Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

De Lisle Carbine: Difference between revisions

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:45ACP DeLisle Carbine 4.jpg|thumb|right|450px|De Lisle Carbine - .45 ACP]]
==Description==
==Description==



Revision as of 23:30, 14 July 2010

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
De Lisle Carbine - .45 ACP

Description

The designer was William De Lisle. It was based on a Short, Magazine, Lee-Enfield Mk III* converted to .45 ACP by modifying the receiver, altering the bolt/bolthead, replacing the barrel with a modified Thompson submachine gun barrel, and using modified magazines from the M1911 pistol. The primary feature of the De Lisle was its very effective suppressor which made it very quiet in action - indeed working the bolt to chamber the next round makes a louder noise than firing a round.[1] The De Lisle carbine was used by the British Commandos and special forces, and was accurate to 250 metres.

The De Lisle was made in response to the Gestapo's 9mm SDK silenced rifle and in very limited numbers; 129 were produced during the period of 1942 to 1945 in three variations (Ford Dagenham Prototype, Sterling production and one Airborne prototype). Thompson sub-machine gun barrels were modified to provide the .45 calibre barrel, which was ported to provide a slow release of high pressure gas.

The suppressor, 2 inches in diameter, went all the way from the back of the barrel to well beyond the muzzle (the suppressor makes up half the overall length of the rifle), providing a very large volume of space to contain the gases produced by firing. This large volume was one of the keys to the effectiveness of the suppressor. The Lee-Enfield bolt was modified to feed the .45 ACP rounds, and the Lee-Enfield's magazine assembly was replaced with a new assembly that held a modified M1911 magazine. Because the cartridge was subsonic, the carbine was extremely quiet, possibly one of the quietest guns ever made.

The De Lisle was used by the Special Operations Executive(S.O.E.) during World War II and after conflicts such as the Malaysian Emergency.

Specification

Cartridge - .45 ACP

Dimensions

Length - 960mm

Weight - 3.70kg

Barrel - 210mm

Rifiling - 4 groves RH

Magazing - 8 rounds

Production 1942-45

DeLisle Carbine

Video Games

The gun appears in the game No One Lives Forever under the name Hampton Carbine

-- "Medal of Honour: Breakthrough" as himself...


Shaniac1138 23:48, 5 November 2008 (UTC)