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Italy's WW1 Heavy Machine Gun: FIAT-Revelli Modelo 1914

http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons https://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons/home Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.bbtv.com/collections/forgotten-weapons Italy was the first major adopter of the Maxim heavy machine gun and had several hundred by 1914 - but wanted to have a domestic design in production as well. The Italian government and military put a lot of resources into the Perino machine gun, but kept it so secret that it was never properly tested and development was very slow. By the time war broke out, the Perino was clearly not ready for field use - and Maxims (along with other foreign designs) were no longer available for commercial sale as production was being taken up by warring nations. This led Italy to adopt a private design of Bethel Revelli in partnership with the FIAT company. Adopted as the Modelo 1914, Revelli's machine gun was a delayed blowback system with a wedge under mechanical disadvantage holding the bolt closed long enough to safety cycle. Its most unique element was the 50-round mousetrap type box magazine that used 10 independent stacks of 5 rounds each (a 100-round version was also made). This was a very complex magazine to produce, and much more delicate than the other machine gun feed systems in use at the time. The Revelli is also notable for being the only major machine gun of the period to have a circulating water jacket, operated by a small hand-cranked pump on the condensing tank. The FIAT-Revelli would see service as both and aircraft and ground gun through World War 1, and was updated in 1935 to an air cooled pattern that would serve through World War 2. These guns are very scarce in the United States today, and I am grateful to the collector who owns this one for providing access to it! Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle #36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

Anonymous

I'm pretty sure that's the kind of Gun you would never see field striped at all other than on Forgotten weapons. Its videos like this show why Ian runs the best arms channel in the World. Hope the assembling wasn't too hard ;-)

Anonymous

Great video Ian! Very interesting...

ViejoLobo

Exposed sear. Exposed reciprocating bolt. Mario Bothers plumbing. What could possibly go wrong?

Joseph W Cupp

Damn! I love this MG! The complexity of it alone makes it beautiful, it needs to be mounted on the turrets of a Steampunk Dirigible Battleship. Also the ammo magazines are fantastic if you stop and think about all the issues with fabric belts at the time and the issues with strips getting bent, besides 5 round magazines are easy to manufacture and the trick is how to connect them and feed them and they seemed to figure that out pretty well. Great job Ian as usual!

Wayne S.

Delayed blowback? Sees massive bolt. Ok then.