Officers
of the Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa demonstrate the
Vickers machine gun. Front, left to right: Major G.F.
Clingdon, Lieutenant-Colonel H.V.D. Laing. Rear, left
to right: Captain Roger Rowley, Lieutenants W.H. Armstrong
and G.O. Handley. Lindfield, England, 8 April 1942.
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| Photo by Frank Royal.
Department of National Defence / National Archives of
Canada, PA-138338. |
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During the Great War, machine guns were used for both direct fire
against visible targets and in an indirect role to create lethal
"beaten zones" where enemy infantry could scarcely survive.
In such roles they were weapons of position more than of maneuver,
often sited to deliver enfilade fire laterally against a line of
advancing troops. The Second World War saw the use of more mobile
light machine-guns that could move with the infantry in the attack,
thus increasing the rifleman's organic fire-power. A machine-gun's
rapid rate of fire causes the barrel to heat up and wear out very
quickly, and solutions to this fundamental problem included air-
and water-cooled weapons with barrels that could be easily replaced
in action.
The Vickers .303 was the same as used during the First World War,
with the addition of a dial sight to increase accuracy. Its gun
barrel was water-cooled to keep the temperature down during rapid
fire. The Vickers was normally fired from a tripod but could also
be mounted on a carrier.
| Vickers .303 |
| Calibre |
.303 inch (7.7 mm) |
| Length |
109 cm |
| Gun weight |
15 kg (without water) |
| Tripod weight |
23 kg |
| Accurate range |
1000 m |
| Rate of fire |
250 rounds per minute |
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