The M1 Garand, also known as the M1 rifle, is a .30-caliber, gas-operated, semi-automatic rifle that was the standard infantry weapon of the U.S. Army during World War II and the Korean War. #m1 #garandthumb
@@AbuHajarAlBugattithe M1 was adopted into service before the SVT-40 also yes they had it but you talked about the Germans still using bolt actions here’s some more numbers for you There were only a little over 1 million SVT-40s made compared to almost 6 million M1s. Who knows maybe the SVT 40 was better but like Kanye said “I guess we’ll never know.”
@@vicv7075 The Garand is without a doubt better as it is more accurate and fires a rimless somewhat more powerful round.Speaking from personal experience.
When I competed I used the M1 and the Mauser. Both are great rifles excet the M1 obviously was faster. In the service I used the Argentinian Mauser and the Belgian FAL.
Для Автоматической Винтовки Симонова Снайперской..!! Для улучшения качества поражения ЖСП..!! НАДО было освоить производство Патронов 7, 62 на 63 мм..!! Или даже 9, 0 на 63 мм..!!
The original M-2 ball loading was 150 grains. Not sure if lighter or heavier bullets would cause problems, but that’s what it was designed to use, at 2700 fps. Modern commercial ammo will push muzzle velocity higher, but on many online ammo venders, the Q&A section often has people asking “is this load safe for my M-1,” and heavier or faster loads are always “not recommended” for M-1s. Federal and Serbian Prvi Partisan specify their 150 grain loads are for M-1 Garands and duplicate the original M-2 ball.