Rifle, Anti-Tank, .55 in, Boys

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Boys Anti-tank Rifle

Type Anti-tank rifle
Place of origin United Kingdom
Service history
In service 1937 - 1943
Used by United Kingdom, Commonwealth
Wars World War II
Production history
Designed 1937
Produced 1937 -
Number built ~62,000
Variants Mk I, Mk II
Specifications
Weight 36 lb / 16 kg
Length 5 ft 2 in / 1.575 m
Barrel length 910 mm

Cartridge Kynoch & RG .55 Boys (13.9 x 99B)
Caliber .55 in (13.9 mm)
Action Bolt
Rate of fire ~10 round/min
Muzzle velocity 747 (later 884) m/s
Effective range 20 mm penetration at 100 yards
Feed system 5 round detachable box magazine

The Rifle, Anti-Tank, .55in, Boys commonly known as the Boys or often and incorrectly Boyes Anti-tank Rifle was a British anti-tank rifle. There were two main types, an early model (MK I) which had a circular muzzle brake and T shaped bipod, and a later model (Mk II) that had a square muzzle brake and a V shaped bipod. There were also different cartridges, with a later one offering better penetration.

Contents

[edit] History

The eponymous creator of this firearm was Captain Boys (the Assistant Superintendent of Design) who was a member of the British Small Arms Committee. It was initially called Stanchion but was renamed after Cpt. H.C. Boys as a mark of respect when he died a few days before the rifle was approved for service in November 1937.

[edit] Description

A bolt action rifle fed from a five-shot magazine, the weapon was large and heavy with a bipod at the front and a separate grip below the padded butt. In order to combat the recoil caused by the large 0.55 inch (13.9 mm) round, the barrel was mounted on a slide, and a shock absorber was fitted to the bipod along with a muzzle brake on the barrel.

The weapon was effective to about 300 yards (280 m) as an anti-tank and anti-vehicle weapon. There were two main service loads used during WWII, the W Mark 1 (60 g AP at 747 m/s) and the W Mark 2 ammunition (47.6 g AP projectile at 884 m/s). Later in the conflict, but too late for service use, a much more effective high velocity round was developed, this fired a tungsten cored Armour-Piercing, Composite Rigid (APCR) design at 945 m/s. The W Mark 2 projectile was able to penetrate up to 3/4 inch (20 mm) of armour at 100 yards (~91 m). The armour plate inclined at 70° from the horizontal ie 20 degrees from the direct line angle of fire - the effective thickness being ~21.5 mm. Its effective range against unarmoured targets (e.g. infantry), was much further. Although useful against the early tanks, the increases in vehicle armour during WW2 left it largely ineffective for anti-tank duties and it was replaced in service by the PIAT anti-tank weapon. It still saw some use against bunkers, machine gun nests, and lighter vehicles. In the Western Desert the large bullet could throw up splinters from rocks to cause casualties and it continued to be used in the Pacific theatre against Japanese tanks; the Japanese did not replace their older lightly armoured tanks, spread out across the Pacific and South East Asia, with newer ones until later in the war. The weapon had been designed with these lighter tanks in mind.

[edit] Usage

The Boys Rifle was sometimes mounted on a Universal Carrier ('Bren Gun Carrier') instead of a Bren Gun.

[edit] External links

British & Commonwealth small arms of World War II
Weapons of the British Empire 1722-1965
In other languages