Engineering:List of .30-06 Springfield firearms
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The below table gives a list of firearms that can fire the .30-06 Springfield cartridge (7.62×63mm in metric notation). The cartridge was originally developed from the round-nosed .30-03 Springfield cartridge as a response to the adoption of spitzer bullets by various European armies in the late 19th to early 20th century. It was the service cartridge of the U.S. military from its adoption in 1906 until 1957, when it started being replaced by 7.62×51mm NATO as the standard U.S. military cartridge. The .30-06 is still common in the 21st century as a popular cartridge for hunting, notably in North America.[1][2]
This table is sortable for every column.
| Name | Type | Country | Image | Years of service | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FN Model 24 and Model 30 | Bolt-action rifle | frameless | 1924–1986 | Export variants. | |
| FN Model 1949 | Semi-automatic rifle | frameless | 1949–1982 | ||
| FN Model D | Light machine gun | frameless | 1940s– | Belgian variant of M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle.[3] | |
| Mosquetão Itajubá M1949 | Bolt-action rifle | frameless | 1949–1968 | Variant of Model 1908/34 short rifle.[4] | |
| Mosquetão Itajubá M954 | Bolt-action rifle | 1954–1968 | Mosquetão M1949 variant with ability to launch rifle grenade.[4] | ||
| Mosquetão Semi-Automático M954 | Semi-automatic rifle | 1954–1964 | Brazilian variant of Gewehr 43.[5] | ||
| Madsen M47 | Bolt-action rifle | 1951–1960s | |||
| Madsen machine gun | Light machine gun | frameless | 1946– | Export variants. | |
| Madsen-Saetter machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | frameless | 1952–present | ||
| Breda Bren gun | Light machine gun | frameless | 1959–1970s | Italian variant of the British Bren gun, made by Breda.[6] | |
| Mexican Mauser Model 1954 | Bolt-action rifle | frameless | 1954–present | ||
| Mendoza RM2 | Light machine gun | frameless | 1947– | ||
| K98kF1 | Bolt-action rifle | frameless | 1953–present | Rechambered from the original 7.92×57mm Mauser.[7][8] | |
| MG34F1 | General-purpose machine gun | frameless | 1953–1970s | Rechambered from the original 7.92×57mm Mauser.[9] | |
| SIG MG 50 | General-purpose machine gun | 1951– | |||
| Type 41 light machine gun | Light machine gun | frameless | 1950s– | Taiwanese variant of the British Bren gun.[10] | |
| M1903 Springfield | Bolt-action rifle | frameless | 1906–1970s | ||
| M1917 Enfield | Bolt-action rifle | frameless | 1917–present | ||
| Winchester Model 70 | Bolt-action rifle | frameless | 1936–present | ||
| M1922 Bang rifle | Semi-automatic rifle | frameless | 1922 | Prototype and testing only. | |
| Thompson Autorifle | Semi-automatic rifle | frameless | 1923 | Prototype and testing only. | |
| M1 Garand | Semi-automatic rifle | frameless | 1936–present | ||
| M8 /X01 "Garage Gun"[11] | Battle rifle | 1950s | Prototype and testing only. | ||
| M1941 Johnson rifle | Semi-automatic rifle | frameless | 1941–1961 | ||
| M1947 Johnson auto carbine | Semi-automatic rifle | 1947 | Derived from M1941 Johnson machine gun. | ||
| Model 45A | Battle rifle / Automatic rifle | Template:Country data Commonwealth of the Philippines |
1945 | Prototype and testing only. | |
| Sieg automatic rifle | Battle rifle / Automatic rifle | 1946 | Prototype and testing only. | ||
| M1903-06 Gatling | Heavy machine gun | frameless | 1906–1911 | .30-06 Springfield variant of the Gatling gun.[12] | |
| M1904 Maxim | Heavy machine gun | frameless | 1906–1918 | US variant of the Maxim machine gun. | |
| M1909 Benét–Mercié | Light machine gun | frameless | 1909–1918 | US variant of the French Hotchkiss M1909.[13] | |
| M1915 Colt–Vickers | Heavy machine gun | frameless | 1917–1945 | US variant of the British Vickers machine gun.[14] | |
| M1917 Browning machine gun | Heavy machine gun | frameless | 1917–1970s | ||
| M1917 Marlin Rockwell | Light machine gun | frameless | 1917–1920s | Based on the M1895 Colt–Browning. | |
| M1917 Lewis | Light machine gun | frameless | 1917–1945 | US variant of the British Lewis gun. | |
| M1918 Lewis | Light machine gun | frameless | 1918–1945 | Aircraft gun variant of the M1917 Lewis. | |
| M1918 Chauchat | Light machine gun / Automatic rifle | frameless | 1918 | US variant of the French Chauchat. | |
| M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle | Light machine gun / Automatic rifle | frameless | 1918–1990s | ||
| M1919 Browning machine gun | Medium machine gun | frameless | 1919–present | ||
| .30 AN/M2 | Light machine gun | frameless | 1930s–1940s | Aircraft mounted variant of M1919 | |
| M1941 Johnson machine gun | Light machine gun | frameless | 1940–1961 | ||
| M2 Stinger | Light machine gun | 1943–1945 | Field modification variant of .30 AN/M2 | ||
| T24 machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | frameless | 1944 | Copy of the MG 42. Prototype and testing only. |
See also
- List of 7.62×51mm NATO firearms
- List of 7.62×54mmR firearms
- List of 7.65×53mm Mauser firearms
- List of 7.92×57mm Mauser firearms
- .303 British
- 7.5×54mm
References
- ↑ Towsley, Bryce M. (25 February 2024). ".30-’06 Springfield: History & Performance". https://www.americanrifleman.org/content/30-06-springfield-history-performance/.
- ↑ Engesser, Joe (30 June 2023). "The .30-06 Rifle: Chambering America's Caliber". https://www.rockislandauction.com/riac-blog/30-06-rifle-americas-caliber.
- ↑ McCollum, Ian (21 August 2020). "FN Model D: The Last and Best BAR". https://www.forgottenweapons.com/fn-model-d-the-last-and-best-bar/.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Neto, Carlos F. P. (5 April 2011). "Fuzís Mauser no Brasil e as Espingardas da Fábrica de Itajubá (Rev. 2)" (in pt). https://armasonline.org/armas-on-line/as-espingardas-da-fabrica-de-itajuba/.
- ↑ McCollum, Ian (10 April 2020). "Brazil’s .30-06 Copy of the G43: The Mosquetão Semi-Automático M954". https://www.forgottenweapons.com/brazils-30-06-copy-of-the-g43-the-mosquetao-semi-automatico-m954/.
- ↑ "Centrefire Automatic Light Machine Gun - Breda Bren - about 1944". https://royalarmouries.org/collection/object/object-176531.
- ↑ McCollum, Ian (4 June 2017). "Norwegian K98kF1 Repurposed Mauser". https://www.forgottenweapons.com/norwegian-k98kf1-repurposed-mauser/.
- ↑ Moss, Matthew (5 March 2018). "Norway's Svalbard Arctic Seed Vault is Defended by Rifles from World War Two". https://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2018/03/05/norways-svalbard-arctic-seed-vault-defended-rifles-world-war-two/.
- ↑ "MG34 and MG42 in Norway, Post WW2". 1 December 2012. https://smallarmsreview.com/mg34-and-mg42-in-norway-post-ww2/.
- ↑ Johnson, Harold E. (1976). Small Arms Identification and Operation Guide – Free World. Defense Intelligence Agency. pp. 255. https://www.google.co.id/books/edition/Small_Arms_Identification_and_Operation/xOcuub2HqUwC?hl=id&gbpv=0.
- ↑ https://www.instmiltech.com/halls/
- ↑ Paul Wahl and Don Toppel, The Gatling Gun, Arco Publishing, 1971, p. 155.
- ↑ "Hotchkiss Portative LMG". 14 September 2011. https://www.forgottenweapons.com/light-machine-guns/hotchkiss-portative-lmg/.
- ↑ Segel, Robert G. (6 January 2012). "U.S. Colt Vickers Model of 1915". Small Arms Defense Journal. http://www.sadefensejournal.com/wp/?p=756.
