MAS-38
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Mitraillette MAS modéle 38 | |
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Type | submachine gun |
Place of origin | France |
Service history | |
In service | 1939 to 1950 |
Used by | France, Germany |
Wars | World War II, First Indochina War |
Production history | |
Designed | 1938 |
Produced | 1939 to 1946 |
Variants | none |
Specifications | |
Weight | 2.87 kg (without magazine) 3.56 kg (with magazine) |
Length | 623 mm |
Barrel length | 224 mm |
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Cartridge | 7.65 mm MAS |
Caliber | 7.65 mm |
Action | blowback |
Rate of fire | 600 to 700 round/min |
Muzzle velocity | 350 m/s |
Feed system | 32 rounds |
The MAS-38 was a French submachine gun designed prior to the Second World War and used by French and German forces.
The Mitraillette MAS modèle 38 (MAS Model 38 Submachine Gun) was developed from the experimental MAS-35. Prior to the development of this weapon France used a variety of German and Swiss submachine guns, or machine pistols as they are called in Europe.
MAS, the Manufacture d'Armes de Saint-Étienne (Weapons industry of Saint-Étienne), was a French supplier of arms that manufactured several firearms for the French Military, including the MAS-36 rifle, the MAS-49, and the FAMAS. It is now part of GIAT Industries. The French Ministry of War approved the MAS-38 in 1938, but production did not begin until 1939. Initially the weapon was supplied to the Gardes mobiles (National Guard) rather than the French Army.
The MAS-38 was chambered for the 7.65mm (0.301 caliber) long cartridge. This was also the cartridge used for France's M1935 series of service pistols, allowing for a limited degree of standardization, but preventing French soldiers from using captured enemy ammunition.
623mm (24.53 in) long with a 224 mm (8.82 in) barrel, the gun weighed 2.87 kg (6.33 lb) empty. It used a 32 round box magazine. The muzzle velocity was 350 m/s (1,148 ft/s) and it had a rate of fire of 600 to 700 round/min.
The MAS-38 is easily recognizable due to its apparently bent barrel assembly. This is because the receiver and butt diverge in alignment from the axis of the barrel by several degrees. To make the weapon compact its bolt recoils inside a tube running through the butt. To allow a natural aiming stance, the butt had to drop while the receiver had remain in alignment. This required that the bolt approach the breech at an angle and the face of the bolt was cut obliquely to allow it to close evenly on the cartridge. The MAS-38 also features an unusual safety catch: the bolt was locked (in either the forward or rear position) by pushing the trigger forward. A valuable feature was that tools were not required for its disassembly.
A very high quality weapon, the MAS-38 was machined from solid steel and only a few parts were stampings. It was designed with a buffered sear assembly to prevent wear and increase the life of the internal parts. A dual range sight system was concealed within the receiver so as to be out of sight until it was flipped up for use.
The odd appearance of the MAS-38 did not detract from its accuracy, but its cartridge was underpowered compared to the German 9mm standard pistol ammunition. However this cannot have made any difference to the outcome of the Battle of France, and in any event the German army seized the MAS plant in 1940 just as the MAS-38 was entering large-scale production. The Germans accepted the gun as a substitute standard weapon, naming it the 7.65 mm MP722(f). They continued production of the gun for their own armed forces and supplied some to the Vichy French.
Production ended in 1946. The French police continued to use the MAS-38 after WWII until it was replaced in the 1950s by the MAT-49 submachine gun.