A History of the Small Arms Made by the Sterling Armament Company : Excellence in Adversity
معرفی کتاب «A History of the Small Arms Made by the Sterling Armament Company : Excellence in Adversity» نوشتهٔ James Edmiston; Peter Laidler، منتشرشده توسط نشر Pen and Sword Military در سال 2020. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
An in-depth history of the small arms made by the Sterling Company of Dagenham, Essex, England, from 1940 until the company closed in 1989. The Lanchester and the Patchett Machine Carbines were both developed at Sterling Engineering Co Ltd during World War II. With the appearance of the earliest Patchett prototypes the military began testing them in ever more rigorous trials, wherein the Patchett kept proving its merits. This led to limited UK adoption of the MkII Patchett as the L2A1 in 1953, and the "first Sterling," the MkII, as the L2A2 in 1955. Then came Sterling's "Crown Jewel," the superb Mk4, adopted as the general-issue UK "Gun, Sub-Machine, L2A3" in September, 1955. Manufactured briefly but intensively by ROF Fazakerley (1955-1959) and by Sterling for over 30 years, nearly 4,000,000 were made. Unlike wraparound bolt designs like the UZI, the Sterling was capable of being truly silenced with standard 9mm ball ammunition (as opposed to being merely "suppressed"). The excellent silenced Sterling-Patchett Mk5, adopted as the UK L34A1 in 1967, is the only Sterling remaining in British Service. All prototypes, military Marks, commercial and licensed production models of the Sterling are described, including the Canadian C1 SMG and the Indian 1A Carbine. Contains notes on manufacturing methods and procedures as used at Sterling, ROF Fazakerley, Canadian Arsenals Limited and the Indian Small Arms Factory, Kanpur (Cawnpore), plus extensive notes on inter-model interchangeability, serial number ranges, quantities produced, client-country purchases of the various Sterling Marks, and accessories. Praise for A History of the Small Arms made by the Sterling Armament Company "If you have an interest in small arms then this is a book that belongs in your library or book shelf. The book does a great job of providing the reader with the story of the weapons that evolved into the Sterling sub-machine gun and the changes in design that took place over that history. The result was a weapon that served in many fields of conflict and performed admirably." -- Armorama An in-depth history of the small arms made by the Sterling Company of Dagenham, Essex, England, from 1940 until Sterling was purchase by British Aerospace in 1989 and closed. The Lanchester and the Patchett Machine Carbines were both developed at Sterling Engineering Co Ltd during World War II. With the appearance of the earliest Patchett prototypes the military began testing them in ever more rigorous trials, wherein the Patchett kept proving its merits. This led to limited UK adoption of the MkII Patchett as the L2A1 in 1953, and the ‘first Sterling’, the MkII, as the L2A2 in 1955. Then came Sterling’s ‘Crown Jewel’, the superb Mk4, adopted as the general-issue UK ‘Gun, Sub-Machine, L2A3’ in September, 1955. Manufactured briefly but intensively by ROF Fazakerley (1955-1959) and by Sterling for over 30 years, nearly 4000,000 were made. Unlike wraparound bolt designs like the UZI, the Sterling was capable of being truly silenced with standard 9mm ball ammunition (as opposed to being merely ‘supressed). The excellent silenced Sterling-Patchett Mk5, adopted as the UK L34A1 in 1967, is the only Sterling remaining in British Service. All prototypes, military Marks, commercial and licensed production models of the Sterling are described, including the Canadian C1 SMG and the Indian 1A Carbine. Contains notes on manufacturing methods and procedures as used at Sterling, ROF Fazakerley, Canadian Arsenals Limited and the Indian Small Arms Factory, Kanpur (Cawnpore), plus extensive notes on inter-model interchangeability, serial number ranges, quantities produced, client-country purchases of the various Sterling Marks, and accessories. Cover Title Copyright Contents Prologue Foreword Foreword of 13th April 2019 Tribute to Robert Blake Stevens Introduction: A Potted History, 1901–1939 Part I: The Military Sterling Chapter 1 The Lanchester Sub-Machine Gun Chapter 2 The Prototype Patchetts Chapter 3 “Pilot” and “User’’ Trials Patchetts Chapter 4 From MkI to Production Chapter 5 Mr Patchett’s Gun Gets Called Up Chapter 6 The First Sterling Chapter 7 The Crown Jewel Chapter 8 The Silent Sterling Part II: The Commonwealth Sterlings Chapter 9 The Canadian Connection Chapter 10 The Indians Curry Favour Part III: The Late Commercial Sterlings Chapter 11 Closing the Bolt Chapter 12 The Sterling Mk7 ‘Pistols’ Chapter 13 The End of the Line Chapter 14 Other Sterling Arms Part IV: Armourers Talk Shop Chapter 15 Mods and Sods Chapter 16 Accessories and Ancillaries Chapter 17 Endgames Chapter 18 Hard Fact Appendix: List of Headings Bibliography
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