwaffe: The G29(ö) aka Gewehr 12/34 (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Steyrs for the Luftwaffe: The G29(ö) aka Gewehr 12/34 (Ad-free) from patreon

When the German government bought up the controlling interest in Steyr in 1938, they made use of its production facilities to start making rifles for the Luftwaffe. Steyr had tooling for the Mauser 98, but not in K98k form - they had most recently made a Mauser-pattern carbine for Chile in 1934 (the M12/34). Under German owne...

View Post

Book Review: The U.S. Model 1917 Rifle - "America's Enfield" (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Book Review: The U.S. Model 1917 Rifle - "America's Enfield" (Ad-free) from patreon

Available from Amazon:

https://www.amazon.com/U-S-Model-Rifle-Americas-Enfield/dp/1931464928

Available from the publisher, Mowbray:

2024-12-08 12:00:04 +0000 UTC View Post

French 1717 Rampart Musket from the American Revolution (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post French 1717 Rampart Musket from the American Revolution (Ad-free) from patreon

American forces in the Revolutionary War took in a bunch of different types of surplus small arms, and one of the interesting ones was the French Model 1717 Rampart gun. When the French created the first standardized military rifle pattern in 1717, they made two versions - an infantry musket and a rampart or wall gun. These w...

View Post

Best of American and Europe: the Webley No5 Express New Army (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Best of American and Europe: the Webley No5 Express New Army (Ad-free) from patreon

Webley introduced their No5 Express New Army model revolver in 1878. This was essentially a ruggedized and scaled up variation on the No5 RIC revolvers that was very popular with police forces. The RIC was chambered for just the .450 Adams cartridge, and its ejection system in particular was not suitable to serious military c...

View Post

So Many Ways to Fail at Making a Pistol (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post So Many Ways to Fail at Making a Pistol (Ad-free) from patreon

Making a successful and popular new handgun requires doing a whole lot of things right...today we are going to consider what happens when they don't go so well.

View Post

SVD Dragunov: The First Purpose-Built DMR (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post SVD Dragunov: The First Purpose-Built DMR (Ad-free) from patreon

The development of the Dragunov designated marksman’s rifle was spurred by the NATO adoption of the 7.62x51mm cartridge. The Red Army had standardized on a new suite of infantry weapons using the intermediate-sized 7.62x39mm round, and feared being out-ranged in open terrain by NATO units. The Soviet squad needed some way t...

View Post

The Hungarian Alternative: G98/40 Rifles in German Service (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post The Hungarian Alternative: G98/40 Rifles in German Service (Ad-free) from patreon

The German Wehrmacht was always hungry for more rifles during World War Two, and adopted substitute designs made in friendly (or subservient) countries when possible. Almost all of these were minor variations on the Mauser 98 system, but the Hungarian G98/40 was an exception. This was a Mannlicher system, with zero parts inte...

View Post

Gear for Carrying DP27 Pan Magazines (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Gear for Carrying DP27 Pan Magazines (Ad-free) from patreon

Today we are taking a look at three different pieces of kit developed to carry Degtyarev DP pan magazines. These mags are really inconveniently shaped, and traditional magazine pouches just don't work for them. Instead, the Soviets initially fielded a stamped steel can that held three pans. This was durable, but had to be car...

View Post

Enjoying Black Powder Episode 5: The Remington Rolling Block

ForgottenWeapons post Enjoying Black Powder Episode 5: The Remington Rolling Block from patreon

The full version with hand loading information (not permitted on YouTube) is available here:

https://forgottenweapons.vhx.tv/videos/black-powder-ep-5-app

Black powder military rifles of the 1860s-1880s are a reall...

View Post

Berettas With Bayonets: The Very Early Model 38A SMG (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Berettas With Bayonets: The Very Early Model 38A SMG (Ad-free) from patreon

The initial model of the Beretta 38A had a number of features that were dropped rather quickly once wartime production became a priority. Specifically, they included a lockout safety switch for just the rear full-auto trigger. This was in place primarily for police use, in which the guns were intended for semiautomatic use ex...

View Post

The First Sturmgewehr: The MKb42(H) (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post The First Sturmgewehr: The MKb42(H) (Ad-free) from patreon

The first iteration of the iconic German Sturmgewehr was developed by Haenel starting in 1938. It was a select-fire rifle chambered for the short 8x33mm cartridge, developed by the Polte company. It used a long-stroke gas piston and a tilting bolt patterned after the Czech ZB-26 light machine gun. What makes the MKb42(H) stan...

View Post

G24(t): Germany’s Take on the Czechoslovakian vz24 (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post G24(t): Germany’s Take on the Czechoslovakian vz24 (Ad-free) from patreon

When Germany took over Czechoslovakia, one of the things they did was buy out a controlling interest in what became known as Waffenwerke Brunn. Headquartered in Prague, the company had two factories; one in Brno (Czechia) and one in Bystrica (Slovakia). The Bystrica factory was already making vz24 Mauser rifles, and under new...

View Post

Questions for Falklands Q&A?

I am on my way home from about 10 days on the Falkland Islands, having hiked the Great Yomp across the island, visited a bunch of the battlefields, and spent some time with the Falkland Islands Defense Force. So, it seems like a good time to do a Q&A about the place - both the 1982 war and the islands in general. What wou...

View Post

“Grey Ghost” - The French Occupation Production P38 Pistol (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post “Grey Ghost” - The French Occupation Production P38 Pistol (Ad-free) from patreon

When the French took over control of the Mauser factory complex in May 1945, the plant had some 85 tons of pistol parts on hand - 7.3 million individual components in various stages of production. This was enough to make a whole lot of guns, even if many of them were not completed parts. So alongside K98k rifles, HST and Luge...

View Post

The Unique Challenges of Self-Loading Shotgun Design (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post The Unique Challenges of Self-Loading Shotgun Design (Ad-free) from patreon

I think a lot of people under appreciate the difficulty of making a reliable self-loading shotgun. Between the rimmed case, wadcutter-type cylindrical shape, varying shell length, and massive variations in loadings, the variability that a designer has to work around is insane...

View Post

P99: The Pistol that Rejuvenated Walther (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post P99: The Pistol that Rejuvenated Walther (Ad-free) from patreon

For a couple decades after World War Two, Walther survived on legacy designs - the PP/PPK and P38 (eventually made with an aluminum frame as the P4) primarily. In the 1970s they developed the P5 for German police use, and this was a reasonably successful pistol, but expensive and complex. Something more modern was needed to k...

View Post

Single-Rune bnz43 SS Contract K98k (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Single-Rune bnz43 SS Contract K98k (Ad-free) from patreon

In 1942, the SS devised a plan to rent out concentration camp labor to companies in the German armaments industry. Several different rifle production lines were set up to make use of this source of cheap labor, and the one we are looking at today is Steyr’s plant at the Gusen camp (a subsidiary of Mauthausen). A rifle produ...

View Post

Port Stanley Meetup Update

Sorry, update to the Port Stanley meetup: it will be Wednesday the 20th (not Thursday as originally posted). Same time and place; The Narrows bar from 6pm to 8pm.

View Post

Franchi SPAS-12 at the Range (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Franchi SPAS-12 at the Range (Ad-free) from patreon

Today I'm taking the SPAS-12 out to the range, to try a variety of ammunition and see what runs in it. The SPAS is a gas-operated shotgun that can be switched to manual pump operation for use with underpowered ammunition. This was originally intended as a way to allow things like beanbag and other less lethal rounds to be use...

View Post

A DAO Service Revolver in the Civil War: the Pettengill Army (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post A DAO Service Revolver in the Civil War: the Pettengill Army (Ad-free) from patreon

The Pettengill revolver is a 6-shot, muzzleloading double-action-only system designed and patented by C.S. Pettengill in 1856, and improved by Edward Raymond and Charles Robitaille in 1858. In 1859, the Rogers & Spencer company was contracted to put them into production as a .31 caliber pocket model and a .34 caliber Navy...

View Post

Colt Boa: Rarest of the Snake Revolvers (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Colt Boa: Rarest of the Snake Revolvers (Ad-free) from patreon

Of the seven revolvers Colt named after snakes, the rarest is the Colt Boa. Only a single production run of these were made totaling just 1,200 guns. They were made in 1985 as a custom order for the Lew Horton distribution company, which wanted something unique to offer its buyers. The Boa was an intermediary between the stan...

View Post

Spoils of War: French Occupation-Production Mauser K98k svwMB (ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Spoils of War: French Occupation-Production Mauser K98k svwMB (ad-free) from patreon

Allied troops occupied the Mauser factory complex in Oberndorf in April of 1945, right at the end of the war. The factory was put under French administration and by May that same year production lines were restarted to supply French forces (who needed as many arms as they could get). In total, just under 52,000 new K98k rifle...

View Post

Shooting a WWII German 50mm Light Mortar (L.Gr.W.36) (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Shooting a WWII German 50mm Light Mortar (L.Gr.W.36) (Ad-free) from patreon

The standard German light mortar in World War Two was the model 1936 5cm Leichter Granatwerfer. It was a very precise (Germanic, one might say) machine, and a bubble lever for careful aiming, and it threw a roughly 2 pound projectile out to a maximum range of 550 meters. Today I have the chance to do some shooting with one, u...

View Post

G33/40: Special Carbine for the Gebirgsjager

ForgottenWeapons post G33/40: Special Carbine for the Gebirgsjager from patreon

When the Germans took over control of the Czechoslovakian arms industry, they took some time to work out what out to be mass produced at the Brno factory. In the interim, they decided to restart production of the Czech vz33 Mauser carbine as the Gewehr 33/40 for German mountain troops. This was a truly short carbine with a 19...

View Post

Meetup: Port Stanley, Falkland Islands

EDIT: Sorry, had to switch this to Wednesday the 20th - same time, same place.

I know this one is a very long shot...in all sorts of sense of the phrase. But I will be in the Falklands filming next week, and if anyone there wants to hang out I will be at the Narrows Bar in Port Stanley at about 6pm until about 8pm on We...

View Post

SPAS-12: Franchi's Special Purpose Automatic Shotgun (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post SPAS-12: Franchi's Special Purpose Automatic Shotgun (Ad-free) from patreon

Franchi introduced the Special Purpose Automatic Shotgun (SPAS-12) for Italian military and police agencies in 1979 and it quickly because popular worldwide. Based originally on the gas-operated Franchi 500, that SPAS-12 was robust, reliable, and designed as a semiautomatic action with a backup pump action operation for use w...

View Post

Beretta M38A vs Suomi kp/31 (w/ John Keene) (Ad-free)

ForgottenWeapons post Beretta M38A vs Suomi kp/31 (w/ John Keene) (Ad-free) from patreon

If you had to pick one, would you take an early Beretta 38A (with bayonet), or a Finnish kp/31 Suomi? Both have semiauto selectors, although the Beretta's its easier to use. The Suomi has a higher rate of fire and larger magazine capacity, but is slower to use. Both have roughly equivalent sights and are very controllable. Th...

View Post