Daisy V/L

Daisy V/L
Type Single-shot rifle
Place of origin  United States
Production history
Designer Jules Van Langenhoven
Designed 1961
Manufacturer Daisy Outdoor Products
Produced 1968-1969
No. built 23,000
Specifications
Cartridge .22 caliber, caseless round
Cartridge weight 29 grains (0.066 oz)
Caliber .22
Action Compressed air to ignite cartridge
Muzzle velocity 1,150 feet per second (350 m/s)
Feed system Single shot
Sights Front post, rear leaf sight

The Daisy V/L was the first production rifle for caseless ammunition. It was released in 1968 by Daisy Outdoor Products.

In 1961 Case Hough, the president of Daisy Heddon division of Victor Comptometer, purchased the design of a new firearm system. The new system was developed by a Belgian Chemist named Jules Van Langenhover. The new gun would be known as the Daisy V/L rifle.[1]

The V/L ammunition consisted of a .22 caliber bullet with a small cylinder of propellant on the back, and no primer.[2] The rifle resembled a typical spring-air rifle, but the 2000° hot, high pressure air served not only to propel the projectile but also to ignite the propellant on the back of the V/L cartridge. The rifle uses a small, unique and well designed part called an Obturator (obturator/ignitor) to compress the air as it is pushed through a tiny hole. This air is heated as it is pushed through the small hole enough to ignite the powder of the caseless round.[3]

The V/L guns and ammunition were discontinued in 1969 after the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives ruled that they constituted a firearm, and Daisy, which was not licensed to manufacture firearms, decided to discontinue manufacture rather than become a firearms manufacturer. About 23,000 of the rifles were made before production ceased.

See also

References

  1. Nonte Jr., Major General George C. (October 1967). An Amazing New Kind of Gun. Popular Mechanics.
  2. Walker, Robert E. (2013). Cartridges and Firearm Identification. CRC Press. ISBN 9781466588813.
  3. Nonte Jr., Major General George C. (October 1967). An Amazing New Kind of Gun. Popular Mechanics.


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