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M79: The Iconic "Bloop Tube" 40mm Grenade Launcher

http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons https://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons/home Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.bbtv.com/collections/forgotten-weapons Combat experience with the bazooka rocket launcher in World War Two and its larger versions in the Korean War convinced the US military that a better weapon was needed to give front-line troops a direct-fire way to attach enemy strong points. The bazooka was bulky, not particularly accurate, and created a lot of backlist signature when fired. This led to a multi-part development effort involving design of a small grenade body, reliable but cheap fusing system, and a cartridge design that could launch it. The result was the 40x46mm grenade. It uses a "high-low" system (originally developed by Rheinmetall during World War Two) in which a powder charge is fired in a small compartment within the cartridge case. The initial pressure in this compartment is some 35,000 psi, which is plenty high to ensure complete and repeatable powder burn. At peak pressure, the internal compartment ruptures, allowing the propellant gasses to expand into the full case volume, which lowers the pressure to about 3,000 psi. This lower pressure is safe to use with an aluminum barrel, and propels the grenade at about 250 fps, giving it a range of about 400 yards without generating excessive recoil. The M79 proved to be very accurate and reliable. It's downside was the need for a grenadier to carry a backup sidearm, as the M79 could not be used at close range. Almost as soon as it was introduced, work began on developing a launcher which could be attached to the M16 service rifle. This would first be the XM-148, and then ultimately the M203 that would replace the M79 in service. M79 launchers can still be found all over the world, however, as they are robust and reliable. Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle #36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

Dana Arbeit

Ian, in the beginning you state that the M79 was a replacement for the ‘bazooka’. My impression has always been that it replaced the rifle grenade. In WWII, using the later classes of anti-tank/armor weapons of LAW, MAW AND HAW, where the LAW was the rifle grenade, the MAW was the bazooka and the HAW was the towed anti-tank gun, the M79 fit as the LAW. However the first and most common round was an anti-personnel round like you described. During the 60s the MAW was still the ‘bazooka’ although it evolved from the WWII 2.35” version to the 3.5” one. The HAW became the TOW missile launcher. In the early days of the Vietnam War, among the short-range anti-personnel rounds tried was an adaptor for firing 12-gauge shotgun rounds. There was also a round using 12-gauge shotgun slugs in a plastic sabot and classified as a “canister” round. Alongside the M79 troops often carried the M72 LAW commonly called the “throw-away bazooka” as a ‘bunker buster’ and ‘ambush buster’ weapon. In some units almost every soldier carried a LAW. The M72 was also a product of the search for a replacement of the rifle grenade. Great video about a weapon that did the job well for its time.

Anonymous

We were still using these in Afghanistan as late as 2008. I worked as a contractor for the U.S. Gov't for a time and we were almost always colocated with SOF/JSOC folks. The ones I had access to were exactly like the one in the video. I practiced with it a lot and it is very easy and intuitive to shoot - far and away my favorite over the 203 or HK69. One of the Navy JSOC guys at a place had a highly modified M79 - the barrel had been cut down and most of the butt stock had been sawed off and replaced with the side folding stock of an MP-5K that had been attached upside down so he could still get the necessary angle. There were no iron sights at all, just a red dot on a custom mount welded to the barrel - I think it was one of those early J-Points that could piggyback on top of an ACOG. He had a holster to carry this attached to his pack. It was very compact and very cool.

Gavin Rea-Davies

Will we get a blooper reel with this video? :-)

Anonymous

Ian, you have hit my nostalgia button, again. In the '60's I was made a "grenadier" and handed the M79 that I called "Thumper." In training, I quickly learned that this was an instinctual weapon for me, or for anyone who had grown up with single barrel shotguns. I never made any fine adjustments to the sights nor did I think that actual aiming had much value. Think of an outfielder pegging a baseball to home plate. In squad training the call "grenadier!" meant that I was expected to move quickly and get the round off as soon as possible. Gee, it's nice to feel needed. With a little practice, it was possible to lob a grenade into a window of a building or vehicle or foxhole.

Pat Patterson

I did Army Basic Combat Training, Company D-7-2, at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, beginning September1972. I distinctly recall a muzzle-mounted grenade launcher, propelled by firing a standard ball round through my M16. I CAN'T FIND a muzzle-mounted rifle grenade listed from that period. My DISTINCT memories of that training: the back-blast from the bazooka demo knocking down a stack of wooden boxes; missing the slow-moving, tank-sized steel plate, with the single LAW I was able to fire; my trepidation about shooting a live grenade with a rifle; my delight at being able to nail the target with one of the grenade launcher systems. Are you aware of any muzzle mounted rifle grenades that would have been in use at that time? (I wasn't in any special equipment-testing program.)

Anonymous

Honestly. I love single shot anything, I find them so fun to shoot, this would just be the biggest giggle device ever for me

Anonymous

I knew someone that used on in Viet Nam. He said they would butt it up to a tree, not their shoulder.