Ma Deuce wrote:Looks like I missed this:
Perinquus wrote:It really is a pity, for had we succeeded, and adopted a version of the MG42, we would have had a much better GMPG than the M60, which we got about a generation later. The M60 had some good points, but had several bad ones too, and the MG42 was a much better gun over all.
The M60 wasn't strictly an attempt to copy the MG42: The M60 is basically a hybrid of the MG42 action and that of the FG42 automatic rifle (to which the M60 bears a striking resemblance), which IIRC was what led to many of the M60's problems. The reason for this peculiar decision was the Army wanted it to be possible to fire the M60 from the standing position (like the BAR). On the other hand they also wanted a belt-fed weapon that could lay down sustained supression fire rom the supported position.
The cartridge used by the M60 wasn't a problem either: the M60 was never chambered for .30-06, it was chambered for 7.62mm NATO (.308), which was a shorter cartridge than the 7.92mm Mauser...
No shit! Dude, I was an infantry sergeant in the U.S. Army. I fucking know the M60 was chambered for the 7.62mm NATO, not the .30-06. That's not what I'm talking about!
And for god's sake, credit me with enough intelligence to recognize the difference between this:
And this:
Simple obsercation will tell you the M60 is not a direct copy of the MG42. Do you think I'm fucking blind? What you apparently don't know is that we did attempt to copy the MG42 back
during WWII. We weren't trying to make a derivative weapon, we attempted to make a direct, dimensionally exact, completely identical copy, except for firring the American .30-06 Springfield cartridge, rather than the German 7.92mm Mauser. And as I said, because someone forgot to take into account the slightly greater length of the .30-06 cartridge, it didn'ty work, so the project was abandoned.
Here's a site that mentions it:
The WSG2000
And here's the relevant passage:
Many will recall the attempts by the U.S. Ordnance Corps to reverse engineer the excellent German WWII MG42 machine gun to fire the U.S. .30-06 caliber cartridge. Had errors in the conversion from metric to English measurements not occurred during prototype design, American GI’s might well have been carrying an Americanized MG42 well into the present day as they had done one World War earlier with the fine M1903 "Springfield" rifle — for all intents and purposes a close copy of the Mauser 98 rifle.