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The Darne company was one of relatively few private arms manufacturers in France, best known for shotguns. During World War One they got into the machine gun trade, making licensed Lewis guns for the French air service. After making a few thousand of those, Regis Darne designed his own belt-fed machine gun in 1917. A large order was placed by the French military, but it was cancelled before production began because of the end of the war.

Darne continued to develop this design in the 1920s, while also producing sporting arms to keep the business running. The gun was intended mostly as an aircraft gun, but designed in a rather modular fashion, easily made into both magazine-fed and belt-fed infantry versions as well as downing, wing, and observer aerial models. It was actually bought by the French Air Force, as well as several other countries during the inter-war period.

The example we are looking at today is an infantry configuration, with a bipod and light-profile barrel. It is chambered for the French 7.5x54mm cartridge, and is officially the Model 1933 (one of the last iterations made). Many thanks to the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History in Brussels for access to this very rare piece! Check them out here:

https://www.klm-mra.be/en/

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Darne Model 1933: An Economic & Modular Interwar MG (ad-free)

https://utreon.com/c/forgottenweapons/ http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons http://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com The Darne company was one of relatively few private arms manufacturers in France, best known for shotguns. During World War One they got into the machine gun trade, making licensed Lewis guns for the French air service. After making a few thousand of those, Regis Darne designed his own belt-fed machine gun in 1917. A large order was placed by the French military, but it was cancelled before production began because of the end of the war. Darne continued to develop this design in the 1920s, while also producing sporting arms to keep the business running. The gun was intended mostly as an aircraft gun, but designed in a rather modular fashion, easily made into both magazine-fed and belt-fed infantry versions as well as downing, wing, and observer aerial models. It was actually bought by the French Air Force, as well as several other countries during the inter-war period. The example we are looking at today is an infantry configuration, with a bipod and light-profile barrel. It is chambered for the French 7.5x54mm cartridge, and is officially the Model 1933 (one of the last iterations made). Many thanks to the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History in Brussels for access to this very rare piece! Check them out here: https://www.klm-mra.be/en/ Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle 36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

Falling Steel

Video alternatively titled: That Darne Gun!

Paul Beck

Or perhaps "Darne near suren enough had that contract efen that war haten up att ended!!!" 🤠👍

Wayne S.

I would love to see a video on the Darne shotguns.

Guido Schriewer

must be the largest triggerguard ever. (but the aug that is). well.. early one huh. wonder when we see the 1st budget plast... polymer cheap mg for elbonia level budgets.

Mike DePolis

Pistol grip and large trigger guard were anticipating heavy gloves for aviators (or cold infantry). - Should have watched longer before posting :-) (still watching!)

Anonymous

Unless I'm mistaken, the withdrawal of the cartridge from the belt, rather than pushing the cartridge through it, is akin to machine guns that use rimmed cartridges, yes? I wonder if that was a part of Monsieur Darne's idea to market these for just about any cartridge a customer should want? The PKM, for instance, uses the Russian 1908 7.62x54mmR cartridge, and has to pluck the cartridge from the belt first... I should think that the side-magazine Darne automatic rifle/LMG would have been competitive against the FM 1924/29 7.5x54mm, no?