Thompson Light Rifle

Carbine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Thompson Light Rifle was an attempt by the Auto-Ordnance Company to manufacture a light rifle for the United States Armed Forces. The overall weapon was based on their well proven .45 ACP submachine gun. It worked well but due to the war effort was found expensive for mass production and its weight defied the concept of a light rifle.[1]

PlaceoforiginUnited States
Designed1941
ManufacturerAuto Ordnance
Quick facts Type, Place of origin ...
Thompson Light Rifle
TypeCarbine
Place of originUnited States
Production history
Designed1941
ManufacturerAuto Ordnance
ProducedPrototypes only
Specifications
Cartridge.30 Carbine
Caliber7.62mm
ActionBlowback, open bolt
Rate of fire600–1200 rpm
Feed system20 or 30 round box magazines
SightsIron
Close

Auto-Ordnance also submitted two other models not based on the Thompson SMG for tests in the .30 Carbine competitions in May and June 1941. Their first light rifle was a more conventional rifle with recoil-operated locked-breech action and weighed about 5.5 pounds.[2] The modified version tested September, 1941 was semi-auto only, had 80 parts, and was found difficult to disassemble and reassemble.[3]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI