When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Colt Canada C19 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colt_Canada_C19

    The Colt Canada C19 is a licence-built, Finnish-designed Tikka T3 CTR bolt-action rifle modified for the Canadian Rangers.The C19 replaced the longer and heavier Lee-Enfield No. 4 Mk.1.303" rifles which entered service with the Canadian Army in WWII and later, with the Canadian Rangers, when they were formed in 1947.

  3. List of historical equipment of the Canadian military

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historical...

    LeeEnfield SMLE Mk.III: Service rifle: 1916-1943 United Kingdom: LeeEnfield No.4 Mk.I: Service rifle: 1943-1955 Canada: Used by Canadian Rangers until 2016, replaced by Colt C-19: M1 Garand: Service rifle: 1944-1953 Canada United States: A small number of M1, M1C and M1D rifles, enough to equip a brigade, were issued to the Canadian Army ...

  4. Canadian Rangers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Rangers

    The bolt action LeeEnfield was then issued to the PCMR as the standard rifle later during the war and it continued to be used by the Canadian Rangers when they were established in 1947. Due to the economy of the .303 (there were thousands left over after the war) and the robust nature of the rifle (especially in conditions such as extreme ...

  5. What is a replica gun? What to know about fake gun in ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/replica-gun-know-fake-gun-082015777.html

    The Rochester police shooting death of Todd Novick comes after state and federal laws aimed to curb access to realistic-looking imitation weapons.

  6. Lee–Enfield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LeeEnfield

    An Afghan mujahid carries a LeeEnfield in August 1985 A Rwandan soldier trains with a Lee-Enfield, 2011 Canadian Rangers, photographed in Nunavut, June 2011 The LeeEnfield family of rifles is the second oldest bolt-action rifle design still in official service, after the Mosin–Nagant . [ 13 ]

  7. List of military equipment of the Canadian Army in World War II

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_military_equipment...

    LeeEnfield No.1 United Kingdom: 1916 Bolt-action.303 British Mk.VII: Mk.III; Mk.III* LeeEnfield No.4 United Kingdom: 1943 Bolt-action .303 British Mk.VII Mk.I; Mk.6* Primary service rifle. Pattern 1914 Enfield United Kingdom: 1914 Bolt-action.303 British Mk.VII For training and use by snipers. [2] M1917 Enfield United States: 1917 Bolt-action

  8. L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L1A1_Self-Loading_Rifle

    The Labour government of Walter Nash approved the purchase of the L1A1 as a replacement for the No. 4 Mk 1 LeeEnfield bolt-action rifle in 1959. [30] An order for 15,000 L1A1 rifles was placed with the Lithgow Small Arms Factory in Australia which had been granted a license to produce the L1A1.

  9. Huot Automatic Rifle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huot_Automatic_Rifle

    To absorb excess energy, the bolt was buffered. The entire mechanism was sheathed in sheet metal. Huot copied the cooling system from the Lewis Gun, then standard in British Army service. [5] It fed from a 25-round drum magazine. He filed Canadian patents; #193724 on 8 March 1917 (granted 4 November 1919) and #193725 on 13 November 1917. [5]