THOSE FRENCH RIFLES !
In the last few years there has been an
increase in firearms importation of those used by France in
the last century. Specifically, a number of MAS 44, 49 and
49/56 rifles in 7.5 x 54 French calibers have shown up.
These were not exported by France but came from countries in
Africa which had been under the French sphere of influence
for a number of years.
Sensibly, when these small nations gained
their independence the French influence waned. The weapons
were packaged for long term storage and eventually found
their way to the largest market for these obsolete firearms,
North America. American, and to a lesser degree Canadian,
military collectors and shooters benefited.
The last batches were mostly the 7.5mm 49/56 semi-automatic
rifle. This rifle is a contemporary of the FAL and M14, both
of which are not seen in frontline service with nations of
influence anymore.
For the moment let us get away from these
fairly modern rifles and go back to the turn of the century,
not the recent one, but the one before that.
At this point in time most of the larger
countries armies were equipped with small caliber (6.5 mm, 7
mm, 8mm, .303 British among others) manually operated
rifles. The ‘smokeless’ powder used in these loadings was a
French invention dating back to the 1880ies. Sporting
ammunition was also being loaded with this revolutionary
powder, one example being the venerable Winchester 30-30.
The French developed a new turn bolt
tubular magazine rifle chambered for their 8mm so-called 8mm
Lebel cartridge. The rifle of course was the 1886/93 Lebel.
This rifle was to soldier on well into the new century in a
variety of configurations. The problem with the Lebel was
that it was obsolete almost as soon as it was issued. The
tubular magazine was the bugbear which doomed it. Impossible
to reload quickly, there were other designs current with the
’86 Lebel which had a detachable or integral box magazines
that could be topped up faster. The cut-off on the ’86 was
intended to keep the cartridges in the tube in reserve, in
the meantime you would load it singly until a crises
occurred where an increase in fire power was required and
then you would be allowed to shoot from the magazine.
I could go on and on about ‘LaBelle’ (The
beauty) but am assuming that many of you already know this
and I would hate to bore anybody! The ‘86 was not
discontinued, but the search for other developments were in
the works.
The next model we get is the 07-15 Mannlicher-Berthier. The
last two names being in the case of Mannlicher the design
genius who perfected the En Bloc loading system for this
rifle, as well as the split breech receiver. The chargers’ (
it is not a stripper clip) capacity was three of those
little fat 8mm Lebel cartridges. The whole thing was pushed
into the magazine well until it locked in place. Pushing
your bolt forward chambered the top most cartridge and you
were ready to shoot. No, it did not have a safety.
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1. Here are the two clips
which are used with the Mannlicher-Berthier series of
rifles.They must be used or you will have a single shot
rifle rather than a repeater. The three shot clip will
also fit the five shot rifle, and the five shot the
three shotter, just only load three in it. Think about
it! |
The 07-15 was just as long as the ’86 and
when the trench warfare was fully established it was found
that these rifles were difficult to wield effectively, more
so when a foot and a half cruciform bayonet ( affectionately
called ‘Rosalie’ by French ‘Poilus’, there is not record of
what the Germans called it).
In addition three cartridges was not much
of a magazine capacity, so the magazine was redesigned to
take a five shot charger, the rifle became the M16. These
were made in carbine configurations as well. The carbines
are not bad, especially if you have the five shot option
available to you. These carbines took a different bayonet
from ‘Rosalie’, although she fitted the 07-15 and 16, so
there was some uniformity there.
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2. Here you see the
action portion of the M. 16 Mannlicher-Berthier rifle or
carbine. This is the five shot model, note the extended
metal magazine. The lid at the bottom of the magazine is
opened when you are shooting. The clip will fall out or
protrude when the last cartridge is chambered. Closing
it keeps Camel hair out. |
Semi-automatic rifles were developed by the
French. They were as long as the Lebel and
Mannlicher-Berthier and they also took a five shot EnBloc
clip. The clip was probably identical with the one used in
the millions by the M16 carbine and rifle version sez you?
No it wasn’t. It was totally different. At this point let us
not try to figure out what they were thinking of.
Finally the War to end all Wars is over and
we can relax, there will never be another one, right!
During this period of relative peace the
French designers did not sit idly by. The M1917
semi-automatic rifle was given on the chance after a number
of sensible modifications. It was shortened and, wait for
it, YES, it was altered to accept the M16 clip we spoke of
earlier. Now they had something. The rifle was deemed
satisfactory during, fighting in North Africa. Whether or
not it was sent to Indo-China is not known. During the
twenties France had also decided that the Chauchat machine
rifle was less than satisfactory and proceeded to replace it
with something better. What they got was the very nice 24/29
automatic rifle, as they called it. Gas operated, top
mounted 25 round magazine and selective fire by means of two
triggers, front for semi, rear for full auto. This was a
good design, and they are still lurking in the palm fronds
of various erstwhile French possessions. It was chambered
for a new cartridge, the 7.5 x 54. Rimless (some magazine
designer must have heaved a sigh of relief) it is basically
the French version of the 7.62 x 51 (.308 sort of) This was
the cartridge they put into their belt fed LMG, the AA-52.
This one is still in service I believe, but let us stick
with the rifles.
The twenties pass and we are in the early
thirties. The French designers pretty well had a
semi-automatic rifle concepted.
In the semi-automatic rifle competition of
1930 their designs were put up against the ZH-29 from
Czechoslovakia and the Swiss KE-9.
The final result from this get-together was
that two of the French entries were clearly superior. Now
the idea was to take these two winners and combine them into
one, which, should, produce an ideal rifle.
The concept of this type of trial was such
a success that the French also applied it to their pistols
trials later in that decade.
While these trials were being done another
Commission was busy designing a new bolt action rifle!
This decision was made in light of the fact
that there was active developments in other countries of
semi-automatic rifles in the caliber which was used in their
currently issued manually operated bolt or straight-pull
rifles, which are really one and the same.
Everybody agreed, officially or not, that
the semi-automatic rifle would be the weapon of choice in
the next war.
The bolt action which they were working on came to be known
as the MAS 36.
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3. The right side view of
the much loved or much maligned MAS36. It only came in
one length and is 7.5 x 54 mm caliber. Many many
sporters were built on this action in France in calibers
other than 7.5 which civilians cannot use. A sturdy
robust rifle, it deserves a better reputation. The bolt
handle is as issue if you must ask. I think Remington
copied it later on. |
This one is an unlovely beast, but under
unprepossessing exterior a clever and effective design
lurked.
The bolt was tubular in shape, sturdy rear
locking lugs and a recessed bolt face.
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4. This time we do have a
stripper clip! The French pack them in 15 round boxes
and they are fairly distinctive since they are aluminum
with hrrin writing on their backs. |
Five shot capacity and a cruciform bayonet
housed under the barrel. Just remove, reverse and plug the
hole and you are ready to bayonet fight. It was also handy
as a flag pole for the ‘fanions’ so beloved by the French.
Two piece wood stock which eased wood
supply. Unfortunately the buttstocks are always too short
for me, but a slip on pad cures that problem!
It is chambered for the same 7.5 x 54mm
cartridge as the 24/29, so we are edging toward uniformity.
A later version, the 36/51, has a .22 mm
anti tank grenade spigot launcher. That was the chief reason
for issuing the rubber slip on pad.
I have never fired a grenade from one of
these launchers, and don’t want to. Still, it is a cheap way
to knock out an armored vehicle. If I was selling life
insurance, I would probably not try to sign up whoever was
elected to knock a tank using this method.
There was also an airborne version of the
MAS36 manufactured the CR36. Its barrel was shortened to 18”
and it was fitted with a folding aluminum stock. Very short
and handy, but the stock is all corners, and with that short
barrel, it is not on the list of my gotta-try-it military
rifles.
The 36 action was also used to assemble the
excellent sniper rifle still in use at the time of writing.
Being the last military bolt action rifle
manufactured in quantity, it was still encountered in
Viet-Nam and actually anywhere within the French sphere of
influence. It is a sturdy reliable rifle one should not be
quick to denigrate.
The Semi-Automatic Rifles
We last left these when they were being
tested together with Swiss and Czech competitors. Much more
research had been done and the invasion by the Germans
called an end to testing. It is not realistic to say that
the French could have had a semi-automatic rifle in service
in 1940. Looking at the available date from that period, the
rifle was clearly superior to the M1 Garand.
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5. This is the first of
the semi-autos the MAS 44. Gas operated with the same
gas system as your M16. Ten shots of 7.5 ammo is a
sturdy reliable combination. I believe it is superior to
the Garand, if only because of the detachable magazine.
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6. Once again, here with
the same stripper clip as the MAS 36, but it holds ten. |
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7. Here is the knitting
needle bayonet which the French use to fly little flags
from during their parades. Good as use as any, they are
darn scary things! |
The forerunner of the 7.5 mm semi-automatic
rifle was the MAS 44. It was adopted in January of 1945 at
which point in time the administrative areas of France were
back in French hands. The 44 used a detachable 10 round box
magazine which will fit the other versions of this model.
The rear sight is identical with the MAS36 and of course
they use the 7.5 mm cartridge. There is photographic
evidence that at least one was used in combat in Marseille
in 1945.
Available information is that 6000 were made and they mostly
went to naval units.
Time passes and in July of 1949 the refined
version of the MAS 44 was adopted and designated… MAS 49.
There were only 20.000 of these rifles made and as a
consequence, they have always been a scarce item.
I still remember the first one I saw, through the
cigar/cigarette smoke, on Bob Landies’ table in one of the
sixties Columbus shows. Look for the big white cocking knob
and that yells:”….. MAS 49….MAS 49…” Then, when I saw the
price that was the end of that.
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8.
Here we have a gruff, but
kindly civil Servant, holding a MAS 49. Please note the
distinctive white polypropylene cocking handle which I
saw through the smoke at Bob Landies table, lo these
many years ago. |
Time passed, and eventually I would end up
with them all, and for less money than the lonely MAS 49 in
the Columbus cigar smoke haze!
The 49 showed its mettle all through the
French period in Viet-Nam, and no doubt the heaps of 49’s
seen in the photos of the fall of Dien-Bien-Phu would be
turned against their former owners, not to mentioned future
invaders.
In the early fifties the French had at least six different
military calibers in use, as well as such a hodge podge of
small arms that it would which probably drive any Ordnance
type bonkers. Time to finally standardize.
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9. The next version, the
49/56 equipped with the 'scope. It’s basically a copy of
the ZF-4 with the same egregious optics. How the scope
and the rifle got married is another saga in the life of
a Gun Collector. |
The service rifle became the 49-56. 7.5 x
54 mm caliber, fitted with a ten round detachable magazine,
and four extra magazines. It is capable of launching NATO
standard 22 mm grenades, both A/T and a/personnel.
Dovetailed for an optical sight which was the same ‘scope
used on the sniper rifle. Last, but not least it also
accepts a blank firing attachment for the French white
plastic 7.5 x 54 mm blanks.
This rifle is still on limited issue to-day, although the
current service rifle is the bull-pup type or ‘Clairon’
(Bugle) as the French call it because of its large sight
guard/carrying handle which gives it that unique bugle
shape. It is in .223 caliber and capable of selective fire
from a 25 round box magazine. I owned a semi-automatic
version of this rifle until the Canadian government decided
I could not be trusted with it and declared it ‘Prohibited’.
It was just fine though, and the French seem to like it as
well.
I have a 7.5 x 54 mm French rifle. I want to shoot it!
First of all you must have one of the following rifles:
- MAS 36 or MAS 36/51
- Model 07-15 M34*
- MAS 44
- MAS 49 or 49/56
This one is so scarce it will merit an
article by itself.
The available French cartridges and the ones manufactured in
their former spheres of influence is not to be relied upon.
Hangfires and misfires, not to mention corrosive primers,
make using any of that ammunition a NO-NO. Also it has the
berdan primer to end all berdan primers in that it is
crimped so well into place you have to be a safe cracker to
remove it. If you do get it out, you soon realize that you
can’t find that size. Reloading can break your heart
sometimes!
I hope that you the reader, and possibly shooter, have some
hand loading experience? If you don’t, when you learn how,
let me say you have a treat coming to you!
The cartridge which just about duplicates
everything, except caliber, of the 7.5 French is the 6.5 x
55 mm Swedish. This cartridge is being currently
manufactured by several domestic factories and is not hard
to find. If you have 7.5 x 54 mm dies all you have to do is
run the 6.5 mm case into the full length sizing die and that
will expand the neck to 7.5 (.30) If you wish you can trim a
millimeter off it, but I did not have to.
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10. The photo shows an unfired 7.5 x 54 mm and a 6.5
x 55 mm Swede, note how similar they are. Next a
fired 7.5 and a Swede which has been fire formed in
the 7.5mm. You can make them this way, but you lose
a good 6.5 mm projectile which you should have saved
for those loads in your Type 22 Japanese light
machinegun. Neck 'em up, works just as well.
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11. Two sectioned cases. One the left is the 7.
French and on the right the 6.5 .Note how the web
thickness is the same. Safe to shoot for sure. |
Go to your reloading book and follow the
instructions for the 7.62 x 51 NATO (.308) cartridge loading
specs, and you will turn out loads that will function just
fine. If you have a 44, 49 or 49/56 you should follow
loading directions for loads to be used in a Garand. They
have a different gas system which should use fast burning
powders.
Any .30 caliber projectiles will function
just fine.
Take your time, enjoy, and you will know
that now you are that rare breed, the Shooter/Collector.
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NOTE |
| The foregoing information is
very limited, and is basically meant to give the
reader the incentive to get much more information
elsewhere and even to own the firearms discussed.
One excellent source of books is I.D.S.A. and their
E-Mail address is:
idsabooks@idsabooks.com.
Tell the nice man that Finn sent you.
And, have fun with this!! |
Article Written
by: Finn
Nielsen