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Q on Brit/Canada use of M1917's
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10-11-2009 11:11 AM
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Thank You to Melanie_Daniels For This Useful Post:
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That's the notch in question...
Does anyone have an answer as to why it was done...documented, not what some might think it was for? There has to be a documented answer???
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My M1917 has the notch. I would like an answer also. I was told it was for a longer round used in Greenland, but that may or not be true.
Regards
Peter.
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We see them here, but not until recent years. It's not a local mod.
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I suspect it has a lot to do with cartridge clearance during loading from stripper clips.
.30-06 M2 Ball cartridges are listed as being 3.345" (84.84mm)max length. Add to that the space occupied by the clip and it is a neat fit into the receiver opening. (I don't have an M-17 to hand but I measured a P-14 as having a clearance of 82.11mm (3,232"), a bit short for .30-06.
Obviously, the M-17 would have been manufactured to allow clearance for clip feeding, but in the event either the clip locating surfaces were worn or otherwise out of spec, or, more likely, the clips themselves were a bit of a "racing fit", there might be a problem.
The filled clip would rotate forward and the top cartridge(s) could possibly foul the receiver ring.
As for different cartridge lengths in service ammo, it is possible but unlikely. Given that the stuff has to work in ALL service weapons in that calibre, length is critical, especially in machine guns. As an example, when the Brits and Commonwealth changed from Mk6 to Mk7 .303 ammo, the new cartridge had the same overall length, otherwise it would not have worked. This particularly applies to all MGs that pull the cartridges from the belt to the rear, i.e. Vickers, Maxims, Brownings etc. as the meplat of the projectile rides against the front of the feed tray area as the feed arm / extractor (choose your terminology) engages it.
I have seen the problem occur when someone I know tried to fire 150gn soft-points through his .30-06 Browning. They were just short enough to prevent the cartridge extractor engaging the rounds reliably. Note also that blank-firing kits for M1919s etc like the Blank Adapter M9, use a "live cartridge blocker" that has two functions: It fills the space normally occupied by the bullet, thus preventing the feeding of live ammo and providing a bearing surface for the shorter cartridge.
Interesting how all this stuff is interlinked.
Last edited by Bruce_in_Oz; 10-14-2009 at 07:15 PM.
Reason: clarity
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Originally Posted by
Too Much Coffee
Does anyone have an answer as to why it was done...documented, not what some might think it was for? There has to be a documented answer???
Difficult, because it is privatly made. I bought the rifle from a Norwegian
ex-wale hunter and he told me, that this was necessary for a special ammunition for wale hunting.
And most of the M1917, that were used in Norway, came from Canada
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I saw hundrets of Danish
rifles without the notch. And most of Danish rifles came from Canada
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Check and see if the barrel has been changed or evidence of re-barreling. A LARGE number were converted to 7.92mm in Belgium
with the receiver notched for the longer 7.92mm cartridge. I wonder if due to the poor sales that the remainder were just put back into original calibre but had been modified with the cut. The conversion price did not justify the additional price and 7.92mm ammo was not that common in North America after WW II other than what was brought back by dad and grampa. Surplus ammo did not start to hit the streets in bulk until the early and mid 60's.
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