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M50 Reising

The .45 Reising submachine gun was manufactured by Harrington & Richardson (H&R) Arms Company in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA, and was designed and patented by Eugene Reising in 1940. The three versions of the weapon were the Model 50, the folding stock Model 55, and the semiautomatic Model 60 rifle.[4] Over 100,000 Reisings were ordered during World War II, and were initially used by the United States Navy, Marine Corps, and the United States Coast Guard, though some were shipped to Canadian, Soviet, and other allied forces to fight the Axis powers.[5]

Reising Model 50
The Reising Model 50 submachine gun
TypeSubmachine gun
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1941–1975
Used bySee Users
WarsWorld War II
Hukbalahap Rebellion
Malayan Emergency[1]
Calderonista invasion of Costa Rica[1]
Vietnam War[2]
Dominican Civil War[1]
Production history
DesignerEugene Reising
Designed1940
ManufacturerHarrington & Richardson
Produced1941–1945
VariantsM50, M55, M60
Specifications
Mass3.1 kg (6.83 lb) (M50)
2.8 kg (6.2 lb) (M55)
Length895.35 mm (35.250 in)
565.15 mm (22.3 in) stock retracted (M55)
Barrel length279 mm (11.0 in) (M50)

Cartridge.45 ACP (M50, M55, M60)[3]
.22 LR (M65)
ActionDelayed blowback, closed bolt
Rate of fire550 rounds/min (M50)
500 rounds/min (M55)
Muzzle velocity280 m/s (919 ft/s)
Maximum firing range274 m (300 yards)
Feed system12- or 20-round detachable box magazine, 30-round aftermarket detachable box magazine
SightsFront blade, rear notch

History edit

 
A U.S. Coast Guard sailor on shore patrol with working dog and a Reising Model 50 with 12-round magazine.

Reising was an assistant to firearm inventor John M. Browning. In this role, Reising contributed to the final design of the US .45 ACP M1911 pistol. Reising then designed a number of commercial rifles and pistols on his own, when in 1938, he turned his attention to designing a submachine gun as threats of war rapidly grew in Europe.[4]

Two years later he submitted his completed design to the Harrington & Richardson Arms Company (H&R) in Worcester, Massachusetts. It was accepted, and in March 1941, H&R started manufacturing the Model 50 submachine gun. Months later, production began on the Model 55, which was identical to the Model 50 other than having a folding wire buttstock, no compensator, and a 10.5 in (270 mm) barrel; and the Model 60 semiautomatic rifle that also resembled a Model 50, but had an 18.75 in (476 mm) barrel without cooling fins or a compensator.[4]

H&R promoted the submachine guns for police and military use, and the Model 60 for security guards. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 the US was suddenly in desperate need of thousands of modern automatic weapons. Reising's only competitor was the .45 ACP Thompson submachine gun.[4]

The US Army first tested the Reising in November 1941 at Fort Benning, Georgia. During this test, several parts failed due to poor construction. Once this was corrected, a second test was made in 1942 at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland. In that test, 3,500 rounds were fired, resulting in two malfunctions: one from the ammunition, the other from a bolt malfunction. As a result, the Army didn't adopt the Reising, but the Navy and Marines did, due to insufficient supply of Thompsons.[4]

The Reising submachine gun was innovative for its time. In comparison to its main rival, the famous Thompson, it possessed similar firepower, better accuracy, excellent balance, a lighter weight, a much lower cost, and greater ease of manufacture. Despite these achievements, the poor combat performance of the Reising—contrasted with favorable combat and law enforcement use of the Thompson—mired the weapon in controversy.[4]

Design edit

The Reising was far less costly ($62) compared to the Thompson ($200). It was much lighter (seven vs. eleven pounds). The Model 55 was also more compact (about twenty-two vs. thirty-three inches in length).[4]

The Reising cost less than the Thompson because its metal components were mostly stampings instead of machined parts. This also allowed it to be lighter, as did its firing mechanism [clarification needed]. Like the 1928A1 Thompson, its operating principle was delayed blowback, but the Thompson's Blish lock system was far less mechanically effective and so, like a simple blowback weapon, the Thompson was dependent on high bolt mass or more specifically bolt inertia to provide an acceptably low rate of fire. That is, a lighter bolt, as used in earlier models of the Thompson, would have reciprocated faster and produced too great a firing speed. This in turn meant that the Thompson could not be radically lightened without a deterioration in its controllability, as a heavy gun was necessary in automatic fire, to counteract and stabilize the effects on control and accuracy of its heavy bolt moving back and forwards. The Reising's bolt is much lighter due to its delayed blowback mechanism being the main determinant of the automatic rate of fire; and consequently the whole gun could be correspondingly light without detracting from accuracy and controllability.

The M50 Reising's delayed blowback operation, often classified as hesitation lock,[6] works as follows: as the cartridge is chambered, the rear end of the bolt is pushed up into a recess, in a manner similar to tilting-bolt locked breech guns; but whereas such weapons rely on an additional mechanism to unlock them, in the case of the Reising the end of the bolt that pushes against the back wall of this recess, is subtly rounded, while the wall is correspondingly curved. On firing, the extreme pressure from the propellant gases is thereby able to force the bolt-end down, back to the horizontal. From here the bolt can move to the rear removing the cartridge from the chamber; but the combination of mechanical disadvantage and friction the force of the gases must overcome to push the end of the bolt down has achieved a delay of a fraction of a second, allowing pressure in the barrel to drop to a level sufficiently low for safe and efficient cartridge extraction.

The Reising fired from a closed bolt with its return spring as part of its cocking handle underneath the barrel. It notably used a linear hammer in the main receiver.

The Reising was more balanced than the Thompson because the barrel-and-receiver-group rested concentrically within the stock. It had smoother lines in that the stock was of conventional shape, and because the cocking handle (action bar) was placed inside the forearm. In addition, it was more accurate both in semi-auto and at the onset of automatic fire, because due to it being a closed bolt gun, only the linear hammer and firing pin moved at the moment the trigger was squeezed, whereas the Thompson slammed home a heavy bolt and actuator.[4]

The Reising was made in selective fire versions that could be switched between semi-automatic or full-automatic fire as needed and in semi-auto only versions to be used for marksmanship training and police and guard use. The Reising had a designed full-auto cyclic rate of 450–600 rounds per minute but it was reported that the true full-auto rate was closer to 750–850 rounds per minute. At those rates, the twenty round magazine could be emptied in less than two seconds. In 1941, the Reising was priced at approximately $50 per weapon as opposed to $225 for the standard military issue Thompson submachine gun.[7]

Variants edit

 
Reising Model 65 training rifle

There were four versions of the Reising, two selective fire models: the M50 and M55, and two semi-automatic only variants: the M60, a .45 ACP carbine,[8] and the M65, chambered for the .22 Long Rifle rimfire cartridge designed for training purposes.

 
Reising Model 55 with wire stock folded
 
Reising M50 with a stock made to imitate a MP40 for movie productions

There were two differences between the M50 and the M55, those being the elimination of the compensator and the addition of a folding wire buttstock making the M55 lighter and shorter. M55 was originally issued to Marine parachute infantry and armored vehicle crews.

The M60 was a long-barreled, semi-automatic carbine model designed primarily for military training and police use. However, few of these were ever sold. The Marines used M60s for training, guard duty, and other non-combat roles. Some M60s were believed to have been issued to Marine officers at Guadalcanal.[9] The remaining guns were passed on to State Guards and civilian law enforcement agencies. The M65 was developed as a sub-caliber training rifle version of the M60, produced only from 1944 to 1946. H&R later made updates to the M65 and sold them on the civilian market (and to the Marines in small numbers) as the MC-58 and M150/151/165 Leatherneck.[10][11]

H&R Reising light rifle edit

From the submachine gun the .30 carbine light rifle prototype was developed, it was competing to become the M1 carbine but lost to Winchester. While sharing many parts with the submachine gun the light rifle uses a gas piston, it was built in semi-automatic and fully automatic versions and issued with a 12 round magazine. [12][13] [14]

USMC deployment edit

 
USMC Reising Model 60 carbine

The Reising entered military service primarily because of uncertainty of supply of sufficient quantities of the Thompson submachine gun. In the testing stage, it won out over some other competing designs. It was very light and quite accurate in aimed fire, and "capable of intensive fire against personnel within a range of 300 yards."[15] This was attributed to its better stock fit and intricate closed bolt, delayed blowback design. Most submachine guns fire from the open bolt position, meaning the full mass of the bolt slams forward when the trigger is pulled; with the closed-bolt system employed by the Reising there is much less movement involving far lighter components, and the resulting improved control in the moment before shooting gives better accuracy, both for semi-automatic and at the onset of full automatic fire.[4] Less advantageously though, this more accurate firepower was somewhat limited due to the 20-round capacity of its largest magazine.[16][17]

The U.S. Marines adopted the Reising in 1941 with 4,200 authorized per division with approximately 500 authorized per each infantry regiment.[18][19] Most Reisings were originally issued to Marine officers and NCOs in lieu of a compact and light carbine, since the newly introduced M1 carbine was not yet being issued to the Marines. Although the Thompson submachine gun was available, this weapon frequently proved too heavy and bulky for jungle patrols, and initially it, too, was in short supply.[16]

During World War II, the Reising first saw action on August 7, 1942, exactly eight months to the day after Pearl Harbor, when 11,000 men from the 1st Marine Division stormed the beaches of Guadalcanal, in the Solomon Islands. The same date of Guadalcanal's invasion, the Model 50 and 55 saw action with the 1st Marine Raiders on the small outlying islands of Tulagi and Tanambogo to the north. Two companies of Marine paratroopers also used Model 55s, to attack the island of Gavutu, between Tulagi and Tanambogo. Paramarines and armored crewmen were issued the folding stock M55, and this version included a notable flaw: its wire-frame stock was poorly designed, crude and flimsy, and had a tendency to fold while firing.[5] Moreover, other serious shortcomings in both guns were becoming apparent. The reality was that the Reising was designed as a civilian police weapon and was not suited to the stresses of harsh battle conditions encountered in the Solomon Islands—namely, sand, saltwater that easily rusted the commercial blued finish, and the difficulty in keeping the weapon clean enough to function properly. Tests at Aberdeen Proving Ground and at Fort Benning, Georgia, had found difficulties in blindfold reassembly of the Reising, indicating the design was complicated and difficult to maintain.

The producer, H&R, had not yet mastered mass-production technologies in 1940-1941, and many of the parts were hand fitted at the factory just like the company did with their commercial firearms; this lack of parts interchangeability was not a problem for a civilian security or police firearm, and the Marines had to accept it in order to get the weapons quickly, but it was very problematic when Reisings were maintained in the field under combat conditions; the Marines were not told not to mix up the parts during communal cleaning, as they were used to.[20][21]

While more accurate than the Thompson, particularly in semi-automatic mode, the Reising had a tendency to jam.[16] The problem with the Reising's form of delayed blowback was the recess in which the bolt lodged when in battery. If this accumulated dirt or fouling these could prevent the bolt from seating in it properly; and if this happened the trigger disconnector automatically prevented firing. In addition, the magazine was a staggered-column, single-cartridge feed design, and slight damage to the feed lips or debris in the magazine would render the magazine unusable. A partial solution to the magazine problem was the later introduction of a single-column magazine that reduced the capacity from 20 to 12 rounds.[4]

The Reising earned a dismal reputation for reliability in the combat conditions of Guadalcanal.[22] The M1 carbine eventually became available and was often chosen over both the Reising and the Thompson in the wet tropical conditions, as the M1928 Thompson's built-in oiling pads in the receiver were a liability.[23]

Withdrawal from the Fleet Marine Force edit

In late 1943 following numerous complaints, the Reising was withdrawn from Fleet Marine Force (FMF) units and assigned to Stateside guard detachments and ship detachments.[24] After the Marines proved reluctant to accept more Reisings, and with the increased issue of the .30-caliber M1 carbine, the U.S. government passed some Reising submachine guns to the OSS and to various foreign governments (as Lend-Lease aid). Canada purchased some Model 50 SMGs and these were issued to 2nd Battalions in Canada where the 1st Battalions of regiments were serving overseas. They were issued along with .30-06 M1917 Enfields and .30-06 Lewis machine guns. One such unit to receive them was the 2nd Bn, Seaforth Highlanders of Canada. The Veteran's Guard of Canada were issued the weapon to guard German prisoners of war.[25] Others were given to various anti-Axis resistance forces operating around the world.

Many Reisings (particularly the semiautomatic M60 rifle) were issued to State Guards for guarding war plants, bridges, and other strategic resources. After the war, thousands of Reising Model 50 submachine guns were acquired by state, county, and local U.S. law enforcement agencies. The weapon proved much more successful in this role, in contrast to its wartime reputation.[4]

Issues of reliability edit

H&R was justifiably proud of the Reising's superior accuracy and balance, lighter weight, and ease of manufacturing when compared to the Thompson. However, the Reising's close tolerances and delicate magazine proved unreliable in the sand and mud of the Solomons, unless kept scrupulously clean. The gun quickly became despised by front-line Marines, and Lieutenant Colonel Merritt A. Edson, Commander, 1st Marine Raider Battalion, ordered that his troops' Reisings be flung into Guadalcanal's crocodile-infested Lunga River, as his troops resorted to reliable bolt-action M1903 Springfield rifles.[4]

This failure made a mockery of H&R's company slogan, "Six-and-one-half pounds of controlled dynamite. The H&R Reising will get a bullet there when you need it!"[4]

There are other reasons for its failure. Foremost was the Reising's complex design of many small pins, plungers, springs and levers. Disassembly and assembly was difficult even under normal conditions. Simple maintenance was problematic as there was no bolt hold-open device. Chambering a cartridge was awkward as the action bar was hard to grasp in the forearm and could be obstructed by the sling. Worse, the safety/selector switch couldn't be sensed by feel at night if it was in the safe, semi, or automatic position.[4]

"Filing-to-fit" of certain parts during production limited interchangeability. The exposed rear sight had no protective ears and was vulnerable to breakage. The adjustable front sight could be lost if the retaining screw wasn't tightly secured. The weapon was susceptible to jamming if grime clogged the bolt's locking recess in the receiver. The two small magazine guide retaining pins and corresponding receiver stud holes were tapered allowing disassembly and assembly only from one direction—right to left for disassembly, and left to right for assembly; adding unacceptable levels of complexity in a combat environment. The retaining pins had to be delicately tapped out whenever the bolt needed to be removed for cleaning; again, an awkwardly involved task whilst under fire. And afterwards when the pins had to be put back during the reassembly process, if they were inserted either too far or not far enough, the receiver might not fit back into the tight confines of the stock.[4]

Model confusion edit

What constitutes a "commercial" and "military" Model 50 is amorphous. First, H&R never made a distinction; the distinction is made by collectors. This confusion stems from a period in production where early Model 50s were manufactured with commercial characteristics and H&R's wartime practice of randomly installing old parts in stock throughout production.[4]

While there is not one factor that distinguishes the so-called commercial from the military model, the commercial model is usually blued. It commonly has a fixed front sight and a rear sight with no retaining screw. It often has 28 fins on the barrel, a one piece magazine release, no outward flanges on the safety/selector switch, and no sling swivels. Lastly, the commercial model commonly has a smooth take-down screw, a two-hole trigger guard, and serial numbers ranging from one to 20,000.[4]

Military Reisings are usually parkerized. They often have an adjustable front sight with an Allen screw and a rear sight with a retaining screw. They routinely have 14 fins on the barrel, a two-piece magazine release, outward flanges on the safety/selector switch, sling swivels, stock ties (crossbolts through the forearm), and a knurled take-down screw. Finally, the military model commonly has a three-hole trigger guard, proofmarks like "PH" or "Pm2" above the chamber, and serial numbers ranging from 20,000 to 120,000.[4]

There are three types of H&R magazines. The first and second models are both smooth body, are blued, and are twenty-shot double column. The first model is distinguished by five cartridge peep holes on the left side, a feature eliminated on the second model to prevent mud and sand from entering. In contrast, the third model is parkerized, has two long indentations on the sides to reduce its capacity to a twelve-shot single column magazine because of feeding problems experienced with former models.[4]

Postwar edit

 
Deputy sheriff with Reising M50

Production of the Model 50 and 55 submachine guns ceased in 1945 at the end of World War II. Nearly 120,000 submachine guns were made of which two-thirds went to the Marines. H&R continued production of the Model 60 semiautomatic rifle in hopes of domestic sales, but with little demand, production of the Model 60 stopped in 1949 with over 3,000 manufactured. H&R sold their remaining inventory of submachine guns to police and correctional agencies across America who were interested in the Reising's selective-fire capability, semi-auto accuracy, and low cost relative to a Thompson. Then, faced with continued demand, H&R resumed production of the Model 50 in 1950 which sputtered to a halt in 1957 with nearly 5,500 additional submachine guns manufactured. But just when the Reising story seemed to end, a final foreign order was received in the 1960s for nearly 2,000 more Model 60s.[4]

Decades later, in 1986, H&R closed their doors and Numrich Arms (aka Gun Parts Corporation) purchased their entire inventory. Acquiring a number of Model 50 receivers, Numrich assembled them with parts. These weapons all have an "S" preceding the serial number and were sold domestically in the early 1990s after reparkerization and fitting with newly manufactured walnut stocks. These stocks are distinguished from originals by their wider than normal sling swivels and buttstocks, by the fact they have no stock ties, and have H&R marked plastic buttplates (originals were unmarked metal).[4]

Machine gun murders edit

In New Zealand in December 1963, two men thought to have been operating an illegal beerhouse business were murdered execution-style with a Reising submachine gun. At the time, machine guns were not thought to be in the hands of civilians in the country.[26]

Users edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Scarlata, Paul (13 January 2014). "The Tommy Gun's Ugly Step Child". Shotgun News. pp. 22–23.
  2. ^ Dockery, Kevin (December 2004). Weapons of the Navy SEALs. New York City: Berkley Publishing Group. p. 382. ISBN 0-425-19834-0.
  3. ^ "Latest Submachine Gun is Designed for Mass Production". Popular Science (April): 73–77. 1941.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Robert C. Ankony, "The US .45 Model 50 and 55 Reising submachine gun and Model 60 Semiautomatic Rifle," Small Arms Review, Jul.2008.
  5. ^ a b Thomas B. Nelson, The World's Submachine Guns, TBN Enterprises, 1963
  6. ^
  7. ^ "Latest Submachine Gun Is Designed For Mass Production". Popular Science. April 1941. pp. 73–76. ISSN 0161-7370. Retrieved 13 June 2011.
  8. ^ McCollum, Ian (September 3, 2017). "Reising Model 60 – A Wartime Semiauto Carbine". YouTube. Forgotten Weapons. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  9. ^ Frank Iannamico, The Reising Submachine Gun Story, Moose Lake Publishing Co., statement of R.G. Rosenquist, Curator, U.S. Marine Raider Museum, at p.132.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on December 3, 2022.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on December 3, 2022.
  12. ^
  13. ^ Forgotten Weapons 2011-04-12 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ . 2023-05-27. Archived from the original on 2023-05-27. Retrieved 2024-03-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ S. Schmidt, Manual for the Reising Submachine Gun: Caliber .45 Models 50, 55, and 60, United States Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. (1942): p.2
  16. ^ a b c Lt. Col. John George, Shots Fired in Anger, Samworth Press, 1948
  17. ^ Roy F. Dunlap, Ordnance Went Up Front, Samworth Press, 1948
  18. ^ p.14 Rottman Gordon & Chappell, Mike US Marine Corps 1941–1945 1995 Osprey Publishing
  19. ^ Frank Iannamico, The Reising Submachine Gun Story, Moose Lake Publishing, 1999. Pages 136–7 show Unit Tables of Equipment, 1st Raider Battalion 24 Sep 42 and 1st Parachute Battalion 1 Jul 42.
  20. ^
  21. ^ Frank Iannamico, The Reising Submachine Gun Story, Moose Lake Publishing, 1999.
  22. ^ Army News, benefits, careers, entertainment, photos, promotions – Army Times HOME
  23. ^ Frank Iannamico, The Reising Submachine Gun Story, Moose Lake Publishing, 1999. Pages 130–135 cover comments on the Reising and Thompson by USMC vets.
  24. ^ p.515 Rottman, Gordon L. U.S. Marine Corps World War II Order of Battle 2003 Greenwood Publishing
  25. ^
  26. ^ . NZ Herald. 6 December 2013. Archived from the original on March 20, 2022. Retrieved 14 May 2017.
  27. ^ "SMGS AND CARBINES IN MILITARY AND THE USE IN BRAZIL".
  28. ^ Koleksi Senjata di Museum Pusat ABRI Satriamandala [Weapons Collection at the Satriamandala Armed Forces Central Museum] (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Departemen Pertahanan - Keamanan Pusat Sejarah ABRI. 1977. p. 39.
  29. ^ Hardin, Herbert O.; Neely, J. (September 1958). (PDF). usaid.gov. International Cooperation Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 17, 2023. Retrieved November 17, 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Small Arms Review, Jul. 2008, pp. 64–67.
  • Dunlap, Roy F., Ordnance Went Up Front, Samworth Press, 1948
  • George, John (Lt. Col.), Shots Fired in Anger, Samworth Press, 1948
  • Jones, Charles, "Lore of the Corps: Reisings Found to be Unreliable in Combat," ArmyTimes.com article
  • Leckie, Robert, Helmet For My Pillow, Random House, 1957.
  • Nelson, Thomas B., The World's Submachine Guns, TBN Enterprises, 1963
  • Hogg, Ian V. and Weeks, John, Military Small Arms of the 20th Century, DBI Books, 1985
  • Iannamico, Frank. The Reising Submachine Gun Story, Moose Lake Publishing, 1999
  • Iannamico, Frank. United States Submachine Guns. Moose Lake Publishing, 2004

External links edit

  • "Financial Assessment of Military Small Arms"--see items 3 and esp., 14 on the Reising submachine gun
  • History of the Reising Model 50 Submachine Gun
  • "Latest Submachine Gun Is Designed for Mass Production", April 1941 Popular Science article
  • M50 compensator patent
  • M50 patent
  • M55 patent

reising, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources M50 Reising news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message The 45 Reising submachine gun was manufactured by Harrington amp Richardson H amp R Arms Company in Worcester Massachusetts USA and was designed and patented by Eugene Reising in 1940 The three versions of the weapon were the Model 50 the folding stock Model 55 and the semiautomatic Model 60 rifle 4 Over 100 000 Reisings were ordered during World War II and were initially used by the United States Navy Marine Corps and the United States Coast Guard though some were shipped to Canadian Soviet and other allied forces to fight the Axis powers 5 Reising Model 50The Reising Model 50 submachine gunTypeSubmachine gunPlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1941 1975Used bySee UsersWarsWorld War IIHukbalahap RebellionMalayan Emergency 1 Calderonista invasion of Costa Rica 1 Vietnam War 2 Dominican Civil War 1 Production historyDesignerEugene ReisingDesigned1940ManufacturerHarrington amp RichardsonProduced1941 1945VariantsM50 M55 M60SpecificationsMass3 1 kg 6 83 lb M50 2 8 kg 6 2 lb M55 Length895 35 mm 35 250 in 565 15 mm 22 3 in stock retracted M55 Barrel length279 mm 11 0 in M50 Cartridge 45 ACP M50 M55 M60 3 22 LR M65 ActionDelayed blowback closed boltRate of fire550 rounds min M50 500 rounds min M55 Muzzle velocity280 m s 919 ft s Maximum firing range274 m 300 yards Feed system12 or 20 round detachable box magazine 30 round aftermarket detachable box magazineSightsFront blade rear notch Contents 1 History 2 Design 3 Variants 3 1 H amp R Reising light rifle 4 USMC deployment 5 Withdrawal from the Fleet Marine Force 6 Issues of reliability 7 Model confusion 8 Postwar 9 Machine gun murders 10 Users 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp A U S Coast Guard sailor on shore patrol with working dog and a Reising Model 50 with 12 round magazine Reising was an assistant to firearm inventor John M Browning In this role Reising contributed to the final design of the US 45 ACP M1911 pistol Reising then designed a number of commercial rifles and pistols on his own when in 1938 he turned his attention to designing a submachine gun as threats of war rapidly grew in Europe 4 Two years later he submitted his completed design to the Harrington amp Richardson Arms Company H amp R in Worcester Massachusetts It was accepted and in March 1941 H amp R started manufacturing the Model 50 submachine gun Months later production began on the Model 55 which was identical to the Model 50 other than having a folding wire buttstock no compensator and a 10 5 in 270 mm barrel and the Model 60 semiautomatic rifle that also resembled a Model 50 but had an 18 75 in 476 mm barrel without cooling fins or a compensator 4 H amp R promoted the submachine guns for police and military use and the Model 60 for security guards After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 the US was suddenly in desperate need of thousands of modern automatic weapons Reising s only competitor was the 45 ACP Thompson submachine gun 4 The US Army first tested the Reising in November 1941 at Fort Benning Georgia During this test several parts failed due to poor construction Once this was corrected a second test was made in 1942 at Aberdeen Proving Ground Maryland In that test 3 500 rounds were fired resulting in two malfunctions one from the ammunition the other from a bolt malfunction As a result the Army didn t adopt the Reising but the Navy and Marines did due to insufficient supply of Thompsons 4 The Reising submachine gun was innovative for its time In comparison to its main rival the famous Thompson it possessed similar firepower better accuracy excellent balance a lighter weight a much lower cost and greater ease of manufacture Despite these achievements the poor combat performance of the Reising contrasted with favorable combat and law enforcement use of the Thompson mired the weapon in controversy 4 Design editThe Reising was far less costly 62 compared to the Thompson 200 It was much lighter seven vs eleven pounds The Model 55 was also more compact about twenty two vs thirty three inches in length 4 The Reising cost less than the Thompson because its metal components were mostly stampings instead of machined parts This also allowed it to be lighter as did its firing mechanism clarification needed Like the 1928A1 Thompson its operating principle was delayed blowback but the Thompson s Blish lock system was far less mechanically effective and so like a simple blowback weapon the Thompson was dependent on high bolt mass or more specifically bolt inertia to provide an acceptably low rate of fire That is a lighter bolt as used in earlier models of the Thompson would have reciprocated faster and produced too great a firing speed This in turn meant that the Thompson could not be radically lightened without a deterioration in its controllability as a heavy gun was necessary in automatic fire to counteract and stabilize the effects on control and accuracy of its heavy bolt moving back and forwards The Reising s bolt is much lighter due to its delayed blowback mechanism being the main determinant of the automatic rate of fire and consequently the whole gun could be correspondingly light without detracting from accuracy and controllability The M50 Reising s delayed blowback operation often classified as hesitation lock 6 works as follows as the cartridge is chambered the rear end of the bolt is pushed up into a recess in a manner similar to tilting bolt locked breech guns but whereas such weapons rely on an additional mechanism to unlock them in the case of the Reising the end of the bolt that pushes against the back wall of this recess is subtly rounded while the wall is correspondingly curved On firing the extreme pressure from the propellant gases is thereby able to force the bolt end down back to the horizontal From here the bolt can move to the rear removing the cartridge from the chamber but the combination of mechanical disadvantage and friction the force of the gases must overcome to push the end of the bolt down has achieved a delay of a fraction of a second allowing pressure in the barrel to drop to a level sufficiently low for safe and efficient cartridge extraction The Reising fired from a closed bolt with its return spring as part of its cocking handle underneath the barrel It notably used a linear hammer in the main receiver The Reising was more balanced than the Thompson because the barrel and receiver group rested concentrically within the stock It had smoother lines in that the stock was of conventional shape and because the cocking handle action bar was placed inside the forearm In addition it was more accurate both in semi auto and at the onset of automatic fire because due to it being a closed bolt gun only the linear hammer and firing pin moved at the moment the trigger was squeezed whereas the Thompson slammed home a heavy bolt and actuator 4 The Reising was made in selective fire versions that could be switched between semi automatic or full automatic fire as needed and in semi auto only versions to be used for marksmanship training and police and guard use The Reising had a designed full auto cyclic rate of 450 600 rounds per minute but it was reported that the true full auto rate was closer to 750 850 rounds per minute At those rates the twenty round magazine could be emptied in less than two seconds In 1941 the Reising was priced at approximately 50 per weapon as opposed to 225 for the standard military issue Thompson submachine gun 7 Variants edit nbsp Reising Model 65 training rifle There were four versions of the Reising two selective fire models the M50 and M55 and two semi automatic only variants the M60 a 45 ACP carbine 8 and the M65 chambered for the 22 Long Rifle rimfire cartridge designed for training purposes nbsp Reising Model 55 with wire stock folded nbsp Reising M50 with a stock made to imitate a MP40 for movie productions There were two differences between the M50 and the M55 those being the elimination of the compensator and the addition of a folding wire buttstock making the M55 lighter and shorter M55 was originally issued to Marine parachute infantry and armored vehicle crews The M60 was a long barreled semi automatic carbine model designed primarily for military training and police use However few of these were ever sold The Marines used M60s for training guard duty and other non combat roles Some M60s were believed to have been issued to Marine officers at Guadalcanal 9 The remaining guns were passed on to State Guards and civilian law enforcement agencies The M65 was developed as a sub caliber training rifle version of the M60 produced only from 1944 to 1946 H amp R later made updates to the M65 and sold them on the civilian market and to the Marines in small numbers as the MC 58 and M150 151 165 Leatherneck 10 11 H amp R Reising light rifle edit From the submachine gun the 30 carbine light rifle prototype was developed it was competing to become the M1 carbine but lost to Winchester While sharing many parts with the submachine gun the light rifle uses a gas piston it was built in semi automatic and fully automatic versions and issued with a 12 round magazine 12 13 14 USMC deployment edit nbsp USMC Reising Model 60 carbine The Reising entered military service primarily because of uncertainty of supply of sufficient quantities of the Thompson submachine gun In the testing stage it won out over some other competing designs It was very light and quite accurate in aimed fire and capable of intensive fire against personnel within a range of 300 yards 15 This was attributed to its better stock fit and intricate closed bolt delayed blowback design Most submachine guns fire from the open bolt position meaning the full mass of the bolt slams forward when the trigger is pulled with the closed bolt system employed by the Reising there is much less movement involving far lighter components and the resulting improved control in the moment before shooting gives better accuracy both for semi automatic and at the onset of full automatic fire 4 Less advantageously though this more accurate firepower was somewhat limited due to the 20 round capacity of its largest magazine 16 17 The U S Marines adopted the Reising in 1941 with 4 200 authorized per division with approximately 500 authorized per each infantry regiment 18 19 Most Reisings were originally issued to Marine officers and NCOs in lieu of a compact and light carbine since the newly introduced M1 carbine was not yet being issued to the Marines Although the Thompson submachine gun was available this weapon frequently proved too heavy and bulky for jungle patrols and initially it too was in short supply 16 During World War II the Reising first saw action on August 7 1942 exactly eight months to the day after Pearl Harbor when 11 000 men from the 1st Marine Division stormed the beaches of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands The same date of Guadalcanal s invasion the Model 50 and 55 saw action with the 1st Marine Raiders on the small outlying islands of Tulagi and Tanambogo to the north Two companies of Marine paratroopers also used Model 55s to attack the island of Gavutu between Tulagi and Tanambogo Paramarines and armored crewmen were issued the folding stock M55 and this version included a notable flaw its wire frame stock was poorly designed crude and flimsy and had a tendency to fold while firing 5 Moreover other serious shortcomings in both guns were becoming apparent The reality was that the Reising was designed as a civilian police weapon and was not suited to the stresses of harsh battle conditions encountered in the Solomon Islands namely sand saltwater that easily rusted the commercial blued finish and the difficulty in keeping the weapon clean enough to function properly Tests at Aberdeen Proving Ground and at Fort Benning Georgia had found difficulties in blindfold reassembly of the Reising indicating the design was complicated and difficult to maintain The producer H amp R had not yet mastered mass production technologies in 1940 1941 and many of the parts were hand fitted at the factory just like the company did with their commercial firearms this lack of parts interchangeability was not a problem for a civilian security or police firearm and the Marines had to accept it in order to get the weapons quickly but it was very problematic when Reisings were maintained in the field under combat conditions the Marines were not told not to mix up the parts during communal cleaning as they were used to 20 21 While more accurate than the Thompson particularly in semi automatic mode the Reising had a tendency to jam 16 The problem with the Reising s form of delayed blowback was the recess in which the bolt lodged when in battery If this accumulated dirt or fouling these could prevent the bolt from seating in it properly and if this happened the trigger disconnector automatically prevented firing In addition the magazine was a staggered column single cartridge feed design and slight damage to the feed lips or debris in the magazine would render the magazine unusable A partial solution to the magazine problem was the later introduction of a single column magazine that reduced the capacity from 20 to 12 rounds 4 The Reising earned a dismal reputation for reliability in the combat conditions of Guadalcanal 22 The M1 carbine eventually became available and was often chosen over both the Reising and the Thompson in the wet tropical conditions as the M1928 Thompson s built in oiling pads in the receiver were a liability 23 Withdrawal from the Fleet Marine Force editIn late 1943 following numerous complaints the Reising was withdrawn from Fleet Marine Force FMF units and assigned to Stateside guard detachments and ship detachments 24 After the Marines proved reluctant to accept more Reisings and with the increased issue of the 30 caliber M1 carbine the U S government passed some Reising submachine guns to the OSS and to various foreign governments as Lend Lease aid Canada purchased some Model 50 SMGs and these were issued to 2nd Battalions in Canada where the 1st Battalions of regiments were serving overseas They were issued along with 30 06 M1917 Enfields and 30 06 Lewis machine guns One such unit to receive them was the 2nd Bn Seaforth Highlanders of Canada The Veteran s Guard of Canada were issued the weapon to guard German prisoners of war 25 Others were given to various anti Axis resistance forces operating around the world Many Reisings particularly the semiautomatic M60 rifle were issued to State Guards for guarding war plants bridges and other strategic resources After the war thousands of Reising Model 50 submachine guns were acquired by state county and local U S law enforcement agencies The weapon proved much more successful in this role in contrast to its wartime reputation 4 Issues of reliability editH amp R was justifiably proud of the Reising s superior accuracy and balance lighter weight and ease of manufacturing when compared to the Thompson However the Reising s close tolerances and delicate magazine proved unreliable in the sand and mud of the Solomons unless kept scrupulously clean The gun quickly became despised by front line Marines and Lieutenant Colonel Merritt A Edson Commander 1st Marine Raider Battalion ordered that his troops Reisings be flung into Guadalcanal s crocodile infested Lunga River as his troops resorted to reliable bolt action M1903 Springfield rifles 4 This failure made a mockery of H amp R s company slogan Six and one half pounds of controlled dynamite The H amp R Reising will get a bullet there when you need it 4 There are other reasons for its failure Foremost was the Reising s complex design of many small pins plungers springs and levers Disassembly and assembly was difficult even under normal conditions Simple maintenance was problematic as there was no bolt hold open device Chambering a cartridge was awkward as the action bar was hard to grasp in the forearm and could be obstructed by the sling Worse the safety selector switch couldn t be sensed by feel at night if it was in the safe semi or automatic position 4 Filing to fit of certain parts during production limited interchangeability The exposed rear sight had no protective ears and was vulnerable to breakage The adjustable front sight could be lost if the retaining screw wasn t tightly secured The weapon was susceptible to jamming if grime clogged the bolt s locking recess in the receiver The two small magazine guide retaining pins and corresponding receiver stud holes were tapered allowing disassembly and assembly only from one direction right to left for disassembly and left to right for assembly adding unacceptable levels of complexity in a combat environment The retaining pins had to be delicately tapped out whenever the bolt needed to be removed for cleaning again an awkwardly involved task whilst under fire And afterwards when the pins had to be put back during the reassembly process if they were inserted either too far or not far enough the receiver might not fit back into the tight confines of the stock 4 Model confusion editWhat constitutes a commercial and military Model 50 is amorphous First H amp R never made a distinction the distinction is made by collectors This confusion stems from a period in production where early Model 50s were manufactured with commercial characteristics and H amp R s wartime practice of randomly installing old parts in stock throughout production 4 While there is not one factor that distinguishes the so called commercial from the military model the commercial model is usually blued It commonly has a fixed front sight and a rear sight with no retaining screw It often has 28 fins on the barrel a one piece magazine release no outward flanges on the safety selector switch and no sling swivels Lastly the commercial model commonly has a smooth take down screw a two hole trigger guard and serial numbers ranging from one to 20 000 4 Military Reisings are usually parkerized They often have an adjustable front sight with an Allen screw and a rear sight with a retaining screw They routinely have 14 fins on the barrel a two piece magazine release outward flanges on the safety selector switch sling swivels stock ties crossbolts through the forearm and a knurled take down screw Finally the military model commonly has a three hole trigger guard proofmarks like PH or Pm2 above the chamber and serial numbers ranging from 20 000 to 120 000 4 There are three types of H amp R magazines The first and second models are both smooth body are blued and are twenty shot double column The first model is distinguished by five cartridge peep holes on the left side a feature eliminated on the second model to prevent mud and sand from entering In contrast the third model is parkerized has two long indentations on the sides to reduce its capacity to a twelve shot single column magazine because of feeding problems experienced with former models 4 Postwar edit nbsp Deputy sheriff with Reising M50 Production of the Model 50 and 55 submachine guns ceased in 1945 at the end of World War II Nearly 120 000 submachine guns were made of which two thirds went to the Marines H amp R continued production of the Model 60 semiautomatic rifle in hopes of domestic sales but with little demand production of the Model 60 stopped in 1949 with over 3 000 manufactured H amp R sold their remaining inventory of submachine guns to police and correctional agencies across America who were interested in the Reising s selective fire capability semi auto accuracy and low cost relative to a Thompson Then faced with continued demand H amp R resumed production of the Model 50 in 1950 which sputtered to a halt in 1957 with nearly 5 500 additional submachine guns manufactured But just when the Reising story seemed to end a final foreign order was received in the 1960s for nearly 2 000 more Model 60s 4 Decades later in 1986 H amp R closed their doors and Numrich Arms aka Gun Parts Corporation purchased their entire inventory Acquiring a number of Model 50 receivers Numrich assembled them with parts These weapons all have an S preceding the serial number and were sold domestically in the early 1990s after reparkerization and fitting with newly manufactured walnut stocks These stocks are distinguished from originals by their wider than normal sling swivels and buttstocks by the fact they have no stock ties and have H amp R marked plastic buttplates originals were unmarked metal 4 Machine gun murders editIn New Zealand in December 1963 two men thought to have been operating an illegal beerhouse business were murdered execution style with a Reising submachine gun At the time machine guns were not thought to be in the hands of civilians in the country 26 Users edit nbsp Argentina 1 nbsp Australia 1 nbsp Brazil The Rio de Janeiro Civil Police bought a number of H amp R Reising M50s after WW2 these weapons were in use until the mid 1990s 1 27 nbsp Canada 1 nbsp Costa Rica 1 nbsp Dominican Republic 1 nbsp French Indochina 4 000 ordered delivery and issue not confirmed 1 nbsp Finland Captured from the Red Army 1 nbsp Indonesia Used by the Indonesian Army 28 nbsp Iran 1 nbsp Malaya Obtained from Malayan Communist Party militia 1 nbsp Mexico 1 nbsp Nazi Germany Captured Reisings from the Red Army designated as the Maschinenpistole 762 r Captured Reisings from the American Army designated as the Maschinenpistole 762 a 1 nbsp New Zealand 1 nbsp Soviet Union Received in the form of Lend Lease aid 1 nbsp Panama Used by the Panama National Guard 29 nbsp Philippines Used by the Philippine Army and Philippine Constabulary during World War II and into the 1960s nbsp United States 1 nbsp United Kingdom 1 nbsp Uruguay Uruguayan Navy 1 nbsp Venezuela 1 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Scarlata Paul 13 January 2014 The Tommy Gun s Ugly Step Child Shotgun News pp 22 23 Dockery Kevin December 2004 Weapons of the Navy SEALs New York City Berkley Publishing Group p 382 ISBN 0 425 19834 0 Latest Submachine Gun is Designed for Mass Production Popular Science April 73 77 1941 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Robert C Ankony The US 45 Model 50 and 55 Reising submachine gun and Model 60 Semiautomatic Rifle Small Arms Review Jul 2008 a b Thomas B Nelson The World s Submachine Guns TBN Enterprises 1963 Delayed Blowback Operation Firearms in the Small Arms Classification Latest Submachine Gun Is Designed For Mass Production Popular Science April 1941 pp 73 76 ISSN 0161 7370 Retrieved 13 June 2011 McCollum Ian September 3 2017 Reising Model 60 A Wartime Semiauto Carbine YouTube Forgotten Weapons Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Retrieved June 20 2018 Frank Iannamico The Reising Submachine Gun Story Moose Lake Publishing Co statement of R G Rosenquist Curator U S Marine Raider Museum at p 132 Harrington amp Richardson Inc MC 58 Rifle 22 LR Archived from the original on December 3 2022 H amp R M65 165 Leatherneck Archived from the original on December 3 2022 Reisings 30 Caliber Almost an M1 Carbine Harrington amp Richardson Light Rifle Forgotten WeaponsArchived 2011 04 12 at the Wayback Machine The U S Caliber 30 Carbines 2023 05 27 Archived from the original on 2023 05 27 Retrieved 2024 03 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link S Schmidt Manual for the Reising Submachine Gun Caliber 45 Models 50 55 and 60 United States Government Printing Office Washington D C 1942 p 2 a b c Lt Col John George Shots Fired in Anger Samworth Press 1948 Roy F Dunlap Ordnance Went Up Front Samworth Press 1948 p 14 Rottman Gordon amp Chappell Mike US Marine Corps 1941 1945 1995 Osprey Publishing Frank Iannamico The Reising Submachine Gun Story Moose Lake Publishing 1999 Pages 136 7 show Unit Tables of Equipment 1st Raider Battalion 24 Sep 42 and 1st Parachute Battalion 1 Jul 42 EUGENE REISING S FIREARM DESIGNS By David R Albert Frank Iannamico The Reising Submachine Gun Story Moose Lake Publishing 1999 Army News benefits careers entertainment photos promotions Army Times HOME Frank Iannamico The Reising Submachine Gun Story Moose Lake Publishing 1999 Pages 130 135 cover comments on the Reising and Thompson by USMC vets p 515 Rottman Gordon L U S Marine Corps World War II Order of Battle 2003 Greenwood Publishing The HARIKARI Club German Prisoners of War and the Mass Escape Scare of 1944 45 at Internment Camp Grande Ligne Quebec The day Chicago came to Auckland NZ Herald 6 December 2013 Archived from the original on March 20 2022 Retrieved 14 May 2017 SMGS AND CARBINES IN MILITARY AND THE USE IN BRAZIL Koleksi Senjata di Museum Pusat ABRI Satriamandala Weapons Collection at the Satriamandala Armed Forces Central Museum in Indonesian Jakarta Departemen Pertahanan Keamanan Pusat Sejarah ABRI 1977 p 39 Hardin Herbert O Neely J September 1958 Report On The Police Forces Of The Republic Of Panama PDF usaid gov International Cooperation Agency Archived from the original PDF on January 17 2023 Retrieved November 17 2022 Bibliography editAnkony Robert C The US 45 Model 50 and 55 Reising Submachine Gun and Model 60 Semiautomactic Rifle Small Arms Review Jul 2008 pp 64 67 Dunlap Roy F Ordnance Went Up Front Samworth Press 1948 George John Lt Col Shots Fired in Anger Samworth Press 1948 Jones Charles Lore of the Corps Reisings Found to be Unreliable in Combat ArmyTimes com article Leckie Robert Helmet For My Pillow Random House 1957 Nelson Thomas B The World s Submachine Guns TBN Enterprises 1963 Hogg Ian V and Weeks John Military Small Arms of the 20th Century DBI Books 1985 Iannamico Frank The Reising Submachine Gun Story Moose Lake Publishing 1999 Iannamico Frank United States Submachine Guns Moose Lake Publishing 2004External links edit Financial Assessment of Military Small Arms see items 3 and esp 14 on the Reising submachine gun History of the Reising Model 50 Submachine Gun Latest Submachine Gun Is Designed for Mass Production April 1941 Popular Science article Modern Firearms M50 compensator patent M50 patent M55 patent Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M50 Reising amp oldid 1221082809, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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