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A Gast gun was evaluated by the US Army, and found to be reliable and mechanically practical. However it was felt that it did not offer enough of an advantage over the existing machine guns to justify the expense of producing the weapon. A Gast gun was evaluated by the US Army, and found to be reliable and mechanically practical. However it was felt that it did not offer enough of an advantage over the existing machine guns to justify the expense of producing the weapon.

Having a similar rate of fire (ROF) to a multi-barreled Gatling gun (3,500 to 6,000 rpm), typical of the American GAU guns used on most USAF aircraft, the Gast is simpler, lighter and has a lower recoil. It also has a higher ROF during the first second or so when a GAU's multibarrel assembly's mass makes it slow to spin up to speed. For breif, high ROF engagements it therefore posesses significant advantages over other high ROF systems. For more sustained fire the Gatling gun's many barrels spreads the barrel heat and wear over more barrels and thus manages these critical dimensions better.


==References== ==References==

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Machine gun
Gast Gun
TypeMachine gun
Place of originGermany
Service history
In serviceUnknown
Used byGermany, United States(Research purposes)
WarsWorld War I
Specifications
Cartridge7.92
Caliber7.92
ActionRecoil
Rate of fire1,600 round/min
Muzzle velocity3,050 ft/s (930 m/s)
Effective firing range1,800 m (2,200 yd)
Feed systemDrum Magazine

The Gast Gun was a German twin barreled machine gun of the Meroka type developed by Karl Gast of the 'Vorwerk' company and used during the First World War. It was notable for its high rate of fire of 1,600 rounds per minute and unique mechanism that is used today in the Gryazev-Shipunov GSh-23L series of Russian aircraft cannon.

Description

The weapon uses two barrels combined into a single mechanism in such a way that the recoil from firing one barrel loads and charges the second. Ammunition was fed into the gun from two drums, one on each side of the gun. The drums had a capacity of 180 rounds of German 7.9 mm rifle ammunition which were fed by a compressed spring one by one into the breech. The changing of ammunition drums could be completed in a few seconds by an experienced gunner. The weapon would also fire single shots if there was a problem with one side of the mechanism.

The weapon was also easy to maintain, and could be field stripped in one minute, thanks to its simple design.

The gun was relatively light at approximately 60 pounds (27 kg) without ammunition and it was felt that it was highly suited to airborne use. A telescopic sight was mounted between the two barrels to aid aiming.

History

The gun was first produced by Karl Gast in January 1916 while working for the Vorwerk, the first weapon being produced in January 1916. During trials, rates of fire at 1,600 rounds per minute were achieved. Demonstrations of the weapon were conducted on 22 August 1917, which were attended by German government officials who soon after placed an order for 3,000 of the guns, along with ten ammunition drums and spare parts for each gun at a unit price of 6,800 marks each. Delivery of the first 100 guns was promised for 1 June 1918, with production ramping up to 500 guns per month by September 1918.

Production of the weapon exceeded these initial projections, and the weapons were received favourably with promises of an order for a further 6,000 guns being promised in September 1918.

A version of the gun firing 13 mm ammunition, the Gast-Flieger MG was also under development.

However, the gun was not widely used, and their existence was kept secret until three years after the Armistice, when a cache of 25 of the guns, ammunition and designs was found near Königsberg.

A Gast gun was evaluated by the US Army, and found to be reliable and mechanically practical. However it was felt that it did not offer enough of an advantage over the existing machine guns to justify the expense of producing the weapon.

References

  1. Flying Guns of World War I, Anthony G. Williams & Dr. Emmanuel Gustin.
  • George M. Chinn, The Machine Gun. History, Evolution, and Development of Manual, Automatic, and Airborne Repeating Weapons, Volume I.

External links

See also

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