Schwarzlose machine gun

(Redirected from Schwarzlose M07/12)

The Maschinengewehr (Schwarzlose) M. 7, also known as the Schwarzlose MG, is a medium machine-gun, used as a standard issue firearm in the Austro-Hungarian Army throughout World War I. It was utilized by the Dutch, Greek and Hungarian armies during World War II. It was routinely issued to Italian colonial troops, alongside the Mannlicher M1895 rifle.[6]

Maschinengewehr (Schwarzlose) M. 7
MG M.7/12 mounted on a wheel in a World War I-era anti-aircraft configuration.
TypeMedium Machine gun
Place of originAustria-Hungary
Service history
In service1908–1948
Used bySee Users
WarsBalkan Wars
World War I
Russian Civil War[1]
Austro-Slovene conflict in Carinthia
Polish–Soviet War
Greco-Turkish War (1919–22)
Constitutionalist Revolution
Colombia–Peru War
Austrian Civil War
Spanish Civil War
World War II
1948 Arab–Israeli War[2]
Production history
DesignerAndreas Wilhelm Schwarzlose[3]
Designed1904[4]
ManufacturerSteyr
Produced1908[5] – 1918
VariantsSee Variants
Specifications
Mass41.4 kg (gun & tripod)
Length945 mm
Barrel length530 mm

Cartridge6.5×50mm Arisaka
6.5x52mm Carcano
6.5×53mmR
6.5×54mm Mannlicher–Schönauer
6.5×55mm
7.62×54mmR
.303 British
8×50mmR Mannlicher
8×56mmR
7.92×57mm Mauser
ActionToggle-delayed blowback
Rate of fire400-580 rounds/min (M.7/12)
600-880 rounds/min (MG-16A)
Feed system250-round cloth belt

The primary producers were the ŒWG in Steyr, and FÉG in Budapest.

History

edit

In 1901 Schwarzlose designed a toggle-delayed pistol, but it went nowhere.[7] However, in 1902 he applied for a patent on a toggle-delayed lock for a machine gun,[8] and another one in 1903[9] for a belt feeding mechanism. Since he had only had the experience of designing handguns before, the design tooks several more years to finalize.

The Schwarzlose M. 7 was a belt-fed machine gun, usually mounted on a tripod, designed by the Prussian firearms designer Andreas Schwarzlose. While its water-cooled barrel gave it an appearance broadly resembling the family of Maxim-derived machine-guns (such as the British Vickers and the German Maschinengewehr 08), internally the Schwarzlose was of a much simpler design, which made the weapon comparatively inexpensive to manufacture. Its unusual delayed blowback mechanism contained only a single spring.

The initial variants of the M.7/12 had a cyclic rate of about 400 rounds/minute. During World War I this was increased to 580 rounds/minute by using a stronger mainspring. The Schwarzlose was robust and reliable, if used in its intended role as an infantry weapon. It met with less success when it was used in roles it had not been designed for, unlike the highly adaptable Maxim-derived machine guns.[10]

Production

edit

The Schwarzlose enjoyed moderate export success in the years leading up to World War I. Apart from the armies of the Austro-Hungarian empire (8mm caliber) it was adopted by the armies of Greece (6.5mm caliber), the Netherlands (6.5mm caliber) and Sweden (using the 6.5×55mm cartridge and designated kulspruta m/1914).[11] In addition, the British ammunition company Kynoch produced a machine gun based on the Schwarzlose patent in 1907, using the .303 British cartridge.[12] The Netherlands used a modified version, the Schwarzlose M.08, in production from 1918 (2,006 made).

After the First World War the Schwarzlose continued in use with the new nations that emerged from the fragments of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Captured examples of the Schwarzlose saw some sporadic use by Russian and Italian units during the First World War. During World War II the Schwarzlose saw limited action in North Africa as an anti-aircraft weapon in Italian service. It was also the standard MG issued to Italian colonial troops. Besides, captured Schwarzlose machine guns of various types saw service with second line units of the Nazi German army, especially during the desperate fighting that took place in the final phases of that conflict.[6]

Overview

edit
 
Toggle-delayed blowback operation of the 07/12 machine gun.

The Schwarzlose MG M.7 is a toggle-delayed blowback, water-cooled machine gun. The mechanism incorporates a device that oils cartridge cases to ease extraction.[13]

Use as an infantry and naval weapon

edit
 
Austro-Hungarian machinegunners in the Tyrolean high mountains.

For infantry use, the Schwarzlose was usually employed as a traditional, tripod mounted, heavy machine gun served by a crew of at least three soldiers, one of whom was the commander, usually an NCO, a gunner who carried the weapon, a third soldier who served as an ammunition carrier and loader and he would presumably also carry the tripod although in practice a fourth soldier might be added to the team to carry the tripod. Another less commonly seen method of deployment was the more compact 'backpack mount'. In this configuration the gun was fitted with a backwards folding bipod attached to the front of the water jacket near the muzzle. The backpack mount itself consisted of a square wooden frame with a metal socket in the center. When the gun was fully deployed the frame was laid on the ground, the gun's central mounting point that usually attached to a tripod now had a small mounting pin attached to it instead which was inserted into the mounting socket in the center of the wooden backpack frame and finally the bipod was folded forward. The Schwarzlose would also have seen service as a fortress weapon in which case it would have been deployed on a variety of heavy and specialized fixed mountings and it also saw some use as a naval weapon aboard ships. During World War I, the Schwarzlose was also pressed into service as an anti-aircraft gun, and, as such, it was deployed using a variety of (often improvised) mountings.

Use as a fortification weapon

edit
 
The 7/12 machine gun with water jacket cover.

After World War I the Schwarzlose equipped the armed forces of Czechoslovakia, where it was adapted (vz. 7/24) and manufactured (vz. 24) as the těžký kulomet vz. 7/24 (heavy machine gun model 7/24) by the Janeček factory (adapted from 8 mm calibre to standard Czechoslovak munition 7,92 Mauser). When Czechoslovakia started building fortifications against Nazi Germany in 1935-1938, light fortifications, known as types 36 and 37, were partially armed with the Schwarzlose vz. 7/24.

Use as an aircraft gun

edit

Apart from its use as a heavy infantry machine gun and as an anti-aircraft weapon, the Schwarzlose saw service with the Austro-Hungarian Luftfahrtruppe during World War I as an aircraft machine gun, a role for which it was not entirely suited. The Schwarzlose was used both as a fixed forward firing gun and as a flexible, ring mounted, defensive weapon.[6]

Synchronizing the Schwarzlose for use in fighters turned out to be a difficult engineering challenge. A critical factor in synchronization is the time delay between the trigger movement and the moment when the bullet leaves the barrel, as during this delay the propeller will continue to rotate, moving over an angle that also varies with engine rpm. Because of the relatively long delay time of the Schwarzlose M7/12, the synchronization systems that were developed could be operated safely only in a narrow band of engine rpm. Therefore, the Austro-Hungarian fighters were equipped with large and prominent tachometers in the cockpit. The M16 version of the gun could be synchronized with greater accuracy, but a widened engine rpm restriction still had to be respected, except for aircraft equipped with Daimler synchronization gear. The result was never entirely satisfactory and Austro-Hungarian aircraft thus armed usually carried the Kravics indicator to warn the pilot of a malfunction in the synchronization gear. The Kravics propeller hit indicator consisted of electric wiring wrapped around the critical area of the propeller blades, connected to a light in the cockpit by a slip ring on the propeller shaft. If the light went out, the pilot knew the propeller had been hit.[14]

Until these synchronization problems had been overcome, it was not uncommon to see the Schwarzlose deployed in a removable forward firing Type-II VK gun container which had been developed by the Luftfahrtruppe's Versuchs Kompanie at Fischamend. The Type-II VK, which received the macabre nickname 'baby coffin' due to its shape, is remarkable in that it was possibly the first example of what today would be called a gun pod.[15] It was usually mounted on the centerline of the upper wing of Austro-Hungarian fighters and two-seat combat aircraft during the early phases of World War I and remained in use on two-seat combat aircraft until the end of the war. In its role as an aircraft weapon, the Schwarzlose was initially used unmodified — other than that the distinctive cone shaped flash-hider seen on most of the infantry weapons was removed. The Schwarzlose was further modified for aircraft use, much as the German Empire's own lMG 08 Spandau ordnance had been modified early in 1915, by cutting slots into the water jacket's sheetmetal to facilitate air cooling. In 1916, the water jacket was removed entirely, and the resulting weapon was re-designated as the Schwarzlose MG-16 and MG-16A when fitted with a stronger spring and a blowback enhancer to increase the gun's cyclic rate, which was eventually brought up to 880 rounds per minute in some versions of the MG-16A. As a defensive ring-mounted gun, the Schwarzlose usually retained its normal twin firing handles and trigger button, although some MG-16 aircraft guns were fitted with enlarged pistol-shaped handles and a handgun-style trigger. All ring-mounted defensive guns were equipped with specialized sights and a box for the ammunition belt, which allowed quick and trouble-free reloading. After the end of World War I, the Schwarzlose saw limited use as an aircraft gun with various East European air forces. The best-known post-war operator of the Schwarzlose was probably the Polish air force, who acquired and used significant numbers of surplus Austro-Hungarian aircraft and used them against Soviet forces during the Polish-Soviet War. The Schwarzlose was, however, quickly phased out of service as an aircraft weapon when more suitable equipment became available.[16]

Variants

edit
 
The first variant, designated M.7. Note the gap between the top cover and the water jacket (absent on later models).

Austro-Hungarian

edit

British

edit

Czechoslovak

edit
 
Czecho-Slovakian Š 24 machine gun
  • Schwarzlose-Janeček vz.07/24 (or vz. 24, or Š 24): The M.7/12 Machine Gun was modified by inventor František Janeček. Modifications include: rechambering to 7.92×57 mm Mauser, a lighter bolt, shorter recoil spring and extension of the barrel by 100 mm. Manufacture and adaptation of these guns took place in the Zbrojovka Brno factory. During 1922 and 1934 there were 4937 modified Schwarzlose M.7/12 MGs to vz.7/24 and 2253 newly produced vz.24 MGs.[17]

Dutch

edit

Hungarian

edit

Swedish

edit
 
Swedish Schwarzlose machine gun body
  • Kulspruta m/1914 in 6.5×55mm.[18] First 511 guns were bought from the ŒWG, but starting from 1917 Sweden began producing them at Carl Gustafs Stads Gevärsfaktori state small arms factory in Eskilstuna, where additional 753 were produced[20] using tooling acquired from ŒWG after the WWI.[21] Its m/14 tripod design was so liked by the Swedish military that it remained even after it the gun itself was superseded by Browning, and stayed in service until 1980.[22]

Users

edit
 
Brigade II of the Polish Legions of the Austria-Hungary in Volhynia, 1915 or 1916.
 
Slovene soldiers of the Austro-Hungarian Army posing with 9 Schwarzlose MGs, in a group photo, Tiraspol in 1918.
 
British soldiers seize a Schwarzlose machine gun from a Jewish weapons cache during the 1947–48 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine.

References

edit
Notes
  1. ^ "Vintage Saturday: Assorted Machine Guns". Forgotten Weapons. 18 October 2014.
  2. ^ Anyathor007 (18 August 2012). "The Birth of Israel". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 12 December 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Peterson 2007, p. 31
  4. ^ "Automatic gun". Google Patents.
  5. ^ Ortner 2011, p. 214
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Willbanks 2004, p. 57
  7. ^ "Schwarzlose 1901 Toggle-Delayed Prototype (Video)". 10 March 2017.
  8. ^ GB 190204176A 
  9. ^ GB 190406417A 
  10. ^ Peterson 2013, p. 34
  11. ^ Janson, Olof (30 April 2020). "The Swedish machineguns before 1950". Gothia Arms Historical Society.
  12. ^ a b "Kynoch Machine Gun". Forgotten Weapons. 19 December 2011. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  13. ^ Hatcher 1947, pp. 38–44
  14. ^ Williams, Anthony G. "Synchronisation systems" (PDF). Military Guns & Ammunition. Based on "Flying Guns: World War I" and "Flying Guns: World War II" by Anthony G Williams and Emmanuel Gustin.
  15. ^ Woodman 1989, p. ?
  16. ^ Chant 2002, p. 89
  17. ^ "Standard_Flying_12-18". Rota Nazdar.
  18. ^ a b Smith 1969, p. 211.
  19. ^ a b Smith 1969, p. 459.
  20. ^ "Swedish Medium Machine Guns: Kulspruta M/36 LV DBL – Small Arms Defense Journal".
  21. ^ "Vhu Praha".
  22. ^ "Hotchkiss machinegun and Schwarzlose Machine gun in Sweden".
  23. ^ a b "Machine Guns, part 2". Jaeger Platoon.net. 4 November 2017.
  24. ^ Brigada Militar (August 2011). "Brigada Militar na Legalidade" (PDF) (in Brazilian Portuguese). Porto Alegre: Corag. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  25. ^ "四川機器局" [Sichuan Machinery Bureau]. ChineseFirearms.com (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 17 April 2021.
  26. ^ Jowett, Philip (28 June 2018). Latin American Wars 1900–1941: "Banana Wars," Border Wars & Revolutions. Men-at-Arms. Vol. 519. Osprey Publishing. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-47282-628-2.
  27. ^ "Czechoslovakia" (PDF). Armaments Year-book : General and Statistical Information. Series of League of Nations publications. IX, Disarmament. Vol. 1926.IX.1. Geneva: League of Nations. 1926. p. 339.
  28. ^ Lugosi, József (2008). "Gyalogsági fegyverek 1868–2008 [Infantry weapons 1868–2008]". In Lugosi, József; Markó, György (eds.). Hazánk dicsőségére: 160 éves a Magyar Honvédség [To the glory of our country: 160 years of the Hungarian Armed Forces] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Zrínyi Kiadó. p. 382. ISBN 978-963-327-461-3.
  29. ^ Riccio, Ralph (2013). Italian small arms of the first & second world wars. Schiffer Publishing. p. 161. ISBN 9780764345838.
  30. ^ Smith 1969, p. 490.
  31. ^ Lohnstein, Marc (23 August 2018). Royal Netherlands East Indies Army 1936–42. Men-at-Arms. Vol. 521. pp. 12 & 21. ISBN 978-1-47283-375-4.
  32. ^ Nowakowski, Tomasz (2014). "Śmiercionośne narzędzie I wojny światowej - karabin maszynowy Schwarzlose M. 07/12" [A deadly tool of the First World War - the machine gun Schwarzlose M. 07/12]. Poligon (in Polish). 44 (3): 15–17.
  33. ^ Smith 1969, p. 535.
  34. ^ Peterson 2007, p. 286
  35. ^ Axworthy, Mark (1995). Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War, 1941–1945. London: Arms and Armour Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-1-85409-267-0.
  36. ^ Василевский, А. М. (1990). Дело всей жизни [A lifelong cause] (in Russian) (7th ed.). Moscow: Izdatel'stvo političeskoj literatury. pp. 21–22. ISBN 978-5-25000-820-4. в течение осени и зимы 1915 года… своих винтовок царской армии уже недоставало. Многие солдаты, в частности, весь наш полк, имели на вооружении трофейные австрийские винтовки, благо патронов к ним было больше, чем к нашим. По той же причине наряду с пулемётами "Максим" сплошь и рядом в царской армии можно было встретить австрийский "Шварцлозе". [During the autumn and winter of 1915 ... the Tsarist Army lacked its own rifles. Many soldiers, in particular, our entire regiment, were armed with captured Austrian rifles, since there were more cartridges for them than for ours. For the same reason, along with the Maxim machine guns, one could often meet the Austrian Schwarzlose in the Tsarist army.]
  37. ^ de Quesada, Alejandro (20 January 2015). The Spanish Civil War 1936–39 (2): Republican Forces. Men-at-Arms. Vol. 498. Osprey Publishing. p. 38. ISBN 978-1-78200-785-2.
  38. ^ Smith 1969, p. 723.
  39. ^ 防衛庁防衛研修所戦史室 (November 1969). 海軍軍戦備<1>昭和十六年十一月まで. 戦史叢書. Vol. 31. 朝雲新聞社. pp. appendix sheet 1-1, 2–1.
Sources
edit