Forgotten Weapons

Forgotten Weapons

4K badge
Subscribe Share
Forgotten Weapons
  • Chatting About Cannons & Tanks with Glenn Fleming

    When I arrived at DriveTanks.com down in Texas, I was happily surprised to find my old acquaintance Glenn Fleming working there as lead gunsmith. Glenn and I first met on the set of a certain TV show many years back, and he is a great guy - in marked distinction from the rest of the show's cast. ...

  • Finnish m/44 Prototype Blowback 9mm Pistol

    The m/44 pistol was intended to be a lower-cost replacement for the Lahti L35 pistol for the Finnish Defense Forces, but production delays resulted in the first batch of 25 examples not being completed until after the end of the Continuation War. Treaties limited Finland's right to conduct arms d...

  • Morphy's Final Prices Fall 2019: Simply Sumptuous Subguns

    With the Morphy's fall 2019 auction now complete, it's time to take a look at what the market says guns are worth. This time, it's mostly submachine guns - with an interesting mix of transferrable and pre-samples.

  • FAMAS PGMP w/ EOTech in a Team 2-Gun Match

    The PGMP (Poignée Garde-Main Polyvalente) handguard assembly is the original modification to allow mounting of optics to the FAMAS rifle. The FAMAS handguard was not designed to hold an optic, and is not nearly stable enough to retain zero. The PGMP adds a hefty metal block to secure the optics ...

  • Sterling Meets Owen: The Australian F1 Submachine Gun

    The Australian Owen submachine gun was once of the best overall SMG designs of the Second World War, and when Australia decided to replace them in the 1960s, the new F1 design have big shoes to fill. The basic configuration of the top-mounted magazine remained, but coupled with elements of the St...

  • Hiram's Extra Light Maxim Gun

    Designed in an effort to compete with the then-new Colt/Browning air cooled 1895 machine gun, the Extra-Light Maxim weighted in at just 27 (maybe 28) pounds for the gun, and 44 pounds with tripod. This may sound heavy, but it was a remarkable improvement over the 100+ pounds of most models of Max...

  • John Browning vs Hiram Maxim: Patent Fight!

    When John Browning designed his Model 1895 machine gun with it's rotary-lever gas operation system, Hiram Maxim filed suit claiming patent infringement. Maxim had filed quite broad patents covering gas pistons operation, but specifically in a linear format. Browning and Colt (who had the license ...

  • Arming the Lion of Judah: Ethiopian FN Mauser Rifles & Carbines

    In 1930, Haile Selassie I became Emperor of Ethiopia (aka Abysinia), and would rule for almost 45 years, with a brief exception when the country was occupied by fascist Italy. During that time, he paid particular attention to Ethiopia’s military strength. As part of his coronation celebration he ...

  • Overview of Estonian Gun Laws

    Today I am joined by an Estonian collector friend to discuss gun laws in Estonia. This a continuing series on gun laws in different countries around the world, and is intended to be an overview only - we do not cover every detail and many subtleties are generalized. I find it interesting to learn...

  • Erquiaga EM-62: Castro's Ex-Armorer Makes an M14

    Juan Erquiaga was a Peruvian Army officer who was introduced to Gordon Ingram and the Police Ordnance Company, probably during Ingram's time working on sales of the Model 6 submachine gun to Peru. Erquiaga first moved to the United States in 1951, and was hired by Police Ordnance. During his time...

  • EOKA Cut-Down Beretta 38 SMG

    This cut-down Beretta Model 38/44 submachine gun was made by the EOKA (Ethniki Organosis Kyprion Agoniston) independence group, which fought in the late 1950s for Cyprus to be reunified with Greece, instead of being a British colony. It shows a clever use of a Bren gun barrel handle as a front gr...

  • Ecia Model 1930 Family: Lost Competitors to the Astra

    Juan Esperanza was one of the two partners who formed the Astra company (with Pedro Unceta). When the two had a falling-out in 1925 and parted ways, Esperanza formed his own company and went on something of a patenting binge. He made an unsuccessful attempt at designing a new machine gun for the ...

  • Virtual Tour: Cody Dug-Up Gun Museum

    There is a second gun museum in Cody Wyoming that is a lot smaller than the main one, but just as interesting - albeit in very different way. The Cody Dug Up Gun Museum houses a large collection of guns literally "dug up" and in less-than-ideal condition. These can be fascinating to see, as much ...

  • DTM: The Soviet Tank Version of the DP-27 LMG

    Almost as soon as the Degtyarev DP-27 was put into Soviet military service, variations were developed for aircraft (DA) and tank (DT) use. The tank pattern we have here is actually a later improved DTM model, but it shares most features with the DT. It has a collapsing stock to save space inside ...

  • Israeli Light-Barrel FAL (from DS Arms)

    Israel was one of the very First Nations to adopt the FN FAL rifle - after Canada but before many actual NATO nations. Israel made its first purchases of the rifles in 1955, and delayed them almost immediately in the 1956 Suez Crisis. The first rifles were wholly made by FN in Belgium, but over t...

  • History of the SVD Dragunov with Max Popenker

    Russian small arms researcher Max Popenker joins us again today, and this time he is discussing the history and development of the Dragunov rifle. We start from the desire to match longer-ranged NATO forces and the competition between Simonov, Konstantinov, and Dragunov through its development an...

  • 1885 Dimancea: A Revolver With Sprockets

    Patented in 1885 by Romanian military officer Haralamb Dimancea, this revolver is actually a true hammerless design. Instead of simply shrouding a hammer inside the frame, Dimancea used a pair of rotating sprockets to cock and release a striker and act as hand and stop for the cylinder. The Gatli...

  • Soviet 122mm D30 Cannon (Firing)

    The D30 is a Soviet 122mm multi-role gun introduced in the 1960s and still in use around the world today. It has a somewhat unusual 3-leg mount that is slower to set up than a standard trail, but allows for complete 360-degree rotation of the gun. The piece was designed for both indirect fire (ma...

  • A Unique Partnership: Czech Mausers for Ethiopia after WWII

    After World War Two, the Czech economy was in serious need of money to recover from the ravages of war. The arms factory at Brno was not bound by the same restrictions as German manufacturers, and still had a production line for the Mauser K98k, which they had been making for the Wehrmacht. Eager...

  • Cooey: The Unassuming Canadian Workhorse

    Cooey is a brand name that will be immediately recognized by Canadians, but pretty much unknown everywhere else. Founded in 1903 by Herbert Cooey, the company would produce a series of simple and practical firearms that became hugely popular and common in Canada. The basic models were the single-...

  • Colt CK901: An AR in 7.62x39mm for the Yemeni Military

    Colt developed this rifle, the CK-901, for the Yemeni military in 2014 - which appears to be the only buyer they have found for it since. The rifle is basically an AR-15 chambered for 7.62x39mm, but uses the 7.62x51mm Colt CM-901 rifle as its base. This means that the bolt and carrier are substan...

  • Colt 601: The AR-15 Becomes a Military Rifle

    The AR-15 rifle was originally developed by Armalite as an offshoot of the AR-10 rifle designed by Eugene Stoner. How that second-thought rifle became the US standard military rifle - and the longest-serving infantry rifle in US military history - is a winding story. From Armalite's sale fo the d...

  • Virtual Tour: Newly Renovated Cody Firearms Museum

    The Cody Firearms Museum has spent many months undergoing a complete renovation and rebuilding, and is not back fully open to the public. The new layout has not just improved visibility and put the guns in better display context, but it has actually increased the number of guns on display. When I...

  • SIG Chylewski: One-Handed Vest Pocket Automatic

    Designed by Witold Chylewski, this was only the second pistol manufactured by SIG (the first being the 6.5mm blow-forward 1894 MAnnlicher design). It was patented prior to WW1, but only after the war was Chylewski able to find a manufacturer interested in his gun. The most notable element of the ...