M1917 Enfield rifle

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US Rifle, Model of 1917, Caliber 30
United States Rifle, cal .30, Model of 1917
M1917 rifle with P1913 bayonet and loaded stripper clip
Type Service rifle
Place of origin U.S. (UK/US development)
Service history
Used by U.S., UK, (also France and China under "Lend Lease")
Wars World War I and World War II
Production history
Designed 1917
Number built 2,193,429 total
Specifications
Weight 9 lb. 3 oz. (4.17 kg)
Length 3 ft. 10.25 in. (1175 mm)
Barrel length 26.0 in. (660 mm)

Cartridge .30-06 (7.62×63 mm)
Caliber .30 cal (7.62 mm)
Action Modified Mauser turn bolt
Rate of fire Manual, as determined by skill of operator
Muzzle velocity 2700 ft/s (823 m/s)
Feed system 6 round, 5-round clip fed reloading

The M1917 Enfield, "P17 Enfield", "American Enfield", formally named "United States Rifle, cal .30, Model of 1917" was an American modification and production of the British .303 caliber P14 rifle developed and manufactured during the period 1917-1918.

Contents

[edit] History

When the British Empire entered World War I, it had an urgent need for rifles and contracts were placed with companies in the United States. In the case of the P14 (Short for Pattern of 1914) rifle, Winchester, Remington and it's new factory at, Eddystone, Pennsylvania, were selected.

When the U.S. entered the war, it had a similar extreme need for rifles. When the US army approached the three factories (Who had finished the P14 contract) in producing the M1903 rifle, the factories suggested that rather than re-tool completely, the factories, under the close supervision of the US Army Ordnance Department, would alter the design of the P14 for caliber .30-06.

The new rifle, Called the M1917 or P17, was used alongside the M1903 rifle and quickly surpassed the Springfield design in numbers produced and units issued. By November 11, 1918 about 75% of the AEF were armed with M1917s. After the armistice, M1917 rifles were surplussed or placed in storage.

Before and during World War II, stored rifles were reconditioned for use issue as reserve, training, and Lend-Lease weapons; these rifles are identified by having refinished metal (sandblasted and Parkerized) and sometimes replacement wood (often birch). Many were sent to Britain for use by the British Home Guard and to Canada for Home defence. These were prominently marked with red paint to avoid confusion with the earlier P14 and other enfields which used the .303 cartridge.

[edit] Design

While developed at the same arsenal, the M1917 is not a version of the .303 caliber rifle of c. 1890-1955, the Lee-Enfield (such as the SMLE version). Both were developed at the Royal Small Arms Factory at Enfield (arsenal) in the United Kingdom. The M1917 was actually a development of the Mauser 98 rifle. Due to the use of rimmed cartridges in the P14, the magazine capacity for the smaller diameter 30-06 was 6 rounds, although stripper clips only held 5 cartridges.

The action was used as the basis for a variety of commercial and gunsmith-made sporting rifles between the world wars and after; surplus receivers and tooling were used by Remington to produce their Model 30 series of rifles in the interwar period. Some (approximately 3000) M1917 rifles were produced in 7 mm and sold to Honduras around 1930.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also


Norwegian service rifles
Kammerlader, Remington M1867, Krag-Petersson, Jarmann M1884, Krag-Jørgensen, Lee-Enfield No. 4 (used during World War II), Pattern 14 Rifle (used during World War II), Karabiner 98k (spoils of war), Selvladegevær M1 (Garand), M1917 Enfield rifle (replaced the Lee-Enfields), AG-3, Våpensmia NM149

Norwegian service rifles
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