Pour a cup of Carcano to my aunt~
Since the French used smokeless gunpowder in 1886, European countries have also followed suit and replaced black powder with smokeless gunpowder. The bullet caliber was also reduced to eight millimeters and below. As the most amusing among European powers, how can the Kingdom of Italy be absent?
In 1890, Italian Chief Technician Salvador Carcano in 杜灵 Armory designed Carcano based on the rolling pin of the pasta master M1891 rifle. To replace the wonderful 10.4 x47R caliber M1870 Vitry black powder rifle.
The Carcano rifle is 1,285 mm long, which is considered to be above the standard in the rifle at the time (but Carcano’s mixed Carbine model is shorter). Perhaps the Southern Europeans are generally short and small. It also resulted in smaller bullets for the Carcano M1891 rifle. The comparison of
6.5*52mm Carcano and 7.92mm Mauser is really thin. This was the weakest standard full-power bomb at the time. It was not until a few years later that the weaker 6.5*50mmSR Arisaka bomb took the top spot.
Karl The Kano rifle is supplied by a leaky clip. This leaky clip draws on the design of the M1888 committee leaky clip, but how could the proud Italy bow to the German Empire? We know that M1888 has five rounds, and Italy has added one...
The Carcano rifle uses a unique progressive rifling (the shorter the muzzle wrap, the faster the warhead speed). The gun has good accuracy. However, what is surprising is that the Italians have chaotic management of ammunition. Carcano ammunition has different sources of gunpowder. Therefore, the muzzle velocity of Carcano ranges from 600 meters to 750 meters per second, and the ballistic trajectory is therefore very random... Everyone looks at luck.
In 1914, Italian soldiers took Carcano rifles and went to the battlefield, and then they were gorgeous Anti-water became the victorious country~
Italians are thinking about expanding their mouths~ But the Southern European dwarves think it’s too uncharacteristic to expand to 7.62mm So, in 1938, the idiots who were full of olive oil whimsically expanded the 6.5mm Carcano to the 7.35mm Italian characteristic (right).
Initially 7.35*51 Carcano bullets were used with the improved Carcano M38 rifle.
In addition, after the war between Japan and China in 1937, Germany, Italy and Japan signed the International Anti-Communist Agreement, so the Japanese Army purchased Carcano from Italy which was changed to use 6.5*50mmSR Arisaka. M1891, the book named it the Italian rifle.
(upper, Italian, lower, Carcano)
Unexpectedly, the book was smashed by the Italian dull, this batch The Carcano structure rifle is not only inferior to Japan's own 38-style in terms of locking strength, but the manufacturing and processing of it is also very stale. The Japanese army glanced at him and threw it to the navy. The navy glanced at him and threw it to the land duck in the port and the uncle who was looking at the warehouse.