Recent Articles



































Maxim Gun



         


The Maxim gun was the first effective machine gun portable enough to be used in warfare.

Invented by American Hiram Maxim (1840 - 1916) in 1885, it used the energy of each bullet's recoil force to eject the spent cartridge and insert the next bullet. Trials showed it could fire 500 rounds per minute, equivalent to the firepower of about 100 rifles. Compared to modern machine guns, the Maxim was extremely bulky and awkward, typically requiring a four to six man team to operate it. However, at the time it was the only alternative to slow firing bolt action rifles, and its extreme lethality was employed to devastating effect against obsolete charging tactics.

It was adopted by the British Army in 1889, and first used by Britain`s colonial forces in the Matabele war in 1893-1894. In one engagement, 50 soldiers fought off 5,000 warriors with just four Maxim guns. The Maxim gun played a major role in the swift European colonization of Africa in the late 19th century. As it was put in a well-known jingle by Hillaire Belloc,

Whatever happens, we have got
The Maxim gun, and they have not.

The design was purchased by several other European countries, setting off an arms and technology race. The Maxim gun first saw significant action in the Russo-Japanese War, where both sides bought vast numbers of Maxim's guns. Nearly 50 per cent of all casualties in the entire conflict were derived from Maxim guns. The German Army's Maschinengewehr and the Russian Devil's Paintbrush" in reference to the sight of whole rows of charging soldiers being cut down in a line.

By World War I, many armies had moved on to lighter, more efficient machine guns. On the Western Front of WWI, 90 per cent of bullet related casualties were inflicted by Maxim-type guns, including the Vickers which was an improved and redesigned Maxim introduced into the British Army on 26 November, 1912.

Maxim also invented a pneumatic gun, the gun silencer (adapted for car exhausts), a smokeless gunpowder, a mousetrap, and carbon filaments for light bulbs.

[Top]

Reference:

  1. Callwell, Colonel C.E. . Small Wars, a Tactical Textbook for Imperial Soldiers. 1990 Greenhill Books, London, Lionel Leventhal Ltd. ISBN 1-85367-071-5. 559pp. This is a reprint of the 1906 version.






  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License