The G3 is a 7.62mm
battle
rifle developed in the 1950s by the German armament
manufacturer Heckler & Koch GmbH (H&K) in
collaboration with the Spanish state-owned design and development agency CETME (Centro de
Estudios Técnicos de Materiales Especiales).
History
The early Mauser Gerät 06H
prototype assault rifle.
The origin of this rifle can be
traced back to the final years of World War
II when Mauser
engineers at the Light Weapon Development Group (Abteilung 37) at Oberndorf am Neckar designed the MKb Gerät
06 (Maschinenkarabiner Gerät 06 or "machine carbine device
06") prototype assault rifle chambered for the intermediate 7.92x33mm
Kurz cartridge, first with the Gerät 06 model using a
roller-locked short recoil mechanism originally adapted from the MG 42 machine gun
but with a fixed barrel and conventional gas-actuated piston rod.[2] It
was realized that with careful attention to the mechanical ratios, the gas
system could be omitted.[3]
The resultant weapon, the Gerät 06H (the "H" suffix is
an abbreviation for halbverriegelt or "half-locked") was
assigned the designation StG 45(M) (Sturmgewehr 45(M) or assault rifle)
but was not produced in any significant numbers and the war ended before the
first production rifles were completed.[4]
The CEAM Modèle 1950, a French effort to
put the StG
45(M) concept into mass production. Chambered in .30 Carbine
The German technicians involved in
developing the StG 45(M) were taken to work in France at CEAM (Centre d'Etudes et
d'Armement de Mulhouse). The StG 45(M) mechanism was modified by Ludwig
Vorgrimler and Theodor Löffler at the Mulhouse
facility between 1946 and 1949. Three versions were made, chambered in .30 Carbine,
7.92x33mm Kurz as well as the experimental 7.65x35mm French short
cartridge developed by Cartoucherie de Valence in 1948. A 7.5x38mm cartridge
using a partial aluminium bullet was abandoned in 1947. Löffler's design,
designated the Carabine Mitrailleuse Modèle 1950, was retained for
trials among 12 different prototypes designed by CEAM, MAC, and MAS. Engaged in the Indochina War and being the second NATO contributor,
France canceled the adoption of these new weapons for financial reasons.
In 1950, Vorgrimler moved to Spain where he
created the LV-50 rifle chambered for the Kurz cartridge and
later, the proprietary 7.92x40mm CETME M53 round.[5]
At this point, the rifle was renamed the Modelo 2. The Modelo 2 drew the
attention of the West German Border
Guards (Bundesgrenzschutz), who sought to re-equip the newly formed
national defense forces. Not willing to accept a cartridge outside of the NATO
specification, the Germans asked CETME to develop a 7.62x51mm version of the
rifle. The resulting CETME Model A was chambered for the 7.62x51mm
CETME cartridge which was identical in chamber dimensions but had a
reduced-power load compared to the 7.62mm NATO round. Further development of
the rifle with input from H&K produced the CETME Model B which
received several modifications, including the ability to fire from a closed bolt
in both semi-automatic and automatic firing modes, a new perforated sheet metal
handguard (the folding bipod had been the foregrip in previous models), improved
ergonomics and a slightly longer barrel with a 22 mm
rifle
grenade launcher guide. In 1958, this rifle was accepted into service with
the Spanish
Army as the Modelo 58, using the 7.62x51mm CETME round.
In 1956, the Bundesgrenzschutz
canceled their planned procurement of the CETME rifles, adopting the Belgian-made FN FAL (G1)
instead. However, the newly formed West German Army (Bundeswehr)
now showed interest and soon purchased a number of CETME rifles (7.62x51mm NATO
chambering) for further testing. The CETME, known as the Automatisches
Gewehr G3 according to German nomenclature, competed successfully
against the Swiss SIG SG 510 (G2) and the American
AR-10 (G4) to
replace the previously favored G1 rifle. In January 1959, the Bundeswehr
officially adopted the CETME proposal. The West German government wanted the G3
rifle to be produced under license in Germany; purchase of the G1 had
previously fallen through over FN's refusal to grant such a license.
In the case of the G3, the Dutch firm Nederlandse Wapen en Munitiefabriek (NWM) held
production and sales rights to the CETME design outside of Spain. To acquire
production rights, the West German government offered NWM contracts to supply
the Luftwaffe
with 20 mm ammunition. Production of the G3 was then assigned to Rheinmetall
and H&K. The latter company already had ties to CETME, and had worked to
further optimize the CETME rifle for use with the full-power
7.62x51mm NATO cartridge (as opposed to the downloaded CETME variant). In 1969,
Rheinmetall gave up production rights to the G3 in exchange for H&K's
promise not to bid on MG 3 production. Later in 1977, the West German
government ceded ownership of G3 production and sales rights exclusively to
H&K.
Initial production G3 rifles
differed substantially from more recent models; early rifles featured
closed-type mechanical flip-up sights (with two apertures), a lightweight
folding bipod, a stamped sheet steel handguard, a wooden buttstock (in fixed
stock models) or a telescopic metal stock.[5]
The weapon was modernized during its service life (among other minor
modifications it received new sights, a different flash
suppressor, and a synthetic handguard and shoulder stock), resulting in the
most recent production models, the G3A3 (with a fixed polymer stock)
and the G3A4 (telescoping metal stock). The rifle proved successful in
the export market, being adopted by the armed forces of over 40 countries.[5]
The G3 was and in some cases continues to be produced under license in: France (MAS), Greece (Hellenic Arms Industry), Iran (Defense Industries Organization), Luxembourg
(Luxemburg Defense
Technologi), Mexico,
Myanmar, Norway (Kongsberg
Våpenfabrikk), Pakistan (Pakistan Ordnance Factories), Portugal (FBP), Saudi
Arabia, Sweden
(FFV), Thailand,
Turkey (MKEK) and the
United
Kingdom (Royal Ordnance).
Design
details
Disassembled G3A3 rifle. Note:
modular design.
The G3A3 (A4) is a selective-fire
automatic weapon that employs a roller-delayed blowback operating system. The
two-piece bolt assembly consists of a breech (bolt head) and bolt carrier. The
bolt is held in battery by two sliding cylindrical rollers that engage locking
recesses in the barrel extension. The breech is opened when both rollers are
compressed inward against camming surfaces driven by the rearward pressure of
the expanding gases upon the bolt head. As the rollers move inward, recoil
energy is transferred to the locking piece and bolt carrier which begin to withdraw
while the bolt head slowly moves rearward in relation to the bolt carrier. As
the bolt carrier clears the rollers, pressure in the bore drops to a safe
level, the bolt head is caught by the bolt carrier and moves to the rear as one
unit, continuing the operating cycle. The bolt also features an anti-bounce
mechanism that prevents the bolt from bouncing off the barrel's breech surface.
The spring-powered claw extractor is also contained inside the bolt while the
lever ejector is located inside the trigger housing (actuated by the recoiling
bolt).[5]
The rifle is hammer fired and has a
trigger mechanism with a 3-position fire selector switch that is also the
manual safety toggle that secures the weapon from accidentally discharging
(fire selector in the “E” or “1” position – single fire mode
("Einzelfeuer"), “F” or “20” – automatic fire
("Feuerstoß"), “S” or “0” – weapon is safe ("Sicher"),
trigger disabled mechanically). The weapon can be fitted with an optional
4-position safety/fire selector group illustrated with pictograms with an
ambidextrous selector lever. The additional, fourth selector setting enables a
3-round burst mode of fire.[5]
The firearm was equipped with iron sights
that consist of a rotary rear drum and hooded front post. The rear sight,
mechanically adjustable for both windage and elevation, has an open notch used
to fire up to 100 m and three apertures used for: 200, 300 and 400 m.[5]
The receiver housing has recesses that work with HK
clamp adapters used to mount day or night optics.
The rifled barrel (contains 4
right-hand grooves with a 305 mm twist rate) terminates with a slotted flash
suppressor which can also be used to attach a bayonet or serve
as an adapter for launching rifle grenades. From the G3A3 the barrel had polygonal
rifling.[6]
The barrel chamber is fluted, which assists in the initial extraction of a
spent cartridge casing (since the breech is opened under very high barrel
pressure
The G3A3 (A4) uses either steel (260 g) or aluminium
(140 g) double-stacked straight box magazines, or a 50 round drum magazine.
Original H&K drums are rare and command high prices, a reproduction is
available at much less cost from Allied Armament. H&K developed a prototype
plastic disposable magazine in the early 1960s, but it was not adopted as
aluminum magazines were just as light and proved more durable, as well as
easier to produce.
Standard accessories supplied with
the rifle include: a detachable bipod (not included with rifles that have a perforated plastic
handguard), sling, cleaning kit and a speed-loading device. Several types of
bayonet are available for the G3, but with few exceptions they require an
adapter to be inserted into the end of the cocking tube. The most common type
features a 6 3/4 inch spear-point blade nearly identical with the M7 bayonet,
but with a different grip because of its mounting above the barrel. The weapon
can also mount a 40 mm HK79 under-barrel grenade
launcher, blank firing adapter a straight blowback bolt (called a “PT”
bolt, lacks rollers) used for firing 7.62x51mm ammunition with plastic bullets,
a conversion kit used for training with .22 LR ammunition
and a sound suppressor (that uses standard ammunition).
The G3 is a modular weapon system.
Its butt-stock, fore-stock and pistol-grip/fire-control assembly may be changed
at will in a variety of configurations (listed below). For example: by simply
removing push pins the fixed butt-stock can be removed and replaced with a
telescoping butt-stock.
Variants
G3A3
German sniper with G3A3ZF-DMR in
Afghanistan
Apart from the G3A3 and G3A4 HK also
built: the G3A3ZF (essentially a G3A3 with a Hensoldt 4x24 optical
sight), the accurized G3SG/1 rifle (hand-selected G3A3’s, equipped with
an improved trigger, Zeiss telescopic sight with a variable 1.5-6x
magnification and a cheek riser) and the G3K carbine which uses an HK33 handguard and a short barrel (reduced in
length to the base of the front sight post), that is too short for use with a
bayonet or rifle grenades.[5]
The G3 served as a basis for many
other weapons, among them: the PSG1 and MSG90 precision rifles, the HK11 and HK21 family of light
machine guns, a semi-automatic version known as the HK91, a "sporterized" model
called the SR9 (designed for the civilian market in
countries where the HK91 would not qualify, primarily the US after the 1989
importation restrictions) and the MC51 carbine, produced by the UK
firm FR Ordnance International Ltd. for special
forces. The MC51 weighs 3.1 kg (6.8 lb), has a folded overall
length of 625 mm (24.6 in), a barrel length of only 230 mm
(9.1 in), which produces a muzzle velocity of approx. 690 m/s
(2,263.8 ft/s) and a muzzle energy of 2215 J. The MC51 was
allegedly manufactured for the British SAS and SBS, who required a compact but powerful
weapon, for situations in which the stopping power and armor piercing
capabilities of 9x19mm Parabellum round were inadequate. Only 50
weapons were produced, and all were reportedly shipped to the UK special
forces. Most of them were soon replaced by the Heckler & Koch HK53 carbine. Another
UK-based company called Imperial Defence Services Ltd. absorbed FR Ordnance and
continues to market the MC51 standard variant.
- G3: Original model based on the CETME Modelo B.
- G3A1: G3 with a single position, collapsible stock. This design was chosen after earlier experimentation with a ventrally-folding stock. Excessive recoil caused the latter to be dropped from consideration.
- G3A2: G3 with new rotating drum rear sight.
- G3A3: The most well known version. Drum sights, a fixed plastic buttstock, and a plastic handguard that does not contact the barrel. The handguard came in a slim, ventilated version and a wide version. The latter allows for the attachment of a bipod.
- G3A3A1: This is a version of the G3A3 with an ambidextrous trigger group and brass deflector. This is an official German Army designation, not an HK factory one.
- G3A4: The G3A4 uses drum sights and a single position, collapsible stock. This rifle could also be issued with a scope with the nomenclature G3A4ZF. The ZF stands for Zielfernrohr or "Telescope".
- G3A4A1: This is a variant of the G3A4 with an ambidextrous trigger group and brass deflector. This is an official German Army designation, not an HK factory one.
- G3KA4: Smallest of the line, it is a Karabiner, or carbine version of the G3. It features drum sights, a retractable stock, and a 315 mm (12.4 in) barrel.
- G3KA4A1: Variant of the G3KA4 with an ambidextrous trigger group and brass deflector. This is an official German Army designation, not an HK factory one.
- G3A5: HK assigned model number for the HK-made Danish version of the G3A3. It differs in that it has a silent bolt-closure device. In Danish service it is known as the Gv M/66. The Gv M/66 was originally intended for use with optics as a designated marksman rifle, while the rest of the squad were issued M1 Garands.
- G3A6: HK assigned model number for the Iranian-made version of the G3A3.
- G3A7: HK assigned model number for the Turkish-made version of the G3A3.
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