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M1941 Johnson rifle: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:M1941Johnson.jpg|thumb|right|500px|M1941 Johnson Rifle - .30-06.]] | [[Image:M1941Johnson.jpg|thumb|right|500px|M1941 Johnson Rifle - .30-06.]] | ||
The Johnson rifle was developed in 1939 by Melvin Johnson, who was promoting the weapon design to the U.S. Army prior to World War II. Variants of the rifle were delivered to the U.S. Marines fighting in the Pacific, however, the overall design for a semiautomatic Infantry rifle went to (and stayed with) the [[M1 Garand]] Rifle which had been formally adopted in 1937. The Johnson was formally adopted in small numbers in 1941, thus the rifle was then called the M1941 Johnson Rifle. It had a unique rotary 10 round magazine, however the recoil operation (versus the gas operation of the Garand) required a moving barrel, which made it unsuitable for bayonet usage and also made the weapon a bit more fragile than the sturdy Garand. A light machine gun variant was also used and shipped to some client nations abroad as well as used in small numbers by Marines and U.S Special Forces in the 1950s-1960s. | The Johnson rifle was developed in 1939 by Melvin Johnson, who was promoting the weapon design to the U.S. Army prior to World War II. Variants of the rifle were delivered to the U.S. Marines fighting in the Pacific, however, the overall design for a semiautomatic Infantry rifle went to (and stayed with) the [[M1 Garand]] Rifle which had been formally adopted in 1937. The Johnson was formally adopted in small numbers in 1941, thus the rifle was then called the M1941 Johnson Rifle. It had a unique rotary 10 round magazine, however the recoil operation (versus the gas operation of the Garand) required a moving barrel, which made it unsuitable for bayonet usage and also made the weapon a bit more fragile than the sturdy Garand. A light machine gun variant was also used and shipped to some client nations abroad as well as used in small numbers by Marines and U.S Special Forces in the 1950s-1960s. | ||
Revision as of 08:34, 7 March 2010
The Johnson rifle was developed in 1939 by Melvin Johnson, who was promoting the weapon design to the U.S. Army prior to World War II. Variants of the rifle were delivered to the U.S. Marines fighting in the Pacific, however, the overall design for a semiautomatic Infantry rifle went to (and stayed with) the M1 Garand Rifle which had been formally adopted in 1937. The Johnson was formally adopted in small numbers in 1941, thus the rifle was then called the M1941 Johnson Rifle. It had a unique rotary 10 round magazine, however the recoil operation (versus the gas operation of the Garand) required a moving barrel, which made it unsuitable for bayonet usage and also made the weapon a bit more fragile than the sturdy Garand. A light machine gun variant was also used and shipped to some client nations abroad as well as used in small numbers by Marines and U.S Special Forces in the 1950s-1960s.
Specifications
- Weight: 9.5 lb (4.31 kg)
- Length: 45.87 in (1,165 mm)
- Barrel length: 22 in (559 mm)
- Cartridge .30-06 Springfield
- 7x57mm Mauser
- Action: Short-recoil, rotating bolt
- Muzzle velocity: 2,840 ft/s (866 m/s)
- Feed system: 10 round cylindrical magazine
- Sights: Adjustable Iron Sights
The M1941 Johnson rifle or it's variants has been seen in the following:
Film
- (Baoqiang Wang) as Jiang Maocai and a Nationalist Chinese sniper in Assembly (Ji jie hao) (Nationalist sniper's rifle being fitted with a scope)
- Wang also uses the same rifle, fitted with a crude scope, inMy Brother Shunliu
- In Canadian Bacon there are a similiar rifle with a scope in the opening.
Television
Video Games
- Silent Storm: Sentinels (Includes scoped version)