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Encyclopedia > Lewis machine gun

The Lewis Gun was a pre-WWI era British machine gun that continued to see service all the way through WWII. It is visually distinctive because of the wide tubular cooling shroud around the barrel, and the top mounted drum magazines. The latter could hold 50 or 90 rounds.

Contents

History

It was invented by US Army Colonel Isaac Newton Lewis in 1911 but was not instantly adopted by the Americans. It was designed with an aluminium barrel casing to use the muzzle blast to draw air into the gun and cool down the internal mechanism. It could fire 550 .303 rounds per minute. The gun weighed 12 kg (28 lb), only about half as much as the monumental Vickers machine gun, and was primarily chosen because it could be carried and used by a single soldier. It was also about one sixth the cost of a Vickers, and was issued in droves to soldiers on the Western Front. (Six Lewis guns could be produced in the same time as a Vickers gun.) The lightness of the Lewis gun made it popular as an aircraft mounted weapon especially since the cooling effect of the high speed air over the gun meant that the radiator and cooling fins could be removed, making the weapon even lighter.


Col. Lewis became frustrated at trying to persuade the U.S. Army to adopt his design. He retired and headed for Belgium. The Belgians quickly adopted the design in 1913, firing the .303 British round. The Germans first encountered it in 1914 and nicknamed it 'the Belgian Rattlesnake.'


World War 1

The British quickly claimed it as their own, adopting it in late 1915. (Much like their invention of the Peabody-Martini-Henry rifle.)


The British tanks used the Lewis gun, as did British aircraft.


In 1917, the U.S. Army adopted the Lewis Gun, firing the .30-06. But the design was quickly replaced by the (in)famous Browning Automatic Rifle or B.A.R.


World War 2

In World War Two it was replaced by the Bren gun for most infantry uses, but the Lewis saw continued service as a vehicle mounted weapon, primarily as a side gunner's weapon on aircraft. Although it was probably obsolete for that role as well, the British were facing something of a major economic crisis during the war, and had to use their existing stocks in whatever capacity made the most sense.


After WWII the Lewis was officially discontinued in British Service, and all existing models were retired in favour of the Bren, Vickers and other machine guns.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Light machine gun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (248 words)
A light machine gun (LMG) is a categorization type, or class of machine guns that are generally lighter than other of machine guns of its period, and usually designed to be carried by an individual soldier, but sometimes with an assistant.
In practice, they are either automatic rifles (machine rifles) or medium machine guns with a bipod, a stock, and sometimes a pistol grip.
Usually an LMG, or LMG version of a firearm is intended to act as a support weapon in that it can generate a greater volume of continuous fire than the usual firearms carried by infantry soldiers, but at the cost of greater weight and higher ammunition consumption.
First World War.com - Weapons of War - Machine Guns (1049 words)
Machine guns of all armies were largely of the heavy variety and decidedly ill-suited to portability for use by rapidly advancing infantry troops.
As the war developed machine guns were adapted for use on tanks on broken ground, particularly on the Western Front (where the majority of machine guns were deployed).
Light machine guns were adopted too for incorporation into aircraft from 1915 onwards, for example the Vickers, particularly with the German adoption of interrupter equipment, which enabled the pilot to fire the gun through the aircraft's propeller blades.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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