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Ask Ian: What Rifles Were the M2-M13? (ad-free)

From Dennis on Patreon:

"What rifles were between the M1 Garand and the M14? I went through Basic with an M14 and I know the M15 was supposed to be a BAR replacement. Google doesn't really find anything on the M2 - M13 rifles."

The Army had rifle for much more than just standard infantry use. They also adopted rifles for marksmanship practice, sub caliber firing of artillery, pilot survival (as the Army Air Force), and spotting. Here are the M2 through M13:

M2 - Springfield .22LR training rifle (updated from the M1922) (https://youtu.be/kOc23X5IeEM)

M3 - Not used

M4 - Harrington & Richardson pilot survival rifle; bolt action .22 Hornet

M5 - Subcaliber .22LR adapter for 37mm guns

M6 - Ithaca pilot survival combination gun; .22 Hornet over .410 shotgun (https://youtu.be/LnHW3-aDP30)

M7 - Subcaliber .30-06 adapter for the 75mm recoilless rifle

M8 - Spotting rifle for the 106mm recoilless rifle (https://youtu.be/GHvmeyA-8rQ)

M9 - Subcaliber .30-06 adapter for the 106mm recoilless rifle

M10 - Not used

M11 - Not used

M12 - Harrington & Richardson .22LR training rifle

M13 - Remington .22LR training rifle

Ask Ian: What Rifles Were the M2-M13? (ad-free)

Comments

Probably that. New class, new numbers.

alphawhiskey

Submachine guns had their own independent set of designation numbers. The Thompson was the M1 SMG, for instance.

Forgotten Weapons

Ian, in this session you said that the m-3 was not used in nomenclature. The M3 was used for the M3 submachine gun.

Eugene Neigoff

There were several renumbering schemes for equipment through the years. Some came from when Congress realized that that the Navy and Air Force were buying the same planes, but giving them different designations.

Bryan R Stahl

This makes me wonder, why is the Abrams the M1 tank, when we had M2, M3 and M4 tanks going back to WWII? Plus the M60 tank of the Vietnam era. Did they just ignore their own numbering system? Was the Abrams a different category of tank, like "Main Battle Tank" or something along those lines while the M4 was a "Medium Tank"?

Matt Haught

The SMG designations were independent of the Rifle ones.

Forgotten Weapons

I’m thinking the M3 Grease Gun took the M3 designation.

Patrick Moran

hey if it would be brit it would be something like mark.....star.star.star... plus shotguns precision rifles cable throwing navy something....

Guido Schriewer

Great question and fantastic answer. Thanks.

Glenn Miller

Didn't IMI make a reproduction of the M6? It may have been 22lr/410 rather than 22 hornet/410.

David K. Jernigan

There is a large collection of USAF survival rifles and development versions at the Air and Armaments Museum near Egland AFB, Fl.

Beverly Chmelik

Forgot about that, thanks!

Brett Baker

The Carbine designations were independent of the Rifle ones.

Forgotten Weapons

M3 carbine probably took the M3 designation. Remember the M2 carbine was used by USAF until the early 60s.

Brett Baker

...and people complain that the British system of Markss and Stars is complicated! lol

Julian Corbett

The US military as a whole ignores its equipment designation systems on a regular basis for all kinds of reasons, but usually dumb ones.

Ryan D Thorne

I am so glad somebody else brought this up. In the press releases for the new Sig M5, they kept calling it the M5 Rifle instead of the M5 Carbine. I even contacted the PEO about it and the general response was “Huh. That’s weird”. So yeah, even the Army has apparently forgotten that they already had an M5 rifle and this new infantry small arm is supposed to be the M5 carbine.

alphawhiskey


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