Carl Gustaf m/45 explained

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Is Uk:yes
Kulsprutepistol m/45 (Kpist m/45)
Type:Submachine gun
Origin:Sweden
Design Date:1944
Manufacturer:Carl Gustafs Stads Gevärsfaktori
Maadi Factories, Egypt
Production Date:1945–1964 (Sweden)
1965–1970 (Egypt)
Service:1945–present
Used By:See Users
Wars:Suez Crisis
Vietnam War
Laotian Civil War
Congo Crisis
Salvadoran Civil War
Lebanese Civil War
Israeli-Arab conflict[1]
Soviet–Afghan War[2]
First Congo War
Iraq War
Mali War[3]
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
Part Length:8.34 in (212 mm)
Cartridge:9×19mm Parabellum (Known as 9×19mm m/39B in Sweden)
Feed:36-round box magazine
Action:Blowback, Simple (straight)
Rate:600 rounds/min
Velocity:1395 ft/s (425 m/s)
Weight:7.38 lbs (3.35 kg) without magazine
Length:21.65/31.81 in (550/808 mm)
Variants:m/45, m/45B, m/45C, m/45BE, m/45BET, m/45S, Port Said, Akaba, US Navy modification (no official designation) with suppressor.
Number:approx. 300,000
Range:~273 yards (250 m)

The Kulsprutepistol m/45 (Kpist m/45), also known as the Carl Gustaf M/45 and the Swedish K SMG, is a 9×19mm Swedish submachine gun (SMG) designed by Gunnar Johansson, adopted in 1945 (hence the m/45 designation), and manufactured at the Carl Gustafs Stads Gevärsfaktori in Eskilstuna, Sweden. The m/45 was the standard submachine gun of the Swedish Army from 1945 to 1965. It was gradually replaced in Swedish service by updated Automatkarbin 4 battle rifles and Automatkarbin 5 assault rifles. The last official user of the m/45, the Swedish Home Guard (Hemvärnet), retired it from service in April 2007.[4]

The m/45 SMG was developed in 1944–45, with a design borrowing from and also improving on many design elements of earlier submachine guns. The sheet metal stamping techniques used in making the German MP 40, the British Sten, and the Soviet PPSh-41 and PPS-43 were studied in detail. Two designs were tested in 1944, one from Carl Gustafs Stads Gevärsfaktori and one from Husqvarna Vapenfabriks and the prototype from Carl Gustafs Stads Gevärsfaktori was chosen for further development. The first production version was adopted in 1945 as the Kpist m/45. The Danish Hovea M/49 SMG, although similar in appearance, is not a version derived from the m/45. The Hovea was a development of the failed test contender (fm44) from Husqvarna.

Features

The standard m/45 is a fully-automatic-only weapon without any option for semi-automatic fire. It weighs 3.3 kg (7.3 lbs.) unloaded, and 4.2 kg (9.25 lbs.) loaded with a 36-round box magazine. It is 808 mm (31.8 in.) long with the stock extended, and 550 mm (21.7 in.) long with the stock folded. The m/45 is an open bolt design with a fixed firing pin. The relatively slow cyclic rate of fire (550–600 rds/min.) and low recoil of the bolt-mechanism actuation (straight blowback) makes it easy to control during full automatic fire. Single shots are also easy to achieve (with very little training) by letting go of the trigger before another round is cycled. The m/45 is fairly accurate up to 200 meters.

Accessories include a special sub-calibre barrel (painted silver) for firing blanks and low-powered gallery ammunition. When firing blanks, a cone shaped blank firing adapter must be attached to the threaded muzzle of the sub-calibre barrel (and secured by a clip) to ensure the mechanism has adequate pressure for its blowback operation. Other accessories include night sights (wartime use only) that attach to the fixed day sights (f: protected post, r: L-type), a brass catcher for collecting spent cartridges (peacetime use only, for reloading and recycling),[5] a quick-detachable (by attached cord) ejection port cover (painted bright red) for guard duty which secures the bolt from accidental firing, and a magazine loader that loads a magazine from a cartridge tray in seconds. The m/45 was also issued with a standard cleaning kit containing a threaded cleaning rod, threaded jag and a container for the jag, lubricant and cleaning patches. The standard sling issued was made of leather, attached to the rear left receiver and left barrel-sleeve sling bars.

The 36-round straight detachable staggered row box magazine is wider at the rear than at the front, the extra space allows the tapered 9mm Parabellum cartridges to feed more efficiently. The trapezium design makes the magazine very reliable in dusty environments and sub-zero temperatures, because magazines of parallel-side design are more likely to jam under adverse conditions. The magazine was used post-war by Finland in the m/31 Suomi under the designation m/54, a distinguishing feature of the variation m/55 (made by Lapua) is a steel wire carrying loop mounted at the bottom front edge. The basic design idea of the m/45 magazine was also used for the magazines of the Czech model 23 and model 25 and the French MAS submachine guns.

The m/45 has no safety switch. Instead the m/45 is put in "safe" by sliding the cocking handle into a short side-slot above the main (lock) slot. In the example US Army photograph, this short safety side-slot is visible behind the rear L-sight. When the m/45 is unloaded the bolt is locked in place in the bolt-forward position by pushing the cocking handle inwards, engaging a hole in the lower left receiver wall.

Variants

Manufacture and use

The Swedish Army list price of the Carl Gustaf m/45 in the late 1970s was around 600 Swedish krona.

The Carl Gustaf m/45 was replaced as main infantry weapon in the Swedish Armed Forces during the mid-1960s with the 7.62mm Automatkarbin 4 battle rifle, but remained in use for auxiliary troops like artillery gun crews, supply- and engineering troops and the like until starting in 1986 being replaced with the 5.56mm Ak 5 assault rifle. On 2 April 2007 the kpist m/45 was officially declared obsolete when it was retired from the Home Guard who were the last users in the Swedish Armed Forces.

In addition to Sweden, several other countries have used the weapon, with versions of the weapon being produced in Egypt and the United States.

Licensed production in Egypt

The m/45 has been manufactured under license in Egypt as the Port Said and the Akaba. The tooling needed for production, as well as technical assistance, was sold by Sweden to Egypt during the 1950s. The Port Said looks and functions exactly as the m/45 (first version while the Akaba is a modified and simplified version). The Akaba has no barrel jacket and a slightly shorter barrel and the folding butt stock has been replaced by a telescoping wire butt stock similar to the one used on the US M3A1.[8] The simplified sights of the Akaba were moved to the front (unprotected post) and back (protected peep) of the receiver.

Use by the United States in Southeast Asia

During the Vietnam War, the US Navy SEALs used the m/45 extensively. One of the gun's qualities which appealed to the US Navy was that the m/45 can fire almost immediately out of the water (over the beach). It also saw use by CIA operatives and advisers. In US service it was largely known as the "Swedish-K" or "K-Rifle".[9] The US Navy was so impressed by the m/45 that when Sweden embargoed the export of weapons to the United States in 1966, Smith & Wesson was given the task of producing a copy. This was designated the Smith & Wesson M76. However, by the time the M76 was ready for combat deployment, the US Navy interest had largely evaporated.[10] Many of the m/45s used by US forces and agencies were devoid of markings, implying clandestine use ("sanitized").[11]

Illegal production in South America

In 1975, the Junta de Coordinación Revolucionaria, a Cuban-backed far-left internationalist organization, established a clandestine military factory in Buenos Aires. Although it was easy to produce explosives, there was a severe lack of materials to make firearms. In order to revert this, a Bolivian engineer, nicknamed "Comrade N", aiming to design "a submachine gun with the characteristics of an Uzi, but easier to build and disassemble and using 9mm ammunition" came out with the JCR-1. It was presented by the Argentinian People's Revolutionary Army through its newspaper Estrella Roja as a lightweight and concealable weapon.[12] Approximately 5,000 units were manufactured, though only a few hundred could be assembled until the Argentine Army dismantled the factory in late 1975.

Users

ex-Zairan Port Saids

Manufactured locally under license as the Port Said and Akaba.[13]

Estonian Defence League[14]

Manufactured locally under license.[15]

[17] The Irish Army used the Carl Gustaf until it was replaced by the Steyr AUG.

Port Said variant[1]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Laffin, John . Arab Armies of the Middle East Wars 1948–73 . Men-at-Arms . 128 . 15 June 1982 . Osprey Publishing . 978-0-85045-451-2 . 31–33.
  2. Web site: Afghanistan – Seized Mujahideen weaponry 008.jpg . Wikimedia Commons.
  3. Web site: En images : Découverte d'un lot d'armes dans la ville de Tombouctou au Mali . In pictures: Discovery of a batch of weapons in the city of Timbuktu in Mali . fr . 8 September 2016 . VOA Afrique.
  4. Kpist m/45 – trotjänare med skral räckvidd . Kpist m/45 - faithful servant with a narrow range . Thomas B. . Andersson . 2017 . Militär historia . Bonniers förlag . 10 . sv.
  5. Web site: Carl Gustaf Kp M/45 submachine gun . Modern Firearms . 17 March 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090308154241/http://world.guns.ru/smg/smg48-e.htm . March 8, 2009.
  6. Book: Rottman, Gordon L. . The Big Book of Gun Trivia: Everything you want to know, don't want to know... . Gordon L. Rottman . 20 October 2013 . London, UK . Bloomsbury Publishing . 978-1-78200-950-4 . 2020-01-27.
  7. Web site: The submachine guns of Sweden . Olof . Janson . Gothia Arms Historical Society.
  8. Web site: Egyptský samopal Akaba . Egyptian Akaba submachine gun . . 25 March 2013 . cs.
  9. Web site: Bishop . Paul . Karl Gustav M/45 "Swedish K" . MACV-SOG Living History Group . 10 September 2013.
  10. Web site: Smith & Wesson M76 . World Guns. 27 October 2010 .
  11. Web site: Association . National Rifle . An Official Journal Of The NRA Behind Enemy Lines: Guns of Vietnam's SOG Warriors . 2024-02-04 . An Official Journal Of The NRA . en.
  12. News: JCR Modelo 1 . 10 March 1975 . Estrella Roja . 49 . El Topo Blindado.
  13. Book: Richard D. . Jones . Leland S. . Ness . Jane's Infantry Weapons 2009/2010 . January 27, 2009 . 35th . Jane's Information Group . Coulsdon . 978-0-7106-2869-5.
  14. Web site: Käsitulirelvad: 9 mm Püstolkuulipilduja M/45 B . Small Arms: 9 mm submachine gun M/45 B . et . . 14 February 2015.
  15. Web site: Carl Gustaf M/45 . 27 October 2010 . Modern Firearms.
  16. Book: Small Arms Survey 2012: Moving Targets . http://www.smallarmssurvey.org/fileadmin/docs/A-Yearbook/2012/eng/Small-Arms-Survey-2012-Chapter-10-EN.pdf . Surveying the Battlefield: Illicit Arms In Afghanistan, Iraq, and Somalia . . 2012 . Small Arms Survey . Small Arms Survey . 321 . 978-0-521-19714-4 . 2018-08-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180831002411/http://www.smallarmssurvey.org/publications/by-type/yearbook/small-arms-survey-2012.html . 2018-08-31 . dead.
  17. Book: Hogg, Ian . Jane's Guns Recognition Guide . 2002 . Harper Collins . 0-00-712760-X . 223.
  18. Book: Bosiljevac, T.L. . SEALs: UDT/SEAL operations in Vietnam . 1991 . . registration . 114 . 080410722X.
  19. Book: Rottman, Gordon L. . Green Beret in Vietnam 1957–73 . Warrior . 28 . 25 July 2002 . 978-1-85532-568-5 . . 41.
  20. Book: Ezell, Edward Clinton . Personal Firepower . Bantam Books . 1988 . The Illustrated History of the Vietnam War . 15 . 1036801376 . registration . 60 . 978-0-55334-549-0.
  21. Web site: "Ukrainian forces on the border with Belarus using... Carl Gustaf m/45!". @CalibreObscura . 10 Nov 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221110201825/https://twitter.com/CalibreObscura/status/1590763291583733760. November 10, 2022.
  22. Web site: TAB . 2024-03-10 . Swedish K In Ukraine – Update . 2024-04-07 . The Armourers Bench . en.
  23. Web site: TAB . 2024-01-21 . Vintage Weapons In a Modern War: Swedish K in Ukraine . 2024-04-07 . The Armourers Bench . en.
  24. Book: Small Arms Survey 2005: Weapons at War . http://www.smallarmssurvey.org/fileadmin/docs/A-Yearbook/2005/en/Small-Arms-Survey-2005-Chapter-11-EN.pdf . The Central African Republic: A Case Study of Small Arms and Conflict . . 2005 . Small Arms Survey . Small Arms Survey . 318 . 978-0-19-928085-8 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101109192749/http://www.smallarmssurvey.org/publications/by-type/yearbook/small-arms-survey-2005.html . dead . November 9, 2010.