René Crauwels

Gimme gimme gimme M/90 !

AG42 Ljungman: Sweden Adopts a Battle Rifle in WWII

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developed, adopted, and produced a new self-loading during World War Two. The process began in 1938, with an attempt by the state rifle factory to convert Mauser bolt actions into semiautomatic; that did not go well. Trials for a ground-up semiauto followed shortly thereafter, with the two finalists being the Pelo from Finland and a design by Erik Eklund of the C.J. Ljungmans Verkstäder, a company that made gas pumps and had no prior small arms experience. Eklund focused on making his rifle as simple as possible, and created a direct gas impingement system with a tilting bolt and a rather unique method of operation. It was chambered for the 6.5x55mm cartridge, with a detachable 10-round magazine (which was intended to be reloaded with stripper clips).

The went into production in 1942, and by 1944 rifles were being delivered to the military. They were never a complete replacement for the various patterns of Mauser, instead being used to supplement squad firepower. In 1953 a major refit program was put in place, making a number of changes and creating the Ag m/42B pattern. Those rifles remained in use until eventually replaced by the AK4, the Swedish model of the G3 from Heckler & Koch.

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