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The Bolt Latch and Caliber .30 Air Cooled Browning Machineguns In U.S. Service

by kkkriverrats

The subject of the bolt latch device, it's intended purpose and use, and when it appeared and disappeared and which models it was used on is the subject of much controversy in the 1919 community. In this article we will attempt to explain the why's, when's and which's of this simple flat piece of steel.

It's always best to start from the beginning. In the case of the relationship between the bolt latch and the air cooled Browning in caliber .30 we have to go back to 1918.

Tanks made their first appearance late in WWI they were crude and unreliable vehicles prone to breakdown and the asphyxiation of their crews. Other than the psychological effect on opposing troops they did little to further the allies cause.

Tanks were armed with a variety of weapons including machineguns. When the U.S. became directly involved in the war in April 1917 we had exactly zero tanks, and precious little else including machineguns.

Fortunately, we had one resource that other countries didn't have, we had John Moses Browning, a self taught mechanical genius who devoted his entire life to firearms design.

Browning had already designed and patented the M1895 'Potato Digger" gas operated machine gun and Colt had manufactured some quantity of these unusual weapons. Browning had also done much preliminary work on a recoil operated machinegun that would become the Model of 1917 water cooled "Heavy" that would serve the U.S. for over 40 years.

When the U.S. entered the war we were dependant on our allies for much of our automatic weapons supply. As the war progressed we began to produce more of our own weaponry including machineguns and tanks. Naturally, there is a tendency for any country to try to use indigenous weapons if possible, and when the subject of arming tanks with machine guns came up, the 1917 was considered.

The Tank Corps was not interested in a water cooled weapon for obvious reasons. It was too heavy and bulky, subject to water jacket damage, and the design did not lend itself to the ball type mounting required to protect tank crews from enemy fire.

Since we were already producing M1917's John Browning, working at Colt's factory decided that if the water jacket was eliminated, the barrel shortened and made heavier, and a different sighting system was developed, the Browning casing and internal parts could be used as a basis for a weapon suitable for tank use. As usual, he was right.

The Army, being the Army, developed a laundry list of requirements for what was to become the Browning Tank Machine Gun, Model of 1919.

One of the biggest problems in the development of an air cooled machine gun was the fact that you lost the efficiency of the water cooling design. Since the M1917 was originally designed as a water cooled weapon, air cooling meant that the barrel had to be much heavier, some sort of support for the muzzle of the new weapon had to be provided, the weight of the recoiling parts increased substantially, affecting the operation and firing rate of the weapon. The biggest problem, however, was the dissipation of the heat created during firing.

This problem was not nearly as serious in air cooled weapons used in aircraft because the weapons were only used while flying, and the large amount of air flow dissipated the heat.

The lack of efficient heat dissipation, when combined with the fact that the Browning design fired from a closed bolt, that is, when the weapon reached the end of the firing cycle the bolt was closed and locked on a chambered cartridge, the firing pin was cocked awaiting action of the sear to release it to start the firing cycle over again, made chamber temperatures critical.

Early machineguns were water cooled for good reason. Relatively small amounts of water have the ability to absorb large quantities of heat energy.

This basic law of physics is well known to anyone waiting for a quart of water to boil on the kitchen stove. Heat is the deadly enemy of all mechanical devices, especially firearms.

Cartridges contain all of the elements necessary to function, all they need is heat energy to ignite the propellant creating the high pressure gasses that propels the projectile out of the barrel. Normally, in small arms, this heat energy is supplied by the primer being struck by the firing pin, this converts mechanical energy into heat energy. Unfortunately, the propellant will respond to any source of heat energy including a hot chamber that raises the temperature of the propellant enough to cause the propellant to burn.

This situation is referred to as a "cook off". The trigger is never pulled, the firing pin, never strikes the primer but the weapon suffers an unintentional discharge.

Normally, a firearm "safety" locks the internal parts in such a way that prevents the trigger from being inadvertently operated or the weapon firing from being dropped or subject to some other mechanical force.

The Model of 1903, the famous Springfield, rifle's three position Mauser style safety is a good example, the safety can only be applied when the striker is cocked, and the bolt is closed and locked. When applied, the safety will not allow the trigger to be operated or the bolt to be opened. The safety has a middle position which will not allow the trigger to be pulled, but will allow the bolt to be opened. This middle position is to allow unloading of the rifle while safeguarding the trigger from unintentional manipulation. The third position allows the trigger to be pulled and the bolt to be operated.

The Army conducted extensive tests to determine how the heat build up would affect the new air cooled Browning. The tests determined that after firing 400 rounds at a rate of 400 rounds per minute that a chambered cartridge would cook off in about 16 seconds. After firing another 500 rounds the cook off time dropped to 11 seconds.

This, rightfully, caused much concern, on November 2, 1918, 9 days before the Armistice ending WWI was signed, the Army ordered that the bolt latch be fabricated and mounted on the Tank guns. This is the first known mention of the bolt latch.

The Army's concern was twofold, first, the obvious safety hazard of unintended discharge. Equally important was the fact that due to the Browning design, cook offs could disable or damage the weapon. Keep in mind that the .30'06 cartridge operates relatively high pressure, about the 55,000 PSI level.

In the Browning closed bolt firing design, when a cartridge is chambered, the firing pin is held inside the bolt by the sear. Under normal firing conditions when the sear releases the firing pin and it strikes the primer, the pin continues to protrude, under spring pressure, from the bolt face, preventing the primer cup material from flowing into the firing pin hole during primer set back that results from the ignition and combustion of the propellant, and the subsequent rising pressure inside the case.

In the case of a cook off, the firing pin remains retracted into the bolt, and primer cup material flows back into the firing pin hole. This effectively locks the fired cartridge case into the bolt face, jamming the action by preventing the ejector from forcing the fired case downward and out of the bolt, or worse, breaking off the ejector completely. This malfunction is made much worse by the design of the bolt where the cartridge is held to the bolt face on two sides by the T slot.

In the case of a weapon like the M1903 rifle the same result would occur from a cook off, however, the case is held to the bolt only on a portion of one side by the extractor, and a cook off case could be pried off by the camming action of pulling laterally on the case neck, or the bolt could be removed from the weapon, and the extractor removed and the case pulled straight off the bolt. While a cook off condition could occur in a bolt action rifle, due to it's rate of fire, it is much less likely.

Cramped conditions inside early tanks made disassembling the weapon inside the tank almost impossible. Use of the bolt latch went a long way to preventing this problem, and by holding the bolt rearward, heat dissipation was much improved, exposing the chamber to more air flow.

Brownings's M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle solved this problem by firing from an open bolt.

When the tank machine gun was developed, WWI was nearly over, and, after the Armistice, the contracts awarded to New England Westinghouse to manufacture it were reduced from 40,000 units to 10,000 and later to just 500 weapons.

There were actually two different types of tank guns, one had telescopic sights, the other had no sights at all, both were referred to as "Model of 1919".

This rather profound difference was not deemed of much importance until late spring of 1929, when the Ordnance Department, decided to call the model with the sight brackets "Gun, Machine, Caliber .30, Browning, Tank, 1919A1". The model with no sights at all was given the same title, except for dropping the "A1" from the nomenclature.

Both of these weapons had the slotted barrel jacket, an 18" barrel, and a bolt latch. This nomenclature lasted for about two years until Ordnance revisited the whole issue, and decided to name the tank guns being developed for Cavalry use 1919A1. This meant that there were now two weapons with the same designation, one for tanks, with brackets for telescopic sights, and one for cavalry use with different sights. In 1932 it was decided to rename the 1919A1 tank guns converted for use by the cavalry to 1919A2. Some Einstein in Ordnance, thought this might clear the air, it didn't.

The Browning Tank Machine Gun, while developed during 1918, actually carried a designation of "Model of 1919". The WWI era of rapid weapons development overwhelmed the Army's weapons nomenclature system. By the end of the War, there were two Model Of 1917 weapons, one a rifle, the other a water cooled machine gun. I suspect that the Army, not wanting to make a bad situation worse with the tank gun, decided to call it the "Model of 1919" since they already had had a "Model of 1918" the famous, and much revered, Browning Automatic Rifle.

It would be good to remember that all of these air cooled weapons had the bolt latch installed.

There is no way to tell for sure, but it appears that Ordnance powers that be felt that any air cooled Browning whether a tank gun, a tank gun converted for cavalry use, a 1919A4 converted from a 1917, or a purpose built 1919A4 Fixed or Flexible needed a bolt latch because of the possibility of cook offs.

This line of reasoning continued until about January 1944, when the bolt latch was dropped as an available part. Ordnance document "The Ordinance Catalog, List of All Parts, SNL A6" dated May 28, 1941, and the same document dated 6 September, 1943 lists the bolt latch and the attaching rivet as obtainable parts. Ordnance publication "ORD 9 SNL A6 ", the document that replaced list of all parts, dated January 1944 no longer lists the bolt latch, or the rivet. Sometime between September, 1943 and January 1944, the latch was declared non-essential.

As of this writing, no one seems to have come up with the actual document, or minutes of some Ordinance Committee meeting that first eliminated what Dolf Goldsmith, probably the worlds most knowledgeable Browning authority, called "that excellent accessory".

One thing is for certain, the bolt latch, was considered an required feature for any ground type air-cooled Browning from November 1918 until early 1944.

At the time of WWI the Ordnance Department used the Class and Division naming convention to identify weapons systems and the drawings used to produce them. This system assigned a Class number to a type of weapon, automatic weapons were Class 51 and a Division number to identify individual weapons, this combination produced a Major Item number. The Model of 1917 Machine Gun was assigned the Major Item identifier of 51-10, and the Model of 1919 Tank gun 51-18 . The drawings used to produce weapons used the Class and Division derived Major Item number combined with a sheet number and in some cases a letter to identify the detail on the sheet to depict a component part.

The first drawing of the bolt latch is 51-18-7C, and it is dated November 20, 1918, 9 days after the Armistice ending WWI was signed. This drawing shows not only the bolt latch as detail "C" assigned a "Piece Part" of 7A, but the auxiliary trigger as detail "A". It also shows an area on the bottom of the bolt latch about 3 inches from the rear, and 2 inches long bent outward 5/16th of an inch.

Apparently, Ordnance desired this, for lack of an official name "finger flange" to make the latch easier to grasp and apply.

Revision 1 to this drawing made minor dimensional changes to the latch and changed the "Piece Part" to 7A1.

The "finger flange "continued in use until Revision 2 of the drawing dated October 20, 1920 when it was eliminated, and the "Piece Part" was changed to 7A2.

The final Class and Division drawing showing the latch was Revision 3 dated June 1, 1931 which changed the drawing number to the new letter prefix numbering system . It became B131295.

The attaching rivet first shown on drawing 51-18-8A also dated November 20, 1918 and assigned a "Piece Part" of 8G also went through a series of dimensional/ "Piece Part" number changes until the final Class and Division drawing Revision 5 dated June 1, 1931 changed the drawing number to A13257.

You will notice that, in the Class and Division system of identifying drawings of parts, there is no connection between the detail letter where the part is depicted on a particular sheet and the "Piece Part" number assigned. Sometimes a part depicted in detail A of a sheet will have A in the piece part number, and sometimes it will be some other letter, or no letter at all, as in the case of a sheet containing only one part.

In the letter prefix system of identifying drawings, only one part was to be shown on each drawing.

The attaching rivet drawing A13257, starts out with a date of June 1, 1931 and goes through 3 Revisions the last one dated 1-20-41. The "Drawing Pertains To" Block lists 51-18, BTMG (Browning Tank Machine Gun) M19 (Model of 1919), 51-77 .30BMG M19A2 ( the elusive Cavalry version), 51-83 .30BMG M19A4 (FXD) (M1919A4 Fixed), and .30 BMG M19A4 (FLEX) (M1919A4 Flexible).

The bolt latch depicted on B131295 starts out with a date of June 1, 1931 goes through 10 Revisions, the last available drawing being Revision 10, dated 5-13-43. Revision 10 also shortened the length of the latch from 11.375 (11 3/8) inches to 7.750 (7 ¾) inches. This shortening of the latch would not require that the rivet hole be relocated on the right side plate. It just shortened the distance from the rolled end of the latch to the bolt handle retaining notch.

So far none of the Revision 10 latches have surfaced. We have not observed any drawings that directed the that the "Piece Mark' be placed on the latch, however, we have observed a latch imprinted B131295-5. It does not have a manufacturers identification. It is possible that Revision 5, dated 3-22-41, a drawing not presently available, required the imprinting, and some subsequent Revision removed the requirement. Much stranger things have happened.

The next development in the M1919 series was the M1919A6, this weapon was a modified M1919A4. It featured a different barrel, barrel jacket, folding bi-pod mounted between a newly designed front barrel bearing and booster, a carrying handle, and a sheet metal butt stock.

This was a stopgap measure to produce a weapon that was intended to be more portable and easier to deploy than a standard tripod mounted M1919A4.

This development was not an unqualified success. The attempt to develop a more easily deployed light machine gun began at least as early as November 20, 1942, and it involved much wrangling between the Ordnance Department and the Infantry.

Ordnance wanted to develop a new weapon better suited to its prospective role, while the Infantry wanted something to place in the field yesterday. At first Ordnance agreed to fabricate a parts kit to be distributed as an accessory to the M1919A4, after more wrangling it was decided to purpose build the new weapon as the M1919A6 a substitute standard.

A camel was once described as a horse designed by a committee, in this case, the horse/camel was the M1919A6.

Everybody seemed to get something, Ordnance continued to work on a new weapon, which turned out to be the M60GP machine gun introduced in 1957. Good thing the infantry didn't decide to wait. The Infantry got to field something quickly, even if it wasn't exactly what they wanted. Everybody won, or lost, depending on your point of view.

By the time all of the A6 wrangling was completed it was February of 1943, and Saginaw Steering Gear was selected to be the builder. Besides being the premier M1919A4 builder, Saginaw also experimented with casting certain M1919A4 parts from an alloy they had developed called ArmaSteel.

The ArmaSteel castings were designed to replace parts that had formerly been forged and machined.

Casting parts speeded up production and cut scrap losses, saving steel, and lowering the price of the weapon. In the fall of 1942 Saginaw produced cast casings, and other parts including a pistol grip back plate and forwarded them to the Aberdeen Proving Grounds for testing.

As a result of these tests, the final report recommended, besides approving using some of the castings, but not the casing, that the bolt latch be removed. Apparently, the bolt latch, installed on the cast receivers caused mounting problems on tripods. What this had to do with conventionally fabricated casings (receivers) is debatable. My guess is that someone in authority who had wanted to remove the bolt latch used this as a reason to do so.

Apparently, the as yet unknown, directive eliminating the bolt latch arrived before Saginaw received the order for production of the purpose built M1919A6 in August of 1943.

The Ordnance Catalog SNL A6, List of All Parts, dated September, 1943 lists parts for M1919A4 and for the first time mentions the M1919A6. The bolt latch is listed as an available part, but only for the M1919A4. Page 49 of this document shows an A6 in Figure 2, it does not have a bolt latch. Page 50 Figure 3, shows the Casing Group Parts of a M1919A4 with the bolt latch.

This would lead one to believe that purpose built M1919A6 weapons were never equipped with bolt latches, but purpose built M1919A4's including A4's rebuilt from M1917's M1919A2's, and anything found lying around, were equipped with bolt latches at least until some time between September, 1943 and January, 1944, when all references to the bolt latch disappeared from Ordnance parts lists.

Having said all that, we have to say this. While no purpose built M1919A6 was supposed to have a bolt latch, some M1919A6's were fabricated from M1919A4 Fixed weapons that were not being used for tank armament. This rebuilding process may have required removal of previously installed bolt latches, we don't know. We also don't know if when M1919A4's were refurbished after 1944 but during WWII if directives required removal of the bolt latch.

If the weapon was intact without the bolt latch, that is if the right side plate were present, it would be an simple matter to just look for the rivet hole, and compare the serial number to the list of known serial numbers to determine when the weapon was produced. It is also possible that even after the directive eliminating the bolt latch arrived that the rivet hole was still being drilled even though it was not required.

Just check out the top cover of a .30 BMG. See that little dimple near the pivot pin hole? It's still there from early M1917 production that used a spring retainer for the pivot pin similar to the pin used for locking the trigger housing and gas tube assemblies on a BAR.

We have a Base Shop Data book for the M1919A4 with a Table of Contents dated 11 October, 1943, still showing the method of tightening the bolt latch river and the tools required to perform this overhaul operation. Armorers rebuilding weapons using this document would most likely either repair or replace the latch.

We went through all of this to get to this point.

A summation of the bolt latch issue is:

There are three types of latches, the pre-1920 version with the "finger flange", the common 11 3/8 inch latch without the "finger flange", and the B131295 Revision 10, 7 ¾ inch short latch.

All air cooled .30 caliber ground Browning Machine Guns, regardless of whether they were made by converting M1917, M1919A2, M1919 Tank guns, or any other variant, or were purpose built as M1919A4's, WITH THE EXCEPTION of purpose built M1919A5 and M1919A6's, from November 1918 until about January, 1944 were supposed to have a bolt latch. Does every one of the previously mentioned weapons have a bolt latch?

The answer is no, there were somewhere around 400,000 of these weapons produced doubtless many of them had unauthorized "field modifications" preformed on them.

In addition, after January, 1944 the bolt latch was no longer listed as an available part. If it were damaged, and no spare was handy, it was merely eliminated, probably by drilling out the rivet and discarding the both parts, or the field expedient of just breaking it off.

The final official word on bolt latches is dated 9 August 1949 and is contained in Ordnance Technical Bulletin TB ORD 366 Overhaul and Rebuild Standards for Small Arms Material, Section IV, Special Rebuild Standards-Cal.30 Machine Guns and Mounts, Receiver Group Assembly,

(2) Cal.30 ground guns
(c) Remove all bolt latches B131295 from guns M1919A4.

We hope that this article will put to rest some of the controversy surrounding the bolt latch. Given the nature of 1919 community's propensity to wrangle over things, this hope is likely in vain.

Dolf, please forgive me, but I never liked the bolt latch, I could just see it scratching up the side of my Saginaw/Ohio Ordnance/Izzy M1919a4/A6 semi-auto mutt.

I always use a method of preventing cook offs or other unintentional discharges similar to the one described in FM 23-45 dated 1940 which describes placing a 'clearing block", a simple piece of wood between the retracted bolt and the empty chamber.

Instead of the wooden block, I use a piece of scrap yellow PVC gas tubing. about 2 feet long, it sticks up above the open top cover and out the bottom of the casing showing me and everyone else that the weapon is cleared.

CREDITS AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Well, it's the usual suspects:

The Browning Machine Gun, Vol. 1, Dolf L. Goldsmith, Collector Grade Publications, Inc.

Hard Rain, The Browning Machinegun. Frank Iannamico, Moose Lake Publishing LLC

Jodie Creen Wesemann, Rock Island Arsenal Museum for all of the Ordnance drawings, and Ordnance publications quoted.

U.S. Infantry Weapons of WWII Bruce N. Canfield, Andrew Mobray Publications.

Members of the 1919a4 Forum, and the director/owner of the forum "SHOTS" for their assistance.

Photo/illustrations Credits as indicated.

My personal thanks to my "Editor" and an important contributor Rollin Lofdahl not only a very knowledgeable guy, but the rudder of the ship. He keeps me pointed in the right direction, not an easy task.

Drawing 51-18-7C Revision 1, dated March 31, 1919 showing the “finger flange” and a piece mark of 7A1.

Courtsey of Jodie Creen Wesemann, RIA Museum.

Drawing 51-18-7C Revision 2, dated October 20, 1920 this Revision removed the ‘finger flange” and changed the piece mark to 7A2. The text instructs the fabricator to “bend slightly” to give tension to the side plate. Available “B” series drawings of the latch give a quantifiable ½ inch bend for tension on the side plate.

Courtsey of Jodie Creen Wesemann, RIA Museum

Drawing B131295 Revision 8, which apparently changed the metal finish to “Phosphate Black” dated 10-20-42 shows the standard length latch now made from “Mill or Band Edge Stock” by revision 6 dated 3-26-42. The text of the “B” series drawings for the latch give a quantifiable ½ inch bend to tension the latch against the side plate, rather than the 51 series drawing’s “bend slightly” instruction.

Courtsey of Jodie Creen Wesemann, RIA Museum

Drawing B131295 Revision 10, dated 5-13-43. Revision 10 shortened the length of the latch to 7 ¾ inch finished length. This revision occurred about the time that the latch was eliminated from the air cooled BMG’s. It appears that the short latch is nearly as scarce as the “finger flange” version.

Courtsey of Jodie Creen Wesemann, RIA Museum

Drawing 51-18-8A Revision 5, dated June 1, 1931 showing the bolt latch rivet. Note the piece part number of 8G2 and that revision 5 changed the drawing number of this part to A13257, the new letter prefix drawing number series. Also of note is the signature in the “Approved by the Acting chief of Ordnance” box. It is none other than Julian S. Hatcher, a name almost as well known in Ordnance circles as John C. Garand.

Courtsey of Jodie Creen Wesemann, RIA Museum

Drawing A13257 Revision 3 dated 1-20-41. This is the last available drawing we have access to, it shows that Revision 1 dated 1-31-36 changed the dimensional tolerances allowed and changed the piece part from A13257 to A13257-1. Revision 3 changed the dimension of the rivet shoulder from .250 +or- .001 to .249 -.002. Somewhere along the line the material used to fabricate this part changed from “steel screw stock” to “Steel-W.D. 1020”. We believe that W.D. is the abbreviation for War Department the predecessor of today’s Department of Defense. The then Major Hatcher’s signature also appears on this drawing.

Courtsey of Jodie Creen Wesemann, RIA Museum

SNL A6 the List of All Parts dated 6 September, 1943 shows the M1919A6 without the bolt latch, and the casing group parts for a 1919A4 equipped with the bolt latch. This SNL also lists the bolt latch and rivet as available parts for the M1919A4 only.

This photo shows a standard length bolt latch with Revision 5 imprinting. Very few latches have any imprinting, and as of this writing this imprinting is the only variant observed. This imprinting would have been on the back side of the latch, not easily seen.

Photo courtesy of Rollin Lofdahl and DRH of the 1919a4 forum.

Sheet 10 of 19 (reduced size) from the Overhaul section of the Base Shop Data book, Table of Contents dated October 11, 1943, shows the procedure and special tool required to tighten the bolt latch rivet. No doubt the latch was riveted to the right side plate before assembling a newly made weapon. The tool drawing is 908244/B315347 this drawing is not available.

Plate 1, page 57, Standard Nomenclature List No. A-6, dated May 28, 1941. It’s hard to distinguish in this illustration, but the 1919A2 Cavalry model shown has the “finger flange” bolt latch. The “finger flange” is located just aft of the reinforcing stirrup. The flat style B131295 bolt latch and A13257 attaching rivet are listed in this publication as available replacement parts for the M1919A2 and the 1919A4 Fixed and Flexible. The listed Unit price is $.23 for the latch and the attaching rivet is priced at $.12.

Today the bolt latch retails for about $30.

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