FBP submachine gun explained

FBP
Origin:Portugal
Type:Submachine gun
Is Ranged:yes
Service:1948-1980s
Used By:See Users
Wars:Portuguese Colonial War
Designer:Major Francisco Gonçalves Cardoso
Design Date:1948 (production model)
Manufacturer:Fábrica de Braço de Prata (FBP)
Production Date:1948-1955 (FBP m/948)
1961-1980 (later models)
Variants:m/948, m/963 and m/976
Weight:3.772NaN2
Length:807mm
Cartridge:9×19mm Parabellum
Action:Blowback
Rate:500 rounds/min
Velocity:390m/s
Feed:21, 32-round box magazine
Sights:Iron

FBP is a 9 mm submachine gun originally developed from a design first conceived in 1940 by Gonçalves Cardoso, an officer of artillery in the Portuguese Army. The onset of World War II halted development of the weapon, which was further modified and put into production in 1948.

History

The submachine gun was produced by the Fábrica de Braço de Prata weapon factory at Lisbon, whose initials FBP gave the name to the weapon, adopted for service as the m/948 in 1948. It utilized the large bolt and telescoping operating spring of the German MP40 submachine gun, and the collapsible wire stock of the American M3 submachine gun.[1] Unusual for submachine guns, the m/948 was fitted with a barrel sleeve with a mount to accept the standard Portuguese Mauser bayonet.

The original version of the submachine gun (the FBP m/948) only allowed for fully automatic fire. An upgraded version (designated FBP m/963) introduced in 1961 also allowed for semi-automatic fire.

The weapon was primarily issued to officers and NCOs in the Portuguese Armed Forces and security forces, along with quantities of ex-German MP 34 submachine guns. In Portuguese service it was used in combat in Angola, Portuguese Guinea, Mozambique, Portuguese India and Portuguese Timor. It was eventually replaced in service by the 9 mm Uzi and the collapsible-stock version of the standard m/961 G3 rifle.

In 1976 Fábrica Militar de Braço de Prata, led by Major Engenheiro Mário Tavares, developed a modernized version of the FBP with a barrel cooling sleeve, but it never entered production.

Users

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20230202135928/http://www.securityarms.com/20010315/galleryfiles/2100/2123.htm FBP/M948 smg Portuguese.
  2. Book: Ezell, Edward. Edward C. Ezell. Small Arms Today. Stackpole Books. 2nd. 1988. 36. English . 0811722805.
  3. Web site: Portuguese FBP Submachine Gun: More Than a Copy of the German MP40 . National Interest . July 21, 2020 . 29 January 2024 . Suciu, Peter.