Now when most Folks if they do at all. Think of the WWII Italian Small arms used by the Italians. Besides thinking “Those Poor Bastards, Look at the shit they were issued!”
Do not have the highest opinion of them, especially after after a certain incident at Dallas Texas.
And for the most part they are Steel on Target!
As the average Italian Snuffie was give some pretty rotten gear. That & he was treated like dirt by his Officers. As the Officers on the other hand got better rations and uniforms etc etc.
Fortunately for Italy. It still produces some really tough guys. That if properly fed, equipped and led are some very good troops. But then Italy has always been a poor country relatively speaking.
But now let us move to one of the bright spots of this issue. The Beretta 38a Submachine Gun.
Now from what I have seen about it. It seems that somebody had their Sh*t together when they designed this.
One of the interesting things about it is the two trigger system on it. So that it could be fire in either single shot or full auto mode.
Also its length allows the shooter to more accurately put lead on target. Then some of the shorter SMG I have shot or seen lately.
But all I know is this. That as soon as I get out of the People’s Republic Of California and back to the Land of the Free! I am going to seriously start looking for one for sale!
Here is some more information about this gem of a Gun!Thanks for reading this and your comments!
Grumpy
https://youtu.be/aZwi8hvIKjg
Beretta Model 38
Beretta Modello 38 | |
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Moschetto Automatico Beretta Modello 1938
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Type | Submachine gun |
Place of origin | Kingdom of Italy |
Service history | |
Used by | See Users |
Wars | |
Production history | |
Designed | 1935 |
Variants | 1938A 1938/42 1938/43 1938/44 1938/44 Special – Model 1 1938/49 – M2, M3 & M4 Model 5 |
Specifications | |
Weight | MAB 38A: 4.2 kg (empty) MAB 38/42: 3.27 kg (empty) MAB 38/49: 3.25 kg (empty) |
Length | MAB 38A: 946mm MAB 38/42: 800mm MAB 38/49: 798mm |
Barrel length | MAB 38A: 315mm MAB 38/42: 213mm MAB 38/49: 210mm |
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Cartridge | 9×19mm Parabellum |
Action | Blowback |
Rate of fire | 600 rpm |
Muzzle velocity | 429 m/s (1,407.1 ft/s) |
Effective firing range | 200 m (218.7 yd) |
Feed system | 10, 20, 30 or 40-Round Detachable Box Magazine |
The MAB 38 (Moschetto Automatico Beretta Modello 1938), Modello38, or Model 38 and its variants were a series of official submachine guns of the Royal Italian Army introduced in 1938 and used during World War II. The guns were also used by the German, Romanian, and Argentine armies of the time.
History[edit]
Originally designed by Beretta‘s chief engineer Tullio Marengoni in 1935, the Moschetto Automatico Beretta (Beretta Automatic Musket) 38, or MAB 38, was developed from the Beretta Modello 18 and 18/30, derived from the Villar Perosa light machine gun of World War I.[2] It is widely acknowledged as the most successful and effective Italian small arm of World War II and was produced in large numbers in several variants. Italy’s limited industrial base in World War II was no real barrier toward the development of advanced and effective smallarms, since most weapons did require large amounts of artisan and semi-artisan man-hours to be fine-tuned and made reliable by default. Italian specialized workers excelled and the initial slow rate of production meant that the MAB 38 only became available in large numbers in 1943, when the fascist regime was toppled and Italy split between the Allied-aligned co-belligerent forces in the south and German collaborationists of the Italian Social Republic in the north.
The MAB 38 was developed by Beretta to compete in the rich market of machine and sub-machine guns; it was a well-made and sturdy weapon, introducing several advanced features ans was suitable for police and special army units. Presented to Italian authorities in 1939, its first customer was the Italian Ministry of Colonies, which purchased several thousands MABs to be issued as standard firearm of the Polizia dell’Africa Italiana (Italian Africa Constabulary), the government colonial police force. Army orders were slow to come; although impressed by excellent qualities and firepower of the weapon, the Italian military did not feel the MAB wsa suitable for standard infantry combat. It was judged ideal for police and assault units and in the beginning of 1941 small orders were placed for Carabinieri (military and civilian police), Guardie di Pubblica Sicurezza (national state police), and paratroopers. The Italian Army requested minor changes to reduce production costs, notably the changed shape of the recoil compensator and the removal of the bayonet and catch as the MAB 38A. This was the standard army variant, used throughout the war and issued to elite Italian units, paratroopers, Alpini “Monte Cervino” assault battalion, 10th Arditi Regiment, “M” Battalions of Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale (MVSN, Blackshirts) and military police.
The Italian Royal Navy also purchased the type and MAB 38A were given to the “San Marco” Marine Regiment and naval security troops; The Regia Aeronautica(Italian Royal Air Force) issued the MAB 38A to its crack A.D.R.A. Regiment. Orders were still small and the Carcano M1891 rifle remained the standard weapon even in elite units. Until 1943, MAB 38A (and since 1942, the MAB 38/42) was available almost exclusively to paratroopers, Blackshirts, tank crews and Carabinieri military police, given the need of all of the former to express high volumes of firepower in prolonged actions or to keep close-quarters combat superiority. The paratroopers of the 185th Airborne Division Folgore was armed exclusively with the weapon. Blackshirt legions (one per infantry division) were regarded and used as elite assault units both for their fanaticism and their Beretta 38s.
After the Italian armistice of September 8, 1943, the Italian armed forces melted away and an Italian army was reconstructed in northern Italy under German sponsorship, the Beretta MAB equippped many units. The Italian Social Republic(R.S.I.) army fought a guerrilla war against partisans from the start, as well as against the Allies. For assault and counterinsurgency units, where firepower at close range was a vital asset, it was the ideal weapon. Production of the MAB became priority and it was supplied in great numbers to R.S.I. formations, especially elite units and it became an iconic weapon, symbolizing the Italian soldier in popular culture. Later in the war, a simplified variant known as the MAB 38/44 was introduced. Regardless of the tables of organization and equipment of a unit, the Beretta 38 was a popular weapon that could eventually find its way into the hands of virtually any soldier, especially amongst officers and higher non-commissioned officers, notably in Bersaglieri light infantry, artillery and armoured units. This weapon remained rare in common infantry and Alpini mountain infantry.
A magazine-holding vest was designed for elite troops (Blackshirts, paratroopers) armed with the Beretta 38; these were dubbed “Samurai” due to the similarity of the stacked magazines with traditional Japanese armour. A special canvas holster was issued with the MAB with two magazine-carrier pouches sewn on, to be worn as a belt but only came into use during the brief life of the R.S.I. and by then could be seen in the employ of many different units whose “elite” status could have been reasonably questioned (such as Black Brigades and other militias). The Beretta MAB was highly praised by Italian resistance movement fighters as well, being far more accurate and powerful than the British Sten which was common issue in partisan units, although the smalles Sten was more suited for clandestine operations. German soldiers also liked the Beretta MAB, judging it large and heavy, but reliable and well made.
The 1938 series was extremely robust and proved very popular with Axis forces as well as Allied troops, who used captured examples.[3] Many German soldiers, including elite forces such as the Waffen-SS and Fallschirmjäger forces, preferred the Beretta 38.[4][5][6] Firing a powerfully loaded Italian version of the widely distributed 9×19mm Parabellumcartridge, the Cartuccia 9 mm M38, the Beretta was accurate at longer ranges than most other submachine guns.[7] The MAB could deliver an impressive firepower at close range and at longer distances its size and weight was an advantage, making the weapon stable and easy to control. In expert hands, the Beretta MAB allowed accurate short-bursts shooting up to 100 m (110 yd) and its effective range with Italian M38 ammunition, was 200 m (220 yd)s, an impressive result for a 9 mm submachine gun.
Specifications[edit]
MAB 38, in its first variants, was a fine weapon by any standard, crafted with high quality materials, flawlessly finished and with carefully machined parts. Models 38/42 and 38/44 were easier and faster to build, the finish was sacrificed for speed of production but the quality remained high. The mechanism was a traditional simple blowback recoil but with a novel floating firing pin, an automatic safety on open bolt (both later removed to save production costs), a recoil compensator on the muzzle, a bolt cocking handle with sliding dust cover and a striking trigger gear with no fire selector but with two triggers instead; the fore trigger was for semi-automatic fire and rear trigger for full-auto. The user could shift quickly between methods without switching levers or safety catches, which proved useful in combat. The full-auto trigger a safety catch on left side, which was eliminated from 1942 and the rear sight was adjustable up to 500 m (550 yd) in the MAB 38 and 38A, the 38/42 and 38/44 variants had fixed rear sights. The MAB 38 had a wooden stock, was about 800 mm (31 in) long and weighed about 5 kg (11 lb) when loaded, with an effective range of about 200 m (220 yd).
Variants[edit]
The Model 1938 can be recognized by its machined steel receiver, fine craftsmanship and finish and by the perforated cooling jacket over the barrel.[8] It was produced from 1938 to 1950 and fired 9×19mm Parabellum ammunition at 600 rounds per minute. It used 10, 20, 30 or 40-round magazines; the short 10-round magazine, when used in conjunction with the fixed bayonet, was popular with Allied and Axis forces for guarding prisoners or internal security.[7][9] In combat, the 30 round magazine was the most common. The original MAB 38, first issued to Italian police in 1939, had a bayonet mount and stock rest for the Carcano M91/38 folding bayonet.
In compliance with Italian army requirements, bayonet mount and rest were eliminated and the recoil compensator was redesigned, the two horizontal muzzle slots substituted by 4 transversal cuttings, judged more effective. This standard army variant was renamed MAB 38A and issued in 1941. Despite its undeniable effectiveness, the Beretta Model 38 proved too time-consuming and expensive to produce during wartime. Marengoni designed a simplified model made from sheet steel, in which the cooling jacket and bayonet mount were eliminated and the separate firing pin mechanism replaced by a fixed firing pin machined on the face of the bolt. The barrel and wooden stock were also shortened to save weight and cost.[8][10] This new model the Model 38/42 had a fluted barrel to aid cooling and save weight. It also had a slower rate of fire (550 rpm). The Model 38/43, was an intermediate production stage between the 42 and 44 patterns.[8] The 38/42 and 38/43 were adopted by the Wehrmacht as the Maschinenpistole 738(i) (in German), abbreviated as MP.738.[10]
The Model 38/44 was a minor revision of the 38/43, in which the bolt was simplified and a large-diameter recoil spring used in place of the operating spring guide.[10] It also eliminated the fluting to save time and increase production.[10]The 38/44 was also adopted by the German army as the MP.739.[11] A variant of the Model 38/44 was fitted with an MP40-style under-folding stock as the Model 38/44 Special or Model 1.[12]
After World War II, the 38/44 continued in production in slightly revised form as the 38/49 series: the Model 2 with an MP40-style under-folding stock,[10] the Model 3 with a telescoping steel-wire buttstock and the Model 4 with a standard wooden rifle stock. All of these models have a push-button cross-bolt safety catch at the middle of the stock.[10] After Marengoni’s death, Beretta engineer Domenico Salza revised the safety system of the Model 38/49 series as the Model 5, identified by a large rectangular grip-safety button located in the stock’s finger groove.[13] The Model 5 was produced for the Italian Army, police and the armed forces of several other nations until 1961, when production ceased in favor of the compact, modern Beretta M12.[13]
Users[edit]
- Albania: captured by the Albanian Partisans in vast quantities during the war
- Costa Rica[14]
- Dominican Republic[14]
- Empire of Japan: 350 ordered and 50 delivered in 1943.[15]
- Ethiopia[14]
- West Germany: Bundeswehr (until 1959) and Bundesgrenzschutz (replaced at the end of the 1960s)[16]
- Italy[4]
- Morocco[14]
- Nazi Germany[18]
- Romania: 5,000 ordered in 1941 and delivered during 1942.[18][19]
- Syrian National Coalition[20]
- Yemen[14]
- Yugoslavia: Captured in vast quantities.