- cross-posted to:
- forgottenweapons@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- forgottenweapons@lemmy.world
You’re all nerding out over the weaponry; I am nerding out over that absolutely beautiful chernozem (soil). That thing has at least 60 cm of topsoil! Hubba hubba hubba!
That open sided mag had to be great in the muddy trenches. Who designed this thing?!?! - and who approved this thing for use?!?!?
It was a great idea - let the troops check how much ammo remained in the mag. Shame about the whole “Real world conditions” thing.
The American Model 1915 was a pretty good quick redesign I think.
Trade the magazine window for a witness hole, go from a moon mag to more conventional box mag, move the vertical grip forward.
Who designed this thing?!?!
Unironically Louis Chauchat. If memory serves the mags didn’t work in testing when they tried to close them. And they needed machine guns now more than they needed good ones after they would have lost.
Those mags can’t have fired for but a couple of seconds with so little ammo.
One is meant to just hold down the trigger until it’s empty. The Chauchet was one of the first of what we would know as a light machinegun. Mobility in order to support advances was the designated role.
In a world of bolt action rifles, the ability to lay down controlled bursts was a big firepower multiplier.
The 20 round magazine would be acceptable for the period. Same capacity as what the M1918A2 BAR was issued with in WW2 and Korea, and only slightly less than the many light machineguns with 30 round magazines that were used for decades after (and in some cases into the current day.)
WW1 - the poor souls that fought that mess.