Telescoping bolt

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External view of Uzi and MP40 submachineguns, both 9mm submachineguns with a 10" (250mm) barrel, showing size advantage that telescoping mechanism allows
External view of Uzi and MP40 submachineguns, both 9mm submachineguns with a 10" (250mm) barrel, showing size advantage that telescoping mechanism allows
Internal mechanisms of a telescoping bolt and conventional submachinegun.  Barrels are blue, bolts are green.
Internal mechanisms of a telescoping bolt and conventional submachinegun. Barrels are blue, bolts are green.

A weapon with a telescoping bolt (also known as an overhung bolt) is one whose bolt telescopes over, that is, wraps around and past, the breech end of the barrel. This feature reduces the required length of a weapon such as a submachine gun significantly, and it allows rifle designs to be balanced around the pistol grip in a way that gives "pointability" similar to a pistol's.

Though technically a different, distinct concept, nearly all telescoping bolt submachineguns do use an ammunition magazine located in the pistol grip which is used to hold the weapon.

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[edit] History

The first production model submachinegun using the telescoping bolt concept was the Czechslovakian Cz 23 aka Sa.23 or vz.48b series, first produced in 1948. These submachineguns use a cylindrical telescoping bolt with centered barrel. While widely exported in the third world, the Cz 23 series were not well known in the west. [1]

The popularly well known first example was the Uzi submachine gun, designed in Israel by a designer inspired by the Cz 23 series. This gun has become probably the best known submachinegun of all time. It uses a rectangular bolt, with an offset barrel. The Uzi was designed in 1948 after first models of the Cz 23 were seen, and entered service in 1951.

Subsequently, the telescoping bolt has been used in a wide variety of submachinegun designs.

[edit] Comparisons

As the image diagrams demonstrate, the basic concept of telescoping bolt and magazine well in handgrip produce significantly more compact weapons. These diagrams show the 1938 design (1939 service) MP-40 submachinegun, which is 630 mm (25 inch) long, weighed around 4 kilograms (8.8 pounds) and has a 251 mm (10 inch) barrel, and the similar materials and production technology Uzi, a 1948 design (1951 service), which is 470 mm (19 inch) long with stock folded and weighed 3.5 kilograms (7.7 pounds) and uses a 251 mm (10 inch) barrel.

Utilizing nothing more than a configuration change, and the same materials and fabrication technologies, the Uzi is 500 grams (1 pound) lighter and 160 mm (6 inches) shorter.

[edit] Examples

[edit] References

  1. ^ Back to the Roots, Monty Mendenhall, at [1], accessed Jan 10, 2007