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Bren gun: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Bren mk1-2.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Bren Mk1 - .303 British. This example is missing the folding metal butt strap on top of the stock.]] | [[Image:Bren mk1-2.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Bren Mk1 - .303 British. This example is missing the folding metal butt strap on top of the stock: note the dovetail mount and screw hole on the side of the receiver under the magazine, which was for attaching a dial sight which does not seem to have ever been issued, and is only present on this version.]] | ||
[[Image:Bren gun.JPG|thumb|right|400px|Bren Mk1 (M) - .303 British. Simplified version with no grip or butt strap on the stock and with dovetail mount on the left side of the receiver deleted]] | [[Image:Bren gun.JPG|thumb|right|400px|Bren Mk1 (M) - .303 British. Simplified version with no grip or butt strap on the stock and with dovetail mount on the left side of the receiver deleted, and a slightly different flash hider]] | ||
[[Image:Bren_mk2.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Bren Mk2 - .303 British. Even more simplified wartime production variant: note the lack of the Mk1's expensive stainless steel flash hider, differently-shaped carry handle, non-adjustable bipod legs, and the simplified rear sight without the adjustment drum of the Mk1. The Mk2 also has a distinctive lightening hole drilled in the middle of the magazine release catch]] | [[Image:Bren_mk2.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Bren Mk2 - .303 British. Even more simplified wartime production variant: note the lack of the Mk1's expensive stainless steel flash hider, differently-shaped carry handle, non-adjustable bipod legs, and the simplified ladder rear sight without the adjustment drum of the Mk1. The Mk2 also has a distinctive lightening hole drilled in the middle of the magazine release catch, though this Mk2 part could end up on other variants as a replacement.]] | ||
[[Image:Bren_l4a4.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Bren L4A4 - 7.62x51mm NATO. Note the straight magazine (due to the rimless 7.62 NATO rounds) and the slotted flash hider.]] | [[Image:Bren_l4a4.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Bren L4A4 - 7.62x51mm NATO. Note the almost straight magazine (due to the rimless 7.62 NATO rounds) of the same type used by the Canadian C2A1 heavy-barrel FAL, and the slotted flash hider.]] | ||
The '''Bren Gun''' was the main light machine gun used by British Commonwealth forces throughout the Second World War. A derivative of the Czech [[ZB26 Machine Gun]] (much like the Japanese [[Type 97 light machine gun]]), the name is a hybrid of those of the two manufacturers, [[Zbrojovka Brno|Brno]] and [[Royal Small Arms Factory|Enfield]]. | The '''Bren Gun''' was the main light machine gun used by British Commonwealth forces throughout the Second World War. A derivative of the Czech [[ZB26 Machine Gun]] (much like the Japanese [[Type 97 light machine gun]]) designed by Václav Holek, the name is a hybrid of those of the two manufacturers, [[Zbrojovka Brno|Brno]] and [[Royal Small Arms Factory|Enfield]]. During WW2, Brens were also manufactured by John Inglis and Company and Long Branch Arsenal in Canada, the Lithgow Small Arms Factory in Australia, and the Ishapore Rifle Factory in India. | ||
The Bren is a relatively slow-firing machine gun (480-540rpm depending on variant) with an overhead-loading magazine, ejecting spent casings downwards. This forces the weapon's sights to be offset to the left side. | The Bren is a relatively slow-firing gas-operated machine gun (480-540rpm depending on variant) with an overhead-loading magazine, ejecting spent casings downwards. This forces the weapon's sights to be offset to the left side. It was known throughout its service life for its reliability and accuracy; while some claim that the earlier versions were actually ''too'' accurate to the point it impacted their usefulness as suppression weapons, these claims are largely unfounded. | ||
After Britain joined NATO in 1954, the Bren was modified to fire standardised 7.62x51mm NATO ammunition, with this variant becoming known as the L4. | The Mk1 Bren is the first production version, with a dovetail mount for a scope that does not seem to have actually been issued, a rear grip and a folding buttstrap. Canadian-produced variants lacked the dovetail mount, grip and buttstrap and had a slightly different flash hider, and were known as Mk1 (M). In 1941 a simplified version, the Mk2, was produced, primarily by Inglis in Canada: this featured extensive changes to reduce the amount of milling required to produce each gun: they also featured some concessions to lightening including a distinctive hole drilled in the magazine release catch, had a simplified flip-up ladder-type rear sight with an adjustment knob at the top rather than the large adjustment drum of earlier models that controlled an aperture sight, a simplified carry handle, a fixed charging handle rather than the folding one of previous versions, lacked the Mk1's expensive stainless steel barrel, had a sheet metal buttplate instead of a buffer, and guns made in England deleted the ability to mount the [[Vickers K]]-style 100 round pan magazine, which had rarely been used anyway. The Mk3 and Mk4 were light variants for paratroop use developed in 1944, with a slightly shortened barrel and various parts milled down further than a standard Bren to reduce weight: Mk3 was the term for a Mk1 modified in this fashion, while the Mk4 was the same done to a Mk2. After Britain joined NATO in 1954, the Bren was modified to fire standardised 7.62x51mm NATO ammunition using inch-pattern FAL magazines, with this variant becoming known as the L4. | ||
The Bren had an incredibly long service life, | Captured Brens were pressed into use by Nazi Germany under the designation ''7.7mm Leichtes MG 138(e)''. | ||
A belt-fed Bren derivative, the Taden Gun, was produced in 1951 using the .280 British intermediate round, but was axed along with the [[Enfield EM-2]] due to the standardisation of the 7.62x51mm NATO round. | |||
The Bren had an incredibly long service life: while it was partially supplanted by the [[FN MAG]] in British use, 7.62mm examples continued to serve and were used in combat by British forces in the Falklands War: they continued to be used to train British cadets until the introduction of the L98A1 Cadet Rifle in 1987. The Irish Reserve Defence Forces did not fully phase out the Bren until 2006, and the Indian Army not until 2012. It is still manufactured by Indian Ordnance Factories as the "Gun, Machine 7.62mm 1B." | |||
==Specifications== | ==Specifications== | ||
( | (1935 – 1971) | ||
* '''Type:''' Light machine gun | * '''Type:''' Light machine gun | ||
* '''Caliber:''' .303 British, 8mm Mauser (China), 7. | * '''Caliber:''' .303 British, 8mm Mauser (China), 7.62x39mm (China) .30-06 (Italian police), 7.62x51mm NATO (L4 and later) | ||
* '''Weight:''' {{convert|kg|11.25}} loaded (Mk1 & Mk2) | * '''Weight:''' {{convert|kg|11.25}} loaded (Mk1 & Mk2), {{convert|kg|9.75}} (Mk3 & Mk4) | ||
* '''Length:''' {{convert|in|42.9}} (Mk4) | * '''Length:''' {{convert|in|45.5}} (Mk1 & Mk2), {{convert|in|42.9}} (Mk3 & Mk4) | ||
* '''Barrel length:''' {{convert|in|25}} | * '''Barrel length:''' {{convert|in|25}} (Mk1 & Mk2), {{convert|in|22.4}} (Mk3 & Mk4) | ||
* '''Capacity:''' 30 round box (usually only loaded with 27-28 due to spring issues), 100-round pan (Mk1 only, rare), 20-round | * '''Capacity:''' 30 round box (usually only loaded with 27-28 due to spring issues), 100-round pan (Mk1 only, rare), 20 / 30-round inch-pattern [[FN FAL]] magazine (L4) | ||
* '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto / Full-Auto | * '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto / Full-Auto | ||
'''The | ----- | ||
'''The Bren gun and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:''' | |||
===Film=== | ===Film=== | ||
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!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="280"|'''Note''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="280"|'''Note''' | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="80"|'''Date''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="80"|'''Date''' | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[Do Not Wake Me Up (Ne budi menya)]]'' |||| || || 2017 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Dunkirk (2017)|Dunkirk]]'' |||| British soldiers|| Mk1 || 2017 | | ''[[Dunkirk (2017)|Dunkirk]]'' |||| British soldiers|| Mk1 || 2017 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[The Siege of Jadotville]]'' || || Irish soldiers|| || 2016 | | ''[[The Siege of Jadotville]]'' || || Irish soldiers|| || 2016 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[White Soldier]]'' || || A Black Commando member || Mk1 (M) || 2014 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Cockneys vs. Zombies]]'' || || || || 2012 | | ''[[Cockneys vs. Zombies]]'' || || || || 2012 | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| ''[[New Kids Turbo]]'' ||[[Flip van der Kuil]] || Barry || || 2010 | | ''[[New Kids Turbo]]'' ||[[Flip van der Kuil]] || Barry || || 2010 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[John Rabe]]'' || || Nationalist Chinese Soldiers || 7.92x57mm Mauser variant|| 2009 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Red and White (Merah Putih)]]'' || || Dutch soldier || || 2009 | | ''[[Red and White (Merah Putih)]]'' || || Dutch soldier || || 2009 | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|''[[Frontier(s)]]'' || [[Samuel Le Bihan]] || Goetz || || 2007 | |''[[Frontier(s)]]'' || [[Samuel Le Bihan]] || Goetz || || 2007 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[Atonement]]'' || || British soldiers || Mk. I || 2007 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Black Book]]'' || || || || 2006 | | ''[[Black Book]]'' || || || || 2006 | ||
|- | |||
|''[[Kokoda (2006)]]''||[[Christopher Baker]]||Blue||||2006 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Kokoda (2006)]]''||[[Travis McMahon]]||Darko||||2006 | |||
|- | |||
| ''The Last Drop'' || [[Nick Moran]] ||Pvt. Alan Ives || || 2006 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Lakshya]]'' || || Indian and Pakistani soldiers || Indian 1B version || 2004 | | ''[[Lakshya]]'' || || Indian and Pakistani soldiers || Indian 1B version || 2004 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[LOC Kargil]]'' || | | rowspan=2| ''[[LOC Kargil]]'' || [[Sunil Shetty]] || Sepoy Sanjay Kumar || rowspan=2| Indian 1B version || rowspan=2| 2003 | ||
|- | |||
| [[Ajay Devgn]] || Lt. Maroj Kumar Pandey | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels]]'' || [[Huggy Leaver]] || Paul || || 1998 | | ''[[Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels]]'' || [[Huggy Leaver]] || Paul || || 1998 | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels]]'' || [[Ronnie Fox]] || Mickey || || 1998 | | ''[[Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels]]'' || [[Ronnie Fox]] || Mickey || || 1998 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[Seven Years in Tibet]]'' || || British-Indian || Mk 1|| 1997 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[An Ungentlemanly Act]]'' || || British and Argentinian soldiers || L4A4 Bren || 1992 | | ''[[An Ungentlemanly Act]]'' || || British and Argentinian soldiers || L4A4 Bren || 1992 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[ | | ''[[Farewell To The King]]''|| [[Nick Nolte]] || Learoyd || ||1989 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[Tumbledown]]'' || ||Scots Guardsman || L4A4 || 1988 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[ | | ''[[Empire of the Sun]]'' || || Imperial Japanese soldiers || || 1987 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Les Morfalous]]'' || [[Jean-Paul Belmondo]] || Sergeant Pierre Augagneur|| || 1984 | | ''[[Les Morfalous]]'' || [[Jean-Paul Belmondo]] || Sergeant Pierre Augagneur|| || 1984 | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Paper Tiger]]'' || || British soldiers || || 1975 | | ''[[Paper Tiger]]'' || || British soldiers || || 1975 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[Mission in Kabul (Missiya v Kabule)]]'' || [[Algimantas Masiulis]] || Gerhard Epp || Without magazine; supposedly Mk.1 || 1971 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Last Grenade, The|The Last Grenade]]'' ||||British soldier|| On Jeep mounted || 1970 | | ''[[Last Grenade, The|The Last Grenade]]'' ||||British soldier|| On Jeep mounted || 1970 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Too Late the Hero]]'' || [[Sean MacDuff]] || Private Rogers || || 1970 | | ''[[Too Late the Hero]]'' || [[Sean MacDuff]] || Private Rogers || || 1970 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[The Last Escape]]'' || || || L4, visually modified as [[Degtyaryov DT]]; top mounted on a Soviet tank || 1970 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Overrun (Di Marsa Matruh)]]'' || [[Ivan Rassimov]] || Lt. Alan Crossland || || 1970 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Kill Rommel!]]'' || [[Anton Diffring]] || Captain Richard Howell || || 1969 | | ''[[Kill Rommel!]]'' || [[Anton Diffring]] || Captain Richard Howell || || 1969 | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Escape from Zahrain]]'' || || Police || || 1962 | | ''[[Escape from Zahrain]]'' || || Police || || 1962 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[The Return of Doctor Mabuse]]'' || || German police || Mk 2 (?) || 1961 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Konga]]'' || || British soldier || || 1961 | | ''[[Konga]]'' || || British soldier || || 1961 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[The Guns of Navarone]]'' || [[James Darren]] || Private Spiros Pappadimos || || 1961 | | ''[[The Guns of Navarone]]'' || [[James Darren]] || Private Spiros Pappadimos || || 1961 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[Gorgo]]'' || || British troops || Mounted on Centurion tank || 1961 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Giant Behemoth, The|The Giant Behemoth]]'' || || British soldiers || || 1959 | | ''[[Giant Behemoth, The|The Giant Behemoth]]'' || || British soldiers || || 1959 | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Young Lions, The|The Young Lions]]'' || || British soldiers || || 1958 | | ''[[Young Lions, The|The Young Lions]]'' || || British soldiers || || 1958 | ||
|- | |||
| ''The Steel Bayonet'' || [[Leo Genn]] ||Maj. Alan Gerrard || || 1957 | |||
|- | |||
| ''The Steel Bayonet'' || || British Soldiers || || 1957 | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="9"|''[[A Hill in Korea]]'' || [[Harry Landis]] || Private Rabin || rowspan="9"| Mk. 2 || rowspan="9"| 1956 | |||
|- | |||
| [[Robert Shaw]] || Lance Corporal Hodge | |||
|- | |||
| [[Barry Lowe]] || Pte. Neill | |||
|- | |||
| [[Robert Brown]] || Pte O'Brien | |||
|- | |||
| [[Charles Laurence]] || Pte. Kim | |||
|- | |||
| [[David Morrell]] || Pte. Henson | |||
|- | |||
| [[Harry Andrews]] || Sgt. Payne | |||
|- | |||
| [[Ronald Lewis]] || Private Wyatt | |||
|- | |||
| [[Stanley Baker]] || Corporal Ryker | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Desert Rats, The]]'' || || Australian commandos || || 1953 | | ''[[Desert Rats, The]]'' || || Australian commandos || || 1953 | ||
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!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Note''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Note''' | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="80"|'''Air Date''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="80"|'''Air Date''' | ||
|- | |||
| rowspan=4| ''[[Gilligan's Island - Season 1]]'' || [[Bob Denver]] || Gilligan || rowspan=2| "So Sorry, My Island Now" (S1E15), "Diogenes, Won't You Please Go Home?"(S1E31) || rowspan=4| 1965 | |||
|- | |||
| [[Dawn Wells]] || Mary Ann Summers | |||
|- | |||
| [[Alan Hale Jr.]] || The Skipper || rowspan=2| "Diogenes, Won't You Please Go Home?"(S1E31) | |||
|- | |||
| [[Vito Scotti]] || Japanese soldier | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[The Prisoner]]'' || [[Patrick McGoohan]] || No. 6 || || 1968 | | ''[[The Prisoner]]'' || [[Patrick McGoohan]] || No. 6 || || 1968 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[Blott on the Landscape]]'' || [[David Suchet]] || Blott || Mk.1 || 1985 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Sahara (1995)]]'' || [[Alan David Lee]] || Bates || || 1995 | | ''[[Sahara (1995)]]'' || [[Alan David Lee]] || Bates || || 1995 | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Foyle's War - Season 2]]'' || || British soldiers || "Fifty Ships" (S2E1) || 2003 | | ''[[Foyle's War - Season 2]]'' || || British soldiers || "Fifty Ships" (S2E1) || 2003 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Kokoda (2010)|Kokoda]]'' || || Australian soldiers || || 2010 | | ''[[Kokoda (2010)|Kokoda]]'' || || Australian soldiers || || 2010 | ||
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| ''[[Parer's War]]'' || || Australian Commandos || || 2014 | | ''[[Parer's War]]'' || || Australian Commandos || || 2014 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Endeavour - Season 2]]'' || || A reenactor of British Army of WW2 || Mk.1; "Trove" (S02E01) || 2014 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Arrow - Season 5]] || || || seen in gunstore; "Vigilante" (S5E07)||2016-2017 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Crown, The|The Crown]]''||||British military||episode: "Misadventure" (S02E01)||2017 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Madiba]]'' || || South African Police || || 2017 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mandalorian, The - Season 1|The Mandalorian]]||[[Gina Carano]]||Cara Dune||mocked up to resemble a blaster||2019 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Cowboy Bebop (2021)]]||[[Josh Randall]]||Pierrot Le Fou||Episode 8||2021 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[SAS Rogue Heroes]]''||Various||British soldiers|| ||2022 | |||
|} | |} | ||
=== | ===Video Games=== | ||
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%" | {| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%" | ||
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF | |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Game Title''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Game Title''' | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="175"|'''Appears As''' | |||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Modifications''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Modifications''' | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Notes''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Notes''' | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|''' Release Date''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|''' Release Date''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[World War II Online: Battleground Europe]]''|| || Bren Mk2 || 2001 | | ''[[Hidden & Dangerous]]''|| |||| Bren Mk2 || 21999 | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[World War II Online: Battleground Europe]]''|| |||| Bren Mk2 || 2001 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Battlefield: 1942]]''|| || Secret Weapons of WWII Expansion pack || 2002 | | ''[[Battlefield: 1942]]''|| |||| Secret Weapons of WWII Expansion pack || 2002 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Forgotten Hope]]''|| || Man-portable, mounted in machine gun nests and bunkers and on the Universal Carrier and M3A1 Halftrack || 2003 | | ''[[Forgotten Hope]]''|| |||| Man-portable, mounted in machine gun nests and bunkers and on the Universal Carrier and M3A1 Halftrack || 2003 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Call of Duty]]''|| || | | ''[[Call of Duty]]''|| || || || 2003 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Hidden & Dangerous 2]]'' || || ||2003 | | ''[[Hidden & Dangerous 2]]'' || |||| ||2003 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Call of Duty | | ''[[Call of Duty: Finest Hour]]'' || "Bren" || || || 2004 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[ | | ''[[Call of Duty 2]]''|| || || || 2005 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[ | | ''[[Darkest Hour: Europe '44-'45]] |||| With deployable bipod || Mounted on Bren Carrier || 2006 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|''[[ | | ''[[Call of Duty 3]]''|| || || || 2006 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[ | | ''[[Company of Heroes (2006)|Company of Heroes]]''|| || || Mk. II || 2013 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[ | | ''[[Far East War]]'' || "Bren Gun" || || Mk. I (M) || 2013 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[ | |''[[Clive Barker's Jericho]]''|| ||w/ bayonet || unusable|| 2007 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[ | | rowspan=2|''[[Forgotten Hope 2]]''|| "Bren Mk I" || rowspan=2| || Bren Mk1 (M), can appear mounted on AA tripods and light vehicles || rowspan=2|2007 | ||
|- | |||
| "Bren Mk II" || Added in v2.53 (2018), can appear mounted on light vehicles | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[The Royal Marines Commando]]''|| |||| Bren Mk2 || 2008 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Mare Nostrum]]'' || || || || 2008 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Karma Online]]'' || || ||||2011 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Company of Heroes 2]]''|| || || Mk. II || 2006 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[World of Guns: Gun Disassembly]]'' || Bren MKII || ||Bren Mk2 || 2014 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Hot Dogs, Horseshoes & Hand Grenades]]'' |||| || Bren Mk2 || 2016 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Ghost Recon: Wildlands]]'' || ||Heavily customized, fitted with a wooden vertical grip || Bren Mk2 || 2017 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Call of Duty: WWII]]'' ||Bren || ||Bren Mk1 (M) || 2017 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Post Scriptum]]'' || "Bren Mk. III" || || Mk3 lightened variant, has tripod and Universal Carrier mounts that feed from drum magazines || 2018 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Battlefield V]]'' ||Bren Gun || ||Bren Mk1 || 2018 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Gun Club VR]]'' || || || || 2018 | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan=3|''[[Enlisted]]'' || || ||Bren Mk1 || rowspan=3| 2021 | |||
|- | |||
||| || Bren Mk2 | |||
|- | |||
||| || Bren Mk2 vehicle mounted | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Call of Duty: Vanguard]]'' ||Bren || ||Bren Mk2 || 2021 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Battlefield 2042]]'' || Bren LMG || || Bren Mk2 || 2021 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Marauders (video game)|Marauders]]'' ||"Bren Mk2"|| Straight 7.62 NATO mag, .303 curved mag, Drum mag, AA spider sights || Bren Mk2; Incorrectly chambered in "7.62mm" || 2022 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
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{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%" | {| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%" | ||
|-bgcolor=#D0E7FF | |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width=" | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Film Title''' | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width=" | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Character''' | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Note''' | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Note''' | ||
!align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width=" | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="50"|'''Date''' | ||
|- | |||
| ''[[Strike Witches]]'' || Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann || Mk 1 (M) without bipod || 2008 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Strike Witches 2]]'' || Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann || Mk 1 (M) without bipod || 2010 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Strike Witches: The Movie]]'' || Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann || Mk 1 (M) without bipod || 2012 | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Girls und Panzer: This is the Real Anzio Battle!]]'' || || Mounting on an APC || 2014 | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan=2 | ''[[Strike Witches: Operation Victory Arrow]]'' || Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann || rowspan=2 | Mk 1 (M) without bipod || rowspan=2 | 2014-2015 | |||
|- | |||
| Amelie Planchard | |||
|- | |||
| ''[[Brave Witches]]'' || Nora Taylor || Mk 1 (M) without bipod || 2016-2017 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''[[Strike Witches]]'' || | | rowspan=2 | ''[[Strike Witches: Road to Berlin]]'' || Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann || rowspan=2 | Mk 1 (M) without bipod || rowspan=2 | 2020 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | | Yoshika Miyafuji | ||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} |
Latest revision as of 10:12, 15 December 2023
The Bren Gun was the main light machine gun used by British Commonwealth forces throughout the Second World War. A derivative of the Czech ZB26 Machine Gun (much like the Japanese Type 97 light machine gun) designed by Václav Holek, the name is a hybrid of those of the two manufacturers, Brno and Enfield. During WW2, Brens were also manufactured by John Inglis and Company and Long Branch Arsenal in Canada, the Lithgow Small Arms Factory in Australia, and the Ishapore Rifle Factory in India.
The Bren is a relatively slow-firing gas-operated machine gun (480-540rpm depending on variant) with an overhead-loading magazine, ejecting spent casings downwards. This forces the weapon's sights to be offset to the left side. It was known throughout its service life for its reliability and accuracy; while some claim that the earlier versions were actually too accurate to the point it impacted their usefulness as suppression weapons, these claims are largely unfounded.
The Mk1 Bren is the first production version, with a dovetail mount for a scope that does not seem to have actually been issued, a rear grip and a folding buttstrap. Canadian-produced variants lacked the dovetail mount, grip and buttstrap and had a slightly different flash hider, and were known as Mk1 (M). In 1941 a simplified version, the Mk2, was produced, primarily by Inglis in Canada: this featured extensive changes to reduce the amount of milling required to produce each gun: they also featured some concessions to lightening including a distinctive hole drilled in the magazine release catch, had a simplified flip-up ladder-type rear sight with an adjustment knob at the top rather than the large adjustment drum of earlier models that controlled an aperture sight, a simplified carry handle, a fixed charging handle rather than the folding one of previous versions, lacked the Mk1's expensive stainless steel barrel, had a sheet metal buttplate instead of a buffer, and guns made in England deleted the ability to mount the Vickers K-style 100 round pan magazine, which had rarely been used anyway. The Mk3 and Mk4 were light variants for paratroop use developed in 1944, with a slightly shortened barrel and various parts milled down further than a standard Bren to reduce weight: Mk3 was the term for a Mk1 modified in this fashion, while the Mk4 was the same done to a Mk2. After Britain joined NATO in 1954, the Bren was modified to fire standardised 7.62x51mm NATO ammunition using inch-pattern FAL magazines, with this variant becoming known as the L4.
Captured Brens were pressed into use by Nazi Germany under the designation 7.7mm Leichtes MG 138(e).
A belt-fed Bren derivative, the Taden Gun, was produced in 1951 using the .280 British intermediate round, but was axed along with the Enfield EM-2 due to the standardisation of the 7.62x51mm NATO round.
The Bren had an incredibly long service life: while it was partially supplanted by the FN MAG in British use, 7.62mm examples continued to serve and were used in combat by British forces in the Falklands War: they continued to be used to train British cadets until the introduction of the L98A1 Cadet Rifle in 1987. The Irish Reserve Defence Forces did not fully phase out the Bren until 2006, and the Indian Army not until 2012. It is still manufactured by Indian Ordnance Factories as the "Gun, Machine 7.62mm 1B."
Specifications
(1935 – 1971)
- Type: Light machine gun
- Caliber: .303 British, 8mm Mauser (China), 7.62x39mm (China) .30-06 (Italian police), 7.62x51mm NATO (L4 and later)
- Weight: 24.8 lbs (11.3 kg) loaded (Mk1 & Mk2), 21.5 lbs (9.8 kg) (Mk3 & Mk4)
- Length: 45.5 in (115.6 cm) (Mk1 & Mk2), 42.9 in (109 cm) (Mk3 & Mk4)
- Barrel length: 25 in (63.5 cm) (Mk1 & Mk2), 22.4 in (56.9 cm) (Mk3 & Mk4)
- Capacity: 30 round box (usually only loaded with 27-28 due to spring issues), 100-round pan (Mk1 only, rare), 20 / 30-round inch-pattern FN FAL magazine (L4)
- Fire Modes: Semi-Auto / Full-Auto
The Bren gun and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:
Film
Title | Actor | Character | Note | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Do Not Wake Me Up (Ne budi menya) | 2017 | |||
Dunkirk | British soldiers | Mk1 | 2017 | |
The Siege of Jadotville | Irish soldiers | 2016 | ||
White Soldier | A Black Commando member | Mk1 (M) | 2014 | |
Cockneys vs. Zombies | 2012 | |||
The Flowers of War | Nationalist Chinese Soldiers | 7.92x57mm Mauser variant | 2011 | |
Shaolin | Nicholas Tse | Cao Man | 7.92x57mm Mauser variant | 2011 |
Shaolin | Cao Man's soldiers | 7.92x57mm Mauser variant | 2011 | |
New Kids Turbo | Flip van der Kuil | Barry | 2010 | |
John Rabe | Nationalist Chinese Soldiers | 7.92x57mm Mauser variant | 2009 | |
Red and White (Merah Putih) | Dutch soldier | 2009 | ||
Tobruk | 2008 | |||
Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, The | John Hannah | Jonathan | 2008 | |
Frontier(s) | Samuel Le Bihan | Goetz | 2007 | |
Atonement | British soldiers | Mk. I | 2007 | |
Black Book | 2006 | |||
Kokoda (2006) | Christopher Baker | Blue | 2006 | |
Kokoda (2006) | Travis McMahon | Darko | 2006 | |
The Last Drop | Nick Moran | Pvt. Alan Ives | 2006 | |
Lakshya | Indian and Pakistani soldiers | Indian 1B version | 2004 | |
LOC Kargil | Sunil Shetty | Sepoy Sanjay Kumar | Indian 1B version | 2003 |
Ajay Devgn | Lt. Maroj Kumar Pandey | |||
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels | Huggy Leaver | Paul | 1998 | |
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels | Suzy Ratner | Gloria | 1998 | |
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels | Ronnie Fox | Mickey | 1998 | |
Seven Years in Tibet | British-Indian | Mk 1 | 1997 | |
An Ungentlemanly Act | British and Argentinian soldiers | L4A4 Bren | 1992 | |
Farewell To The King | Nick Nolte | Learoyd | 1989 | |
Tumbledown | Scots Guardsman | L4A4 | 1988 | |
Empire of the Sun | Imperial Japanese soldiers | 1987 | ||
Les Morfalous | Jean-Paul Belmondo | Sergeant Pierre Augagneur | 1984 | |
The Africain (L'Africain) | The poacher | L4 | 1983 | |
Bukit Kepong | Bukit Kepong police officers | Mk I | 1982 | |
Police Jungle Squad | ||||
Communist terrorists | ||||
The Wild Geese | Various mercenaries | 1978 | ||
A Bridge Too Far | British soldiers | 1977 | ||
Paper Tiger | British soldiers | 1975 | ||
Mission in Kabul (Missiya v Kabule) | Algimantas Masiulis | Gerhard Epp | Without magazine; supposedly Mk.1 | 1971 |
The Last Grenade | British soldier | On Jeep mounted | 1970 | |
Too Late the Hero | Sean MacDuff | Private Rogers | 1970 | |
The Last Escape | L4, visually modified as Degtyaryov DT; top mounted on a Soviet tank | 1970 | ||
Overrun (Di Marsa Matruh) | Ivan Rassimov | Lt. Alan Crossland | 1970 | |
Kill Rommel! | Anton Diffring | Captain Richard Howell | 1969 | |
Kill Rommel! | Carl Parker | Lieutenant George Morris | 1969 | |
Kill Rommel! | Renato Romano | Sergeant Atwell | 1969 | |
If... | Malcolm McDowell | Mick Travis | 1968 | |
How I Won the War | Michael Crawford | Lt. Goodbody | 1967 | |
How I Won the War | Lee Montague | Sgt. Transom | 1967 | |
How I Won the War | Musketeers (British soldiers) | Mounted on Dodge M-37, Daimler Dingo, Ford F-60 | 1967 | |
Cast a Giant Shadow | Stathis Giallelis | Ram Oren | 1966 | |
Judith | Peter Finch | Aaron Stein | 1966 | |
Judith | Shraga Friedman | Nathan | 1966 | |
Judith | Haganah fighters | 1966 | ||
So Darling So Deadly | Seen in Golden Dragon's lair | 1966 | ||
Death is Nimble, Death is Quick | Joe Abey | Inspector Khamar | 1966 | |
The Unvanquished (L'Insoumis) | French legionnaires and Algerian insurgents | 1964 | ||
The Longest Day | Sean Connery | Private Flanagan | 1963 | |
From Russia With Love | 1963 | |||
Dr. No | Crab Key guard | 1962 | ||
Escape from Zahrain | Police | 1962 | ||
The Return of Doctor Mabuse | German police | Mk 2 (?) | 1961 | |
Konga | British soldier | 1961 | ||
The Guns of Navarone | James Darren | Private Spiros Pappadimos | 1961 | |
Gorgo | British troops | Mounted on Centurion tank | 1961 | |
The Giant Behemoth | British soldiers | 1959 | ||
Yesterday's Enemy | British soldiers | Mk 1 | 1959 | |
Dunkirk | British soldiers | Mk 1 | 1958 | |
The Young Lions | British soldiers | 1958 | ||
The Steel Bayonet | Leo Genn | Maj. Alan Gerrard | 1957 | |
The Steel Bayonet | British Soldiers | 1957 | ||
A Hill in Korea | Harry Landis | Private Rabin | Mk. 2 | 1956 |
Robert Shaw | Lance Corporal Hodge | |||
Barry Lowe | Pte. Neill | |||
Robert Brown | Pte O'Brien | |||
Charles Laurence | Pte. Kim | |||
David Morrell | Pte. Henson | |||
Harry Andrews | Sgt. Payne | |||
Ronald Lewis | Private Wyatt | |||
Stanley Baker | Corporal Ryker | |||
Desert Rats, The | Australian commandos | 1953 | ||
Paratrooper | British paratroopers | 1953 | ||
Went the Day Well? | German Paratroopers | 1942 | ||
Somewhere in France | 1942 |
Television
Show Title / Episode | Actor | Character | Note | Air Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gilligan's Island - Season 1 | Bob Denver | Gilligan | "So Sorry, My Island Now" (S1E15), "Diogenes, Won't You Please Go Home?"(S1E31) | 1965 |
Dawn Wells | Mary Ann Summers | |||
Alan Hale Jr. | The Skipper | "Diogenes, Won't You Please Go Home?"(S1E31) | ||
Vito Scotti | Japanese soldier | |||
The Prisoner | Patrick McGoohan | No. 6 | 1968 | |
Blott on the Landscape | David Suchet | Blott | Mk.1 | 1985 |
Sahara (1995) | Alan David Lee | Bates | 1995 | |
Foyle's War - Season 1 | British soldiers | "The White Feather" (S1E2) | 2002 | |
Foyle's War - Season 2 | British soldiers | "Fifty Ships" (S2E1) | 2003 | |
Kokoda | Australian soldiers | 2010 | ||
The Promise | British paratroopers | Mk1 | 2011 | |
Parer's War | Australian Commandos | 2014 | ||
Endeavour - Season 2 | A reenactor of British Army of WW2 | Mk.1; "Trove" (S02E01) | 2014 | |
Arrow - Season 5 | seen in gunstore; "Vigilante" (S5E07) | 2016-2017 | ||
The Crown | British military | episode: "Misadventure" (S02E01) | 2017 | |
Madiba | South African Police | 2017 | ||
The Mandalorian | Gina Carano | Cara Dune | mocked up to resemble a blaster | 2019 |
Cowboy Bebop (2021) | Josh Randall | Pierrot Le Fou | Episode 8 | 2021 |
SAS Rogue Heroes | Various | British soldiers | 2022 |
Video Games
Game Title | Appears As | Modifications | Notes | Release Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hidden & Dangerous | Bren Mk2 | 21999 | ||
World War II Online: Battleground Europe | Bren Mk2 | 2001 | ||
Battlefield: 1942 | Secret Weapons of WWII Expansion pack | 2002 | ||
Forgotten Hope | Man-portable, mounted in machine gun nests and bunkers and on the Universal Carrier and M3A1 Halftrack | 2003 | ||
Call of Duty | 2003 | |||
Hidden & Dangerous 2 | 2003 | |||
Call of Duty: Finest Hour | "Bren" | 2004 | ||
Call of Duty 2 | 2005 | |||
Darkest Hour: Europe '44-'45 | With deployable bipod | Mounted on Bren Carrier | 2006 | |
Call of Duty 3 | 2006 | |||
Company of Heroes | Mk. II | 2013 | ||
Far East War | "Bren Gun" | Mk. I (M) | 2013 | |
Clive Barker's Jericho | w/ bayonet | unusable | 2007 | |
Forgotten Hope 2 | "Bren Mk I" | Bren Mk1 (M), can appear mounted on AA tripods and light vehicles | 2007 | |
"Bren Mk II" | Added in v2.53 (2018), can appear mounted on light vehicles | |||
The Royal Marines Commando | Bren Mk2 | 2008 | ||
Mare Nostrum | 2008 | |||
Karma Online | 2011 | |||
Company of Heroes 2 | Mk. II | 2006 | ||
World of Guns: Gun Disassembly | Bren MKII | Bren Mk2 | 2014 | |
Hot Dogs, Horseshoes & Hand Grenades | Bren Mk2 | 2016 | ||
Ghost Recon: Wildlands | Heavily customized, fitted with a wooden vertical grip | Bren Mk2 | 2017 | |
Call of Duty: WWII | Bren | Bren Mk1 (M) | 2017 | |
Post Scriptum | "Bren Mk. III" | Mk3 lightened variant, has tripod and Universal Carrier mounts that feed from drum magazines | 2018 | |
Battlefield V | Bren Gun | Bren Mk1 | 2018 | |
Gun Club VR | 2018 | |||
Enlisted | Bren Mk1 | 2021 | ||
Bren Mk2 | ||||
Bren Mk2 vehicle mounted | ||||
Call of Duty: Vanguard | Bren | Bren Mk2 | 2021 | |
Battlefield 2042 | Bren LMG | Bren Mk2 | 2021 | |
Marauders | "Bren Mk2" | Straight 7.62 NATO mag, .303 curved mag, Drum mag, AA spider sights | Bren Mk2; Incorrectly chambered in "7.62mm" | 2022 |
Anime
Film Title | Character | Note | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Strike Witches | Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann | Mk 1 (M) without bipod | 2008 |
Strike Witches 2 | Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann | Mk 1 (M) without bipod | 2010 |
Strike Witches: The Movie | Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann | Mk 1 (M) without bipod | 2012 |
Girls und Panzer: This is the Real Anzio Battle! | Mounting on an APC | 2014 | |
Strike Witches: Operation Victory Arrow | Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann | Mk 1 (M) without bipod | 2014-2015 |
Amelie Planchard | |||
Brave Witches | Nora Taylor | Mk 1 (M) without bipod | 2016-2017 |
Strike Witches: Road to Berlin | Pierrette-Henriette Clostermann | Mk 1 (M) without bipod | 2020 |
Yoshika Miyafuji |
See Also
- Royal Small Arms Factory - A list of weapons produced by RSAF Enfield