Difference between revisions of "FN Model 1903"
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Latest revision as of 15:26, 15 March 2013
FN Model 1903 | |
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Husqvarna m/1907 variant | |
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Type | Single action semi-automatic pistol |
Land of Origin | USA / Belgium |
Specifications | |
Length | 205 mm |
Barrel length | 127 mm |
Weight | 930g unloaded |
Cartridge | 9 x 20 mm SR Browning Long, 7.65x17mm SR Browning (.32ACP) |
Action | Blowback |
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Feed | 7- (9mm) or 8- (7.65mm) round box magazine |
Sights | fixed iron sights |
Service History | |
Wars | WW1, WW2 |
Production History | |
Designer | John Browning |
Design Date | 1902 |
Manufacturer | Fabrique Nationale |
Produced | 1903-1942 |
No. Built | 153,173 |
It was introduced in 1903 and fired the 9 x 20 mm SR Browning Long cartridge. It should not be confused with the US-made Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammerless (also in .32 ACP), nor with the Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammer (in .38 ACP), even though they are all based on the same mechanical design, which Browning sold to both Colt and FN (and others as well).
Due to its reliability, accuracy, light weight, and quick reloading, the M1903 was an issued sidearm for many police forces and militaries, including those of Estonia, Paraguay, Russia, Turkey, and Sweden (manufactured under license as the Husqvarna m/1907) from 1917 and until 1942. Contrary to some belief however, the FN Mle 1903 was never accepted as official sidearm of either the Netherlands or Belgian army.
FN built slightly less than 60,000 M1903 pistols, plus Husqvarna built another 94,000 pistols. Many of these pistols were later modified in the United States, with a bushing in the chamber to fire the more common .380 ACP ammunition.
This pistol can be called a forerunner of most semi-automatic pistols in the world, in one respect or another. Significantly underpowered by modern standards, it was still reliable, accurate and comfortable to carry and fire. It also offered a much faster reloading procedure than any of contemporary military or civilian revolvers.
[edit] Description
The FN/Browning M1903 (and its offshoots, whether made by FN in Belgium or by Colt in USA), is a blowback operated, semi-automatic pistol. The recoil spring was located under the barrel, like most modern pistols. The single action trigger unit has a concealed hammer (Colt also produced similar models with open hammers). The non-pivoting trigger is somewhat similar to the latter Colt/Browning M1911 trigger. The manual safety switch is located at the left side of the frame, above the grip panel. When engaged, it locks both the sear and the slide. It also locks the slide in the open position for disassembly. An additional automatic grip safety locked the sear unless the gun is properly held in the palm.
The barrel is locked to the frame by several radial ribs. To disassemble the pistol, one must retract the slide, lock it open with the safety, then rotate barrel out of engagement with the frame, and then remove barrel and slide. An automatic slide stop (hold open) device was also incorporated, with the visible lever located at the right side of the frame, above the trigger guard.
The single stack magazine is inserted in to the butt and locked by the lever at the heel of the grip. Military issue pistols also had lanyard ring on the left side of the grip.
[edit] Oops
In the world of fiction, the FN Ml 1903 was used as a sidearm by British spy James Bond, in John Gardner's 1981 novel Licence Renewed. The pistol was depicted on the front cover of the first edition of the novel. By 1981 the pistol had been out of production for several years, and following the surprising amount of resultant criticism from fans, Gardner chose to avoid the hassle and stick to more modern designs for his subsequent Bond novels.[edit] Resources
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This article is part of a series on the works of John Moses Browning | ||
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Semi-automatic pistols | FN M1900 · Colt M1900 · Colt M1902 · FN Model 1903 · M1903 Pocket Hammer · M1903 Pocket Hammerless · M1908 Vest Pocket · FN Model 1910 · M1911 · Colt Woodsman · Baby Browning · Hi-Power | |
Rifles | Winchester Model 1885 · Winchester Model 1886 · Winchester 1892 · Winchester Model 1894 · Winchester Model 1895 · Remington Model 8 · Remington Model 24 · FN Trombone | |
Shotguns | Winchester Model 1887 · Winchester Model 1897 · Browning Auto-5/Remington Model 11 · Remington Model 17 · Savage Model 520 · Browning Superposed · Ithaca 37 | |
Machine guns | Colt-Browning M1895 · Browning M1917 · Browning Automatic Rifle · Browning M1919 · M2 Machine Gun | |
Cartridges | .25 ACP · .32 ACP · .38 ACP · .380 ACP · .45 ACP · .50 BMG |
This article is part of a series on FN Herstal firearms | ||
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Handguns | Barracuda · Five-seven · FNP series/FNX series · Forty-Nine · Hi-Power · HP-DA · M1900 · M1903 · M1905 · M1910 | |
Rifles | Semi-auto & select — C1 · CAL · F2000 / FS2000 · FAL · FNAR · FNC · Model 1949 · PS90 · SCAR-L/SCAR-H Bolt-action — Model 1950 · Model 30-11 · PBR · SPR · TSR | |
Shotguns | SLP · TPS | |
Submachine guns | P90 | |
Machine guns | BRG-15 · M2 · MAG· Minimi · Mle 1930 | |
Other stuff | 5.56x45mm SS109 · 5.7x28mm · EGLM · FN 303 |