Lahti-Saloranta M/26

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lahti-Saloranta M-26 LMG

Type Light machine gun
Place of origin Flag of Finland Finland
Service history
In service 1930-1950s
Production history
Designer Aimo Lahti & Arvo Saloranta
Designed 1925
Number built > 6200
Variants LS-26-31 (able to accommodate the 75 round drum magazine)
Specifications
Weight 9.3 kg
Length 1,109 mm
Barrel length 500 mm

Cartridge 7.62x54mmR
Action Recoil operation
Rate of fire 450 to 550 round/min
Muzzle velocity 800 m/s
Effective range 400 m
Feed system 20 or 75 round magazine

The Lahti-Saloranta M-26(Sometimes LS-26) is a light machine gun which was designed by Aimo Lahti and Arvo Saloranta in 1926. The weapon was able to fire in both full automatic and semi-automatic modes. Both 20 round box and 75 round drum magazines were produced but the Finnish army seems to have only used the smaller 20 round magazine.

The M-26 won a Finnish Army competition in 1925 where it was selected as the army's main automatic rifle. Production started in 1927, and lasted until 1942. More than 5,000 weapons were produced during that time. China also placed a huge order of 30,000 7.92 mm M-26s in 1937, but only 1,200 of these weapons were actually delivered due to Japanese diplomatic pressure.

In the Winter War, there were two squads in each platoon that provided covering fire for two ten-man rifle squads. In each squad, there was one M-26 gunner, one assistant and the rest of the men carrying rifles, one of them possibly a sniper rifle.

On the battlefield, the Lahti-Saloranta M/26 was found to be unreliable, heavy and lacking in magazine capacity. The Finnish gunners often preferred the Degtyarev light machine gun when thousands of them were captured from the Soviets and used against their former owners. As a result, in the summer of 1944, only 3,400 M/26s were at the front, compared to over 9,000 war-booty Degtyarevs.

[edit] External links


[edit] See also