Description:Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Mg 42, Mg 08, Mg 34, Mg 15 Machine Gun, Ckm Wz.30, Zb Vz. 26, Bergmann Mg15 Na Gun, Mg 30, Browning Wz.1928, Besa Machine Gun, Mg 81 Machine Gun, Mg 17 Machine Gun, Epk Machine Gun, Karabin Maszynowy Obserwatora Wz.37, Volksmaschinengewehr Vmg-27, Mg 13, Zb-50. Excerpt: Bergmann MG15 The Bergmann MG15 was the World War I production version of a prototype machine gun designed in 1910, the brainchild of Theodor Bergmann and Louis Schmeisser . It should not be confused with the Rheinmetall MG-15, which was a completely different weapon, whose nomenclature is often confused with the Bergmann because of the naming conventions of the Weimar Republic. The two weapons are completely unrelated. The Bermann MG-15 fired from 250, 200, or 100 round disintegrating metal-linked belts, a first for a light machine gun. The crank-loaded "Kurbel drum" that held a 100-round linked belt could be fitted to the side of the weapon's receiver with a mounting bracket. Design and Development The Bergmann gun used a lock system patented by Theodor Bergmann in 1901 along with the short recoil principle of operation. The locking system, in which a cam moves a lock vertically in the weapon was not dissimilar to the Browning machine gun designs. The original design, borrowing from the 1910 pattern, was a heavy ground-based weapon fitted with a water-cooling jacket. The weapon was then lightened for both infantry and aircraft use. For aircraft usage, the bolt was lightened and the mechanism sped up from 500 rounds per minute to 800. For ground use, this weapon was adopted as the Bergmann MG-15. The receiver to the weapon was machined down and lightened, featured a butt stock fitted to the end of the weapon. It was given a pistol grip and trigger grouping instead of spade-grips, the heavy cooling jacket was re...We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with 7.92 MM Machine Guns: MG 42, MG 08, MG 34, MG 15 Machine Gun, Ckm Wz.30, Zb Vz. 26, Bergmann Mg15 Na Gun, MG 30, Browning Wz.1928. To get started finding 7.92 MM Machine Guns: MG 42, MG 08, MG 34, MG 15 Machine Gun, Ckm Wz.30, Zb Vz. 26, Bergmann Mg15 Na Gun, MG 30, Browning Wz.1928, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Description: Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Mg 42, Mg 08, Mg 34, Mg 15 Machine Gun, Ckm Wz.30, Zb Vz. 26, Bergmann Mg15 Na Gun, Mg 30, Browning Wz.1928, Besa Machine Gun, Mg 81 Machine Gun, Mg 17 Machine Gun, Epk Machine Gun, Karabin Maszynowy Obserwatora Wz.37, Volksmaschinengewehr Vmg-27, Mg 13, Zb-50. Excerpt: Bergmann MG15 The Bergmann MG15 was the World War I production version of a prototype machine gun designed in 1910, the brainchild of Theodor Bergmann and Louis Schmeisser . It should not be confused with the Rheinmetall MG-15, which was a completely different weapon, whose nomenclature is often confused with the Bergmann because of the naming conventions of the Weimar Republic. The two weapons are completely unrelated. The Bermann MG-15 fired from 250, 200, or 100 round disintegrating metal-linked belts, a first for a light machine gun. The crank-loaded "Kurbel drum" that held a 100-round linked belt could be fitted to the side of the weapon's receiver with a mounting bracket. Design and Development The Bergmann gun used a lock system patented by Theodor Bergmann in 1901 along with the short recoil principle of operation. The locking system, in which a cam moves a lock vertically in the weapon was not dissimilar to the Browning machine gun designs. The original design, borrowing from the 1910 pattern, was a heavy ground-based weapon fitted with a water-cooling jacket. The weapon was then lightened for both infantry and aircraft use. For aircraft usage, the bolt was lightened and the mechanism sped up from 500 rounds per minute to 800. For ground use, this weapon was adopted as the Bergmann MG-15. The receiver to the weapon was machined down and lightened, featured a butt stock fitted to the end of the weapon. It was given a pistol grip and trigger grouping instead of spade-grips, the heavy cooling jacket was re...We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with 7.92 MM Machine Guns: MG 42, MG 08, MG 34, MG 15 Machine Gun, Ckm Wz.30, Zb Vz. 26, Bergmann Mg15 Na Gun, MG 30, Browning Wz.1928. To get started finding 7.92 MM Machine Guns: MG 42, MG 08, MG 34, MG 15 Machine Gun, Ckm Wz.30, Zb Vz. 26, Bergmann Mg15 Na Gun, MG 30, Browning Wz.1928, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.