Service rifle: Difference between revisions
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|1957-Present |
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|Selective fire |
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Revision as of 14:32, 9 August 2008
The service rifle (also known as standard-issue rifle) of a given army or armed force is that which it issues as standard to its soldiers. In modern forces, this is typically a highly versatile and rugged assault rifle suitable for use in nearly all theatres and environments. Service rifles are also often selected for their upgradability (e.g. the addition of underslung grenade launchers, sights, flashlights, laser sights, etc).
Although certain weapons issued to special forces units are rarely considered 'service weapons' in the truest sense, certain specialist rifles and submachine guns are categorized as such if issued as per standard operating procedures upon entering special environments or scenarios. These may include urban warfare (FIBUA/MOUT) and jungle warfare environments.
Most armies also have service pistols/side arms.
History
Originally, rifles used in combat were not standard-issue weapons like the service rifles of today. Rifles were for specialist marksmen only, whilst the ordinary infantry were issued less accurate smoothbore muskets which had a higher rate of fire, with bore diameters as high as 19 mm, or 0.75 inch. By the middle of the 19th century, however, rifles were becoming more and more common on the battlefield, with the muskets being phased out. Originally, these combat rifles were single-shot muzzleloading weapons, but as technology advanced through the 18th and 19th centuries, so too did the technique of loading rounds. First, breech-loading firearms, like the Prussian Needle gun of the mid-18th century came to prominence, which then evolved into repeating weapons, such as the bolt-action Mosin-Nagant rifle used by Imperial Russia in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and the Soviet Union in the Second World War. By this time almost all prominent armies in the world had some sort of standard service rifle. During the Second World War, there was yet another leap forward in rifle design which was to influence service rifles even today. That is, the use of a fired cartridge's gas emissions to automatically rechamber rounds into the breech once a bullet had been fired, as well as expelling the old cartridge. These weapons were known as gas-operated firearms. Some of the earliest examples of these were most prominent in the Second World War, and were usually semi automatic, such as the American-made M1 Garand, first brought into service with the United States in 1936. These "battle rifles", as they were called, usually fired a "full-sized" (as opposed to an intermediate) rifle cartridge, such as the .30-06 Springfield or .303 British. Another type of commonly-issued rifle which was to become well known during this time was the assault rifle, a (usually) fully-automatic rifle firing a lighter "intermediate" cartridge, as opposed to the full-sized cartridges used by battle rifles. The first of these was the Sturmgewehr 44, used by Nazi Germany in the later stages of the Second World War. The StG44 was not issued in large numbers, and was never adopted as Germany's service rifle. However, this weapon was to serve as the precursor to other assault rifles such as the Soviet AK-47, the American M-16, the Belgian FN FAL, the German G3 and the Swiss Sturmgewehr 57, which today supersede battle rifles as the service rifle of choice for militaries the world over.
Service rifles by nation
Belgium
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
FN Mauser M1889 | Bolt-action | 7.65x 53mm Belgian Mauser | 1889-1940 |
FN Mauser M1936 | Bolt-action | 7.65x 53mm Belgian Mauser | 1936-1949 |
FN SAFN-49 | Semi-automatic | .30-06 Springfield | 1949-1956 |
FN FAL | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1953-1979 |
FN FNC | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1979-present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Hanyang Type 88 | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1895-1947 |
Chiang Kai-shek rifle | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1935-1952 |
Type 53 Carbine | Bolt-action | 7.62x54R | 1953-1976 |
SKS | Semi-automatic | 7.62x39mm | 1956-1989 |
Type 56 | Selective fire | 7.62x39mm | 1956-1986 |
Type 81 | Selective fire | 7.62x39mm | 1981-Present |
QBZ-95 | Selective fire | 5.8x42mm | 1995-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
M16 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 197?-Present |
Daewoo K1 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1981-Present |
Daewoo K2 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1984-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Chassepot M1866 | Bolt-action | 11mm | 1866-1874 |
Gras M1874 | Bolt-action | 11mm | 1874-1886 |
Lebel M1886 | Bolt-action | 8 mm Lebel | 1886-1940 |
MAS-36 | Bolt-action | 7.5x54 French | 1936-1978 |
MAS-49 | Semi-automatic | 7.5x54 French | 1949-1979 |
FAMAS | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1978-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Needle gun | Breech loading | 15.4mm | 1848-1871 |
M1871 Mauser | Bolt-action | 11x60mm R | 1871-1888 |
Model 1888 Commission Rifle | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1888-1915 |
Gewehr 98 | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1898-1935 |
Mauser Kar 98k | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1935-1955 |
Sturmgewehr 44 | Selective fire | 7.92 x 33 mm | 1944-1955 |
FN FAL | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1955-1965 (West Germany) |
MPi-K | Selective fire | 7.62x39mm | 1955-1990 (East Germany) |
Heckler & Koch G3 | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1958-~2006 |
Heckler & Koch G36 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1995-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Lee-Enfield No 4 | Bolt-action | .303 British | 1948-1958 |
Mauser Kar98k | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1948-1958 |
FN FAL | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1955-1974 |
Galil AR | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1974-present |
M16 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1974-present |
Tavor TAR-21 | Selective Fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 2002-present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Carcano | Bolt-action | 6.5 x 52 Mannlicher-Carcano | 1892-1950 |
M1 Garand | Semi-automatic | .30-06 Springfield | 1945-1959 |
Beretta BM-59 | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1959-1990 |
Beretta AR70/90 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1972-present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Murata rifle | Bolt-action | 10x60R | 1880-1898 |
Arisaka Type 38 | Bolt-action | 6.5mm Arisaka | 1898-1945 |
Arisaka Type 99 | Bolt-action | 7.7mm Arisaka | 1939-1945 |
M1 Garand | Semi-automatic | .30-06 Springfield | 1945-1964 |
Howa Type 64 | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1964-Present |
Howa Type 89 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1989-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Heckler & Koch G3 | Selective fire | 7.62 x 51 mm NATO | 1965-Present(Slowly Replaced by FX-05 Xiuhcoatl) |
M-16 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1971-Present |
Heckler & Koch G36 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1999-Present |
FX-05 Xiuhcoatl | Selective fire | 5.56 x 45 mm NATO | 2006-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Kammerlader | Breech-loading | Minié ball | 1842-1870 |
Remington M1867 | Rolling block | 12.17x44mm | 1867-1908 |
Jarmann M1884 | Bolt-action | 10.15x61mm | 1884-1900 |
Krag-Jørgensen M1894 | Bolt-action | 6.5x55mm | 1894-1940 |
Lee-Enfield No 4 | Bolt-action | .303 British | 1940-1952 |
Mauser M98 | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1945-1950 |
Selvladegevær M1 | Semi-Automatic | .30-06 Springfield | 1950-Present (limited use for drill/display) |
AG-3 | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1966-Present |
Heckler & Koch HK416 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | Being issued from 2008 |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Enfield m/1859 | Percussion cap | 14mm Minié | 1859-1872 |
Snider-Enfield m/1872 | Breech-loading | 14mm Snider | 1872-1910 (after 1886 limited use with colonial troops) |
Kropatchek m/1886 | Bolt-action | 8x60mm Guedes | 1886-1961 (after 1904 limited use with colonial troops) |
Mauser-Vergueiro m/1904 | Bolt-action | 6.5x58mm Vergueiro | 1904-1937 |
Mauser m/937 | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1937-Present (limited use for drill/display in the GNR) |
G3 m/961 | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1961-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Berdan rifle | Bolt-action | 10.75x58mm | 1869-1891 |
Mosin-Nagant | Bolt-action | 7.62x54R | 1891-1963 |
SKS | Semi-automatic | 7.62x39mm | 1945-1989 |
AK-47 | Selective fire | 7.62x39mm | 1949-Present |
AK-74 | Selective fire | 5.45x39mm | 1974-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
M1893 Mauser | Bolt-action | 7x57 Mauser | 1893-1945 |
Coruña 42 | Bolt-action | 7.92x57mm Mauser | 1942-1958 |
CETME | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1958-1997 |
Heckler & Koch G36 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 2000-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Vetterli rifle | Bolt-action | 10.4x38Rmm Rimfire | 1869-1890 |
Schmidt-Rubin | Bolt-action | 7.5x55mm Schmidt Rubin | 1889-1957 |
Sturmgewehr 57 | Selective fire | 7.5x55mm Schmidt Rubin | 1957-1990 |
Sturmgewehr 90 | Selective fire | Gewehr Patrone 90 | 1990-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Ferguson rifle | Breech-loading | .650 Ball | 1776 |
Baker rifle | Flintlock | .615 Ball | 1801-1837 |
Brunswick rifle | Percussion cap | .704 Ball | 1837-1851 |
Pattern 1853 Enfield | Percussion cap | .577 Ball | 1853-1867 |
Snider-Enfield | Breech-loading | .577 Snider | 1866-1901 |
Martini-Henry | Falling block | .577/450 Martini-Henry | 1871-1918 |
Lee-Metford | Bolt-action | .303 British | 1888-1926 |
Lee-Enfield | Bolt-action | .303 British | 1895-Present (limited use) |
L1A1 SLR | Semi-automatic | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1956-Present |
SA-80 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1985-Present |
Austeyr (Australian version of the Steyr AUG) | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1987-Present |
Firearm | Type | Calibre | Service |
---|---|---|---|
Kentucky Rifle | Flintlock | .69 Ball | 1776-1795 |
Springfield Model 1795 | Flintlock | .69 Ball | 1795-1816 |
Springfield Model 1816 | Flintlock | .69 Ball | 1816-1835 |
M1819 Hall rifle | Falling block | .69 Ball | 1820 |
Springfield Model 1835 | Flintlock | .67 Ball | 1835-1842 |
Springfield Model 1842 | Percussion cap | .58 Minié | 1842-1855 |
Springfield Model 1855 | Percussion cap | .58 Minié | 1855-1861 |
Sharps rifle | Falling block | .50-70 Government | 1850-1881 |
Springfield Model 1861 | Percussion cap | .58 Minié | 1861-1873 |
Springfield Model 1873 | Breech-loading | .45-70 Government | 1873-1886 |
Krag-Jørgensen | Bolt-action | .30-40 Krag | 1894-1903 |
Springfield M1903 | Bolt-action | .30-06 Springfield | 1903-1957 |
M1917 Enfield | Bolt-action | .30-06 Springfield | 1917-1943 |
M1 Garand | Semi-automatic | .30-06 Springfield | 1936-1963 |
M14 | Selective fire | 7.62x51mm NATO | 1957-Present |
M16 | Selective fire | 5.56x45mm NATO | 1961-Present |