pattern 1914の例文
- Here it produced the Pattern 1914 Enfield rifle and M1917 Enfield rifle.
- The Pattern 1914 Enfield was the successor to the Pattern 1913 Enfield experimental rifle and the predecessor of the U . S . Rifle M1917 Enfield.
- These were known as " . 22 Pattern 1914 Short Rifles " during The First World War and "'Rifle, No . 2 Mk.
- The Pattern 1914 Enfield had a large, strong bolt action, and the bolt travel is long, as it was designed for the dimensionally large and powerful . 276 Enfield cartridge.
- Adapting the design to fire the standard . 303 British round led to the Rifle, . 303 Pattern 1914 ( P14 ), a design fed from a five-round internal box magazine.
- Prior to and during World War II, the Pattern 1914 Enfield was used, after undergoing modification ( " Weedon Repair Standard ", formally the Mk2 standard ) in Britain mainly as a rearguard rifle.
- The Pattern 1914 Enfield like the Mauser Gewehr 98 had no magazine cut-off mechanism, which when engaged permits the feeding and extraction of single cartridges only while keeping the cartridges in the magazine in reserve.
- The main sniper rifles used during the First World War were the German Mauser Gewehr 98; the British Pattern 1914 Enfield and Lee Enfield SMLE Mk III, the Canadian Ross Rifle, the American M1903 Springfield, and the Russian M1891 Mosin Nagant.
- Compared to the Lee Enfield the Pattern 1914 Enfield was more accurate, more durable; however, it was heavier the Lee Enfield Mk III weighed empty and had only half the magazine capacity, giving it a significantly lower effective rate of fire.
- The Pattern 1914 Enfield and M1917 Enfield rifles are based on the Enfield-designed P1913, itself a Mauser 98 derivative and not based on the Lee action, and are not part of the Lee Enfield family of rifles, although they are frequently assumed to be.
- Common sniper rifles used during the Second World War include : the Soviet M1891 / 30 Mosin Nagant and, to a lesser extent, the SVT-40; the German Mauser Karabiner 98k and Gewehr 43; the British Lee Enfield No . 4 and Pattern 1914 Enfield; the Japanese Carcano Model 1891.
- The P14's principal combat use during World War I was as a sniper rifle, since it was found to be more accurate than the Short Magazine Lee Enfield, either in standard issue form or with modified " fine-adjustment " aperture rearsights designated "'Pattern 1914 Mk I W ( F ) "'and "'Pattern 1914 Mk I * W ( F ) "'or, from April 1918, Aldis Pattern 1918 telescopic sights designated "'Pattern 1914 Mk I * W ( T ) "'( modified and telescopic sights were mainly used on Winchester-manufactured rifles, the Winchesters being thought to be of superior quality ).
- The P14's principal combat use during World War I was as a sniper rifle, since it was found to be more accurate than the Short Magazine Lee Enfield, either in standard issue form or with modified " fine-adjustment " aperture rearsights designated "'Pattern 1914 Mk I W ( F ) "'and "'Pattern 1914 Mk I * W ( F ) "'or, from April 1918, Aldis Pattern 1918 telescopic sights designated "'Pattern 1914 Mk I * W ( T ) "'( modified and telescopic sights were mainly used on Winchester-manufactured rifles, the Winchesters being thought to be of superior quality ).
- The P14's principal combat use during World War I was as a sniper rifle, since it was found to be more accurate than the Short Magazine Lee Enfield, either in standard issue form or with modified " fine-adjustment " aperture rearsights designated "'Pattern 1914 Mk I W ( F ) "'and "'Pattern 1914 Mk I * W ( F ) "'or, from April 1918, Aldis Pattern 1918 telescopic sights designated "'Pattern 1914 Mk I * W ( T ) "'( modified and telescopic sights were mainly used on Winchester-manufactured rifles, the Winchesters being thought to be of superior quality ).