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MAGNUM
06-26-2004, 09:09 AM
This is the Beretta BM59 FAL, an upgrade of the M1 Garand that was in service in Italian Army from 1960 to 1991.

From world.guns.ru

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Since the end of the World War 2, Italy adopted the US-designed M1 Garand rifle in .30-06 (7.62x63mm) and manufactured it under licence. This semi-automatic rifle proved itself wery well during WW2 but in the late 1950s it was seriously outdated and obsolete, so Italian military wanted a new rifle, chambered for the NATO-standard cartridge, 7.62x51mm. The most cost-efficient way to build a new rifle was to redesign the old good M1, and this was done by Pietro Beretta SPa. New gun, designated as Beretta BM59, was adopted in 1959 and served with Italian, Indonesian and Marocco armies. It should be noted that earliest BM59s were manufactured from available M1 parts, including rechambered barrels. In the late 1980s BM59 was rplaced in Italian service with Beretta AR70/90 assault rifles.

Basically, the BM59 can be described as re-chambered M1 Garand, with addition of the removable 20 rounds magazine and select fire trigger. Another addition was a flash-hider of NATO-standard diameter, which also served as a rifle grenade launcher. To launch grenades, one must turn on gas cut-off valve by raising grenade front sight, mounted on the gas block. If it will not be done, the excessive gas pressure will damage the rifle. BM59 is a gas operated rifle, with gas chamber and gas piston located under the barrel. Chamber locks by the rotating bolt with two massive lugs. Fire mode selector/safety switch is located at the front of the triggerguard, charging handle is attached to the gas rod and reciprocates during the fire cycyle.

BM59 was available in 4 modification:
* BM59 Mark I had a wooden stock with semi-pistol grip.
* BM59 Mark II had a wooden stock with pistol grip to achieve a better control during the full-auto fire;
* BM59 Mark III, or Ital TA, was a gun with a pistol grip and a metallick folding buttstock, and was intended for Mountain troops; BM59 Para was similar to BM59 Ital TA but had shorter barrel and shorter flash-hider, and was intended for paratroopers.
* BM59 Mark IV, had a heavier barrel and plactick stock, and was used as a light squad automatic weapon

Caliber: 7.62x51 mm NATO (.308 Winchester)
Action: Gas operated, rotating bolt
Overall length: 1095 mm
Barrel length: 491 mm
Weigth: 4.4 kg empty
Rate of fire: 750 rounds per minute
Magazine capacity: 20 rounds


http://world.guns.ru/assault/bm59_l.jpg

http://world.guns.ru/assault/bm59_r.jpg

http://world.guns.ru/assault/bm59_fold.jpg

http://www.brigatacadore.it/Dotazioni/Immagini/Fal.JPG

MAGNUM
06-26-2004, 09:13 AM
http://www.france-collection.com/BM59MAIN/bm59.jpg

Bayonet
06-26-2004, 09:21 AM
May I ask which bayonet does it has?

Dennis G
06-26-2004, 09:22 AM
I never got a chance to use the BM59 but I love the Garand 60+ years old and they shoot like a laser. I’m sure Beretta makes a good model. Looks a lot like the M1A.

MAGNUM
06-26-2004, 09:23 AM
This one.

http://www.vecio.it/foto/m8s.jpg

Graeme
06-26-2004, 09:24 AM
Any one know how they compare to M14's/M1A's?

thatguy96
06-26-2004, 10:57 AM
They're closer to the M1 Garand than the M14 is (mainly because the Italians designed them that way, so they could use a majority of the old machinery on which they built M1s), but I've heard few bad things about them. I've heard them described as the Cadillac of the pattern, but I'd love to get my hands on one of Beretta's semi-autos and see for myself.

VorpalDoom
06-26-2004, 11:36 AM
judging from the specs givin, and the photos, it seems more like a m14, thats about the size of a g3a3.

thatguy96
06-26-2004, 06:14 PM
The specs have nothing to do with the internal functioning of the weapon, and its much closer to say the T37 (http://world.guns.ru/assault/t37.jpg) Proto, which is nothing more really than an M1 rechambered and designed to feed from a mag. You'll find that most people will compare it much more readily to the M1 Garand than to the M14.

FB
06-28-2004, 06:54 AM
The internal mechanism of the FAL BM59 is practically the same of the good old Garand. I've used both of them during my military service, first the Garand and the FAL and once you got used to the (fairly easy) maintenance and cleaning procedures of the first, you were practically able to perform the same tasks on a FAL.

As far as shooting them: the Granad is a bit more precise, due to the longer barrel and absence of the muzzle brake/flash hider. Not an enormous difference though, and at the shooting range (100m) it was common to see the same results from Garand shooters vs FAL shooters, or from a shooter alternating the two weapons.

The FAL TA (that stand for Truppe Alpine = Alpine Troops, the Italian Alpini) which I used is much more confortable and handy to carry around then the Garand.

Best regards

tenda
06-28-2004, 07:19 AM
great rifle....but i will prefer the old m1....anyway good calibre...!!!! :lol: