Browning M1921 M2 M2HB M2B-QCB heavy machine gun (USA)
John Browning testing his prototype .50 caliber heavy machine gun, circa 1919
Twin AA mount with Browning M2 water-cooled machine guns in action
Browning M2HB air-cooled machine gun on M3 tripod
Browning M2HB-QCB air-cooled machine gun of current manufacture with quick-change barrel, on M3 tripod
Caliber: .50BMG (12,7x99mm) Weight:
38 kg MG, 58 kg complete with M3 tripod Length: 1650 mm Length of barrel: 1140 mm Feeding: belt Rate
of fire: 450-600 rounds/min
The development of a large-caliber heavy machine gun in USA was
initiated in 1918, at the direct request of General Pershing, the
commander of the US expeditionary corps in Europe. He requested a heavy
gun capable of destroying military aircraft and ground targets such as
tanks and armored cars. The task of developing such a gun and
ammunition was passed to John Browning (then based at Colt’s
factory) and the Winchester Arms Co. respectively. The basic pattern of
the new heavy machine gun was sealed in 1921. Officially adopted in
1923 as “machine gun, .50 calibre, M1921”, this water
cooled, belt fed gun became the prime AA weapon for the infantry and
the navy. In the year 1930 US Army adopted a slightly modified .50
caliber M1921A1 machine gun, and further work on this gun concentrated
on the development of a universal weapon suitable for most roles. The
key design changes were made by Dr. Samuel G. Green, who redesigned the
basic receiver so it could be used in conjunction with either
water-cooled or air-cooled barrels, encased in a water jacket or short
perforated sleeve respectively. He also developed a switchable left or
right side belt-feeding unit. The US Army adopted the new, improved
fifty-caliber machine gun as the M2, in a water-cooled anti-aircraft
version, an air-cooled ground mount version and as an aircraft weapon.
Since the original air-cooled barrels were too light to provide any
degree of sustained fire in ground applications, heavier barrels were
soon introduced for the ground-mounted guns, so this weapon became the
“M2 Heavy Barrel” or M2HB for short. In 1938 the barrel of
the M2HB was lengthened to provide more striking energy and longer
range, and in this form the M2HB was made in great numbers during the
Second World War. US arms factories turned out a little less than 2
million M2 guns in all versions between 1941 and 1945, of which over
400,000 were made in M2HB configuration for ground use. After the
WW2, .50-caliber Browning guns found a wide acceptance across the
world, and today are still widely used as ground and vehicle guns in
most of NATO countries and many others. Production of new M2HB guns is
continued in USA and Belgium.
Browning M2HB machine gun is
belt-fed, air-cooled machine weapon capable of semi-automatic and
automatic fire. The M2HB fires from a closed bolt at all times, and
uses a short-recoil operated action with a vertically sliding locking
block, which rises up to lock the bolt to the barrel extension, and
drops down on recoil to unlock the bolt from the barrel. It also has a
bolt accelerator, made in the form of a lever located at the
bottom of the receiver. Upon recoil, once the barrel is unlocked from
the bolt, it strikes the accelerator, so the kinetic energy of the
recoiling barrel is quickly transmitted to the bolt, improving the
reliability of the weapon. Barrels are screwed into the barrel
extension and are not quick-detachable on standard M2HB weapons;
furthermore, once the barrel is installed in the weapon, the headspace
must be adjusted prior to firing, or the weapon may fail to fire or
produce a serious jam. However, quick change barrel (QCB) kits were
developed by several companies during the 1970s and 1980s, and every
M2HB weapon can be converted to a QCB version with the replacement of
only a few parts, including the barrel. The rear part of the barrel is
enclosed in a short, tubular, barrel jacket with cooling slots. The
back of the receiver houses a bolt buffer, and additional buffer is
used to soften the movement of the heavy barrel. On infantry guns, the
cocking handle was invariably installed on the right side of the
weapon, but slots were made on both sides of the receiver for tank
installations which may require a left-side cocking handle. Browning
M2HB machine guns use a disintegrating steel belt, with the feed
switchable from one side to the other through the re-installation of
certain parts in the feed unit. The belt feed is of the two stage type
– every cartridge is first withdrawn from the belt toward the
rear by the pivoting extractor lever, attached to the bolt. Once the
cartridge is clear of the belt, it is lowered into a T-slot cut into
the bolt face, and pushed forward into the barrel. Spent cartridge
cases are forced down the T-slot and out of the weapon through an
opening at the bottom of the receiver by the following cartridges, or
by the pivoting belt extractor lever (for the last cartridge case). A
rotary switch is used to select the track for left or right side
feed. Since the gun fires from a closed bolt, it has a
separate firing pin, powered by its own spring, and hosted inside the
bolt along with the sear and cocking lever. Upon the recoil stroke of
the bolt, the cocking lever pulls the firing pin back until it is
engaged by the sear. Once the bolt is fully in battery (locked closed),
a pull on the trigger raises the trigger bar so it acts on the sear and
releases the firing pin. The standard firing controls consist of a
push-type thumb trigger and sear release buttons located between the
dual spade grips. Alternatively, an electric solenoid trigger can be
installed for mounted vehicle applications. The M2HB has an unusual
method of providing semi-automatic fire (probably added to the basic
design as an afterthought) – it has a bolt latch, which locks the
bolt to the bolt buffer in the open position after each shot.
Therefore, if gun is fired in semi-automatic mode (single shots), for
each shot the operator must first release the bolt forward by pressing
the bolt latch release, located next to the thumb trigger (as the gun
fires from a closed bolt). After the bolt is released and the gun is
loaded, the operator may push the trigger to fire a single bullet. If
the automatic mode is desired, the bolt latch must be turned off and
locked by turning its lock to the left. In this position it will not
engage the bolt and the gun will fire continuously as long as the
trigger is pressed. It must be noted that original M2HB guns had no
manual safeties; however, the recent M2E2 upgrade, developed by General
Dynamics, includes, among other items, an additional manual safety
located next to the trigger. Standard sights consist of a folding
blade front and frame-type rear. The rear sight is mounted on the
receiver, the front sight is located at the front of the receiver and
protected by an arc-shaped sight protector. Additionally, various types
of telescopic and night sights can be installed using appropriate
mountings.