The M1 Garand or M1 rifle[1] is a semi-automatic rifle that was the service rifle of the U.S. Army during World War II and the Korean War. The rifle is chambered for the .30-06 Springfield cartridge and is named after its Canadian-American designer, John Garand. It was the first standard-issue autoloading rifle for the United States.[13] By most accounts, the M1 rifle performed well. General George S. Patton called it "the greatest battle implement ever devised".[14][15] The M1 replaced the bolt-action M1903 Springfield as the U.S.' service rifle in 1936,[16] and was itself replaced by the selective-fire M14 rifle on March 26, 1958.[17] Pronunciation Sources differ on the pronunciation of the M1 Garand. Some, such as General Julian Hatcher's The Book of the Garand (1948), give /ˈɡærənd/, identical to the pronunciation of John Garand's surname.[18] However, a 1952 issue of Armed Forces Talk, a periodical published by the U.S. Department of Defense, gives the pronunciation as /ɡəˈrænd/, saying "popular usage has placed the accent on the second syllable, so that the rifle has become the 'guh-RAND.'"[19] American Rifleman magazine, while acknowledging /ɡəˈrænd/ as the pronunciation favored by U.S. servicemen, deemed either pronunciation valid.[20] History M1 Garand with en bloc clips M1 Garand displayed with en bloc clip at U.S. Army Museum of Hawaii Development French Canadian-born Garand[21] went to work at the United States Army's Springfield Armory and began working on a .30 caliber primer actuated blowback Model 1919 prototype. In 1924, twenty-four rifles, identified as "M1922s", were built at Springfield. At Fort Benning during 1925, they were tested against models by Berthier, Hatcher-Bang, Thompson, and Pedersen, the latter two being delayed blowback types.[22] This led to a further trial of an improved "M1924" Garand against the Thompson, ultimately producing an inconclusive report.[22] As a result, the Ordnance Board ordered a .30-06 Garand variant. In March 1927, the cavalry board reported trials among the Thompson, Garand, and 03 Springfield had not led to a clear winner. This led to a gas-operated .276 (7 mm) model (patented by Garand on April 12, 1930).[22] In early 1928, both the infantry and cavalry boards ran trials with the .276 Pedersen T1 rifle, calling it "highly promising"[22] (despite its use of waxed ammunition,[23] shared by the Thompson).[24] On August 13, 1928, a semiautomatic rifle board (SRB) carried out joint Army, Navy, and Marine Corps trials between the .30 Thompson, both cavalry and infantry versions of the T1 Pedersen, "M1924" Garand, and .256 Bang, and on September 21, the board reported no clear winner. The .30 Garand, however, was dropped in favor of the .276.[25] Further tests by the SRB in July 1929, which included rifle designs by Browning, Colt-Browning, Garand, Holek, Pedersen, Rheinmetall, Thompson, and an incomplete one by White,[nb 2] led to a recommendation that work on the (dropped) .30 gas-operated Garand be resumed, and a T1E1 was ordered November 14, 1929. Twenty gas-operated .276 T3E2 Garands were made and competed with T1 Pedersen rifles in early 1931. The .276 Garand was the clear winner of these trials. The .30 caliber Garand was also tested, in the form of a single T1E1, but was withdrawn with a cracked bolt on October 9, 1931. A January 4, 1932 meeting recommended adoption of the .276 caliber and production of approximately 125 T3E2s. Meanwhile, Garand redesigned his bolt and his improved T1E2 rifle was retested. The day after the successful conclusion of this test, Army Chief of Staff General Douglas MacArthur personally disapproved any caliber change, in part because there were extensive existing stocks of .30 M1 ball ammunition.[26] On February 25, 1932, Adjutant General John B. Shuman, speaking for the Secretary of War, ordered work on the rifles and ammunition in .276 caliber cease immediately and completely, and all resources be directed toward identification and correction of deficiencies in the Garand .30 caliber.[24]: 111 On August 3, 1933, the T1E2 became the "semi-automatic rifle, caliber 30, M1".[22] In May 1934, 75 M1s went to field trials; 50 went to infantry, 25 to cavalry units.[24]: 113 Numerous problems were reported, forcing the rifle to be modified, yet again, before it could be recommended for service and cleared for procurement on November 7, 1935, then standardized January 9, 1936.[22] The first production model was successfully proof-fired, function-fired, and fired for accuracy on July 21, 1937.[27] Production difficulties delayed deliveries to the Army until September 1937. Machine production began at Springfield Armory that month at a rate of ten rifles per day,[28] and reached an output of 100 per day within two years. Despite going into production status, design issues were not at an end. The barrel, gas cylinder, and front sight assembly were redesigned and entered production in early 1940. Existing "gas-trap" rifles were recalled and retrofitted, mirroring problems with the earlier M1903 Springfield rifle that also had to be recalled and reworked approximately three years into production and foreshadowing rework of the M16 rifle at a similar point in its development. Production of the Garand increased in 1940 despite these difficulties,[29] reaching 600 a day by January 10, 1941,[22] and the Army was fully equipped by the end of 1941.[26] Following the outbreak of World War II in Europe, Winchester was awarded an "educational" production contract for 65,000 rifles,[22] with deliveries beginning in 1943.[22] Service use John Garand (left) points out features of the M1 to army generals George Patton letter to Springfield Armory on the M1 Garand, January 26, 1945 U.S. Army infantryman in 1942 with M1 in front of an M3 half-track at Fort Knox, Kentucky U.S. Marine Corps Silent Drill Team with M1 rifles The M1 Garand was made in large numbers during World War II; approximately 5.4 million were made.[30] They were used by every branch of the United States military. The rifle generally performed well. General George S. Patton called it "the greatest battle implement ever devised."[15] The typical opponent of a US soldier during World War II was usually armed with a slower-firing bolt-action rifle (e.g. the Karabiner 98k for Germany, the Carcano M1891 for Italy, and the Type 38 or Type 99 Arisaka rifle for Japan). The impact of faster-firing infantry small arms in general soon stimulated both Allied and Axis forces to greatly increase their issue of semi- and fully automatic firearms then in production, as well as to develop new types of infantry firearms.[31] Many M1s were repaired or rebuilt after World War II. While U.S. forces were still engaged in the Korean War, the Department of Defense decided more were needed. Springfield Armory ramped up production, but two new contracts were awarded. During 1953-56, M1s were produced by International Harvester and Harrington & Richardson in which International Harvester alone produced a total of 337,623 M1 Garands.[32][33] A final, very small lot of M1s was produced by Springfield Armory in early 1957, using finished components already on hand. Beretta also produced Garands using Winchester tooling. In 1939, the British Army looked at the M1 as a possible replacement for its bolt-action Lee-Enfield No.1 Mk III., but decided against it as by January 1940 the Birmingham Small Arms Company was already preparing production of the Lee-Enfield Mk IV.[34] However, surplus M1 rifles were provided as foreign aid to American allies, including South Korea, West Germany, Italy, Japan, Denmark, Greece, Turkey, Iran, South Vietnam, the Philippines, etc. Most Garands shipped to allied nations were predominantly manufactured by International Harvester Corporation during the period of 1953-56, and second from Springfield Armory from all periods.[33] Some Garands were still being used by the United States into the Vietnam War in 1963; despite the M14's official adoption in 1958, it was not until 1965 that the changeover from the M1 Garand was fully completed in the active-duty component of the Army (with the exception of the sniper variants, which were introduced in World War II and saw action in Korea and Vietnam). The Garand remained in service with the Army Reserve, Army National Guard, and the Navy into the early 1970s. The South Korean Army was using M1 Garands in the Vietnam War as late as 1966.[35]
BananaRblx pov: Our content monitors that your behavior in Roblox has been in violation of our *Terms of use.* Reason: Online dating Offensive item: Zaddy *Your account has been terminated.*
I'm shocked beacuse I was playing brookhaven, a person said "you're beautiful please can you be my girlfriend?" then I told: "Ty for the compliment, but I arleady have a boyfriend" (Thats not true, BUT I DIDNT WANTED TO DATE HIM, SO I TOLD HIM THAT 😭✋), NOW I'M SHOCKED EVEN MORE! 💀✋
W VIDEO DADDY!
BANANARBLX?? DADDY? 😱
Fr
SUS
you are the guy who did really bad things...
@@2yxle look at his recent video
i like how bonbo said "a pig uh no thanks bro i already got one next to me"
Bruh
@@tamannaakter9862 wrong time for the bruh my friend was dying on the floor when she heard that(not actually but she was laughing a lot)
W roast
Ædo aß
XD💀
1:40
Biggest roast in roblox
W BONBO
The part that makes me laugh is the part when that bonbo screams when the dude crawls under its makes me laugh so hard
Fun fact about Bonbo:
1. Favorite word daddy
2. Content sus videos
Me:☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️
"If he keeps acting sus... JUST RUN HIM OVER WITH A BUS". Wise quotes
i would say that too
Master oogway taught u didn’t he?
Mhm
@@imoof5523 MHM UWUWUWUWIUWUWUWU
YASSSSSSSSSS
6:45 LOL HIS SCREAMS WERE HEARABLE🤣
Ikr
“I got a pig right next to me” caught be dying in laughter 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 1:46
You should do being sus to my sus friend for 24 hours
5:15 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 😂😂😂 😂
“It reminds me of cream”💀
Wtf I had a sus friend too
Ok
@@CypherSonicAEthat’s all you have to say
I love this video so much thank you bonbo
As a person who has 20 gay friends in roblox I can relate to this😂
: 💀 how 20 friend gay
Friend gay : 0
Girl I have 20 gay friends too
Banger video bonbo u make my day. Also very sus lmao.
Yeah..
The end cracked me up😢
Bonbos favourite word is 100% Daddy
"ActUaLLY ItS ZADDy"
@@StingzGTAG yeah lol(i hate bonbo)
@@ilovejesusandgod24why do you hate him I litterly love him (as a good poster)
@@ilovejesusandgod24I only hate him when tap is here lol
WHAT THE HECK?!!?!???!
bonbo i think your friend is not sus he simply just came out the closet
Lmfao. 💀
1:42 😂😂
Bonbo I'm your biggest fan
Most SUS Video of all of them in the world. XD 😆 🤣
Guys Forward the Video in 5:09 that was the most Sus💀
💀
If i was handcuffed to someone then i would close my eyes if he/she would use the bathroom 😭😭
The M1 Garand or M1 rifle[1] is a semi-automatic rifle that was the service rifle of the U.S. Army during World War II and the Korean War.
The rifle is chambered for the .30-06 Springfield cartridge and is named after its Canadian-American designer, John Garand. It was the first standard-issue autoloading rifle for the United States.[13] By most accounts, the M1 rifle performed well. General George S. Patton called it "the greatest battle implement ever devised".[14][15] The M1 replaced the bolt-action M1903 Springfield as the U.S.' service rifle in 1936,[16] and was itself replaced by the selective-fire M14 rifle on March 26, 1958.[17]
Pronunciation
Sources differ on the pronunciation of the M1 Garand. Some, such as General Julian Hatcher's The Book of the Garand (1948), give /ˈɡærənd/, identical to the pronunciation of John Garand's surname.[18] However, a 1952 issue of Armed Forces Talk, a periodical published by the U.S. Department of Defense, gives the pronunciation as /ɡəˈrænd/, saying "popular usage has placed the accent on the second syllable, so that the rifle has become the 'guh-RAND.'"[19] American Rifleman magazine, while acknowledging /ɡəˈrænd/ as the pronunciation favored by U.S. servicemen, deemed either pronunciation valid.[20]
History
M1 Garand with en bloc clips
M1 Garand displayed with en bloc clip at U.S. Army Museum of Hawaii
Development
French Canadian-born Garand[21] went to work at the United States Army's Springfield Armory and began working on a .30 caliber primer actuated blowback Model 1919 prototype. In 1924, twenty-four rifles, identified as "M1922s", were built at Springfield. At Fort Benning during 1925, they were tested against models by Berthier, Hatcher-Bang, Thompson, and Pedersen, the latter two being delayed blowback types.[22] This led to a further trial of an improved "M1924" Garand against the Thompson, ultimately producing an inconclusive report.[22] As a result, the Ordnance Board ordered a .30-06 Garand variant. In March 1927, the cavalry board reported trials among the Thompson, Garand, and 03 Springfield had not led to a clear winner. This led to a gas-operated .276 (7 mm) model (patented by Garand on April 12, 1930).[22]
In early 1928, both the infantry and cavalry boards ran trials with the .276 Pedersen T1 rifle, calling it "highly promising"[22] (despite its use of waxed ammunition,[23] shared by the Thompson).[24] On August 13, 1928, a semiautomatic rifle board (SRB) carried out joint Army, Navy, and Marine Corps trials between the .30 Thompson, both cavalry and infantry versions of the T1 Pedersen, "M1924" Garand, and .256 Bang, and on September 21, the board reported no clear winner. The .30 Garand, however, was dropped in favor of the .276.[25]
Further tests by the SRB in July 1929, which included rifle designs by Browning, Colt-Browning, Garand, Holek, Pedersen, Rheinmetall, Thompson, and an incomplete one by White,[nb 2] led to a recommendation that work on the (dropped) .30 gas-operated Garand be resumed, and a T1E1 was ordered November 14, 1929.
Twenty gas-operated .276 T3E2 Garands were made and competed with T1 Pedersen rifles in early 1931. The .276 Garand was the clear winner of these trials. The .30 caliber Garand was also tested, in the form of a single T1E1, but was withdrawn with a cracked bolt on October 9, 1931. A January 4, 1932 meeting recommended adoption of the .276 caliber and production of approximately 125 T3E2s. Meanwhile, Garand redesigned his bolt and his improved T1E2 rifle was retested. The day after the successful conclusion of this test, Army Chief of Staff General Douglas MacArthur personally disapproved any caliber change, in part because there were extensive existing stocks of .30 M1 ball ammunition.[26] On February 25, 1932, Adjutant General John B. Shuman, speaking for the Secretary of War, ordered work on the rifles and ammunition in .276 caliber cease immediately and completely, and all resources be directed toward identification and correction of deficiencies in the Garand .30 caliber.[24]: 111
On August 3, 1933, the T1E2 became the "semi-automatic rifle, caliber 30, M1".[22] In May 1934, 75 M1s went to field trials; 50 went to infantry, 25 to cavalry units.[24]: 113 Numerous problems were reported, forcing the rifle to be modified, yet again, before it could be recommended for service and cleared for procurement on November 7, 1935, then standardized January 9, 1936.[22] The first production model was successfully proof-fired, function-fired, and fired for accuracy on July 21, 1937.[27]
Production difficulties delayed deliveries to the Army until September 1937. Machine production began at Springfield Armory that month at a rate of ten rifles per day,[28] and reached an output of 100 per day within two years. Despite going into production status, design issues were not at an end. The barrel, gas cylinder, and front sight assembly were redesigned and entered production in early 1940. Existing "gas-trap" rifles were recalled and retrofitted, mirroring problems with the earlier M1903 Springfield rifle that also had to be recalled and reworked approximately three years into production and foreshadowing rework of the M16 rifle at a similar point in its development. Production of the Garand increased in 1940 despite these difficulties,[29] reaching 600 a day by January 10, 1941,[22] and the Army was fully equipped by the end of 1941.[26] Following the outbreak of World War II in Europe, Winchester was awarded an "educational" production contract for 65,000 rifles,[22] with deliveries beginning in 1943.[22]
Service use
John Garand (left) points out features of the M1 to army generals
George Patton letter to Springfield Armory on the M1 Garand, January 26, 1945
U.S. Army infantryman in 1942 with M1 in front of an M3 half-track at Fort Knox, Kentucky
U.S. Marine Corps Silent Drill Team with M1 rifles
The M1 Garand was made in large numbers during World War II; approximately 5.4 million were made.[30] They were used by every branch of the United States military. The rifle generally performed well. General George S. Patton called it "the greatest battle implement ever devised."[15] The typical opponent of a US soldier during World War II was usually armed with a slower-firing bolt-action rifle (e.g. the Karabiner 98k for Germany, the Carcano M1891 for Italy, and the Type 38 or Type 99 Arisaka rifle for Japan). The impact of faster-firing infantry small arms in general soon stimulated both Allied and Axis forces to greatly increase their issue of semi- and fully automatic firearms then in production, as well as to develop new types of infantry firearms.[31]
Many M1s were repaired or rebuilt after World War II. While U.S. forces were still engaged in the Korean War, the Department of Defense decided more were needed. Springfield Armory ramped up production, but two new contracts were awarded. During 1953-56, M1s were produced by International Harvester and Harrington & Richardson in which International Harvester alone produced a total of 337,623 M1 Garands.[32][33] A final, very small lot of M1s was produced by Springfield Armory in early 1957, using finished components already on hand. Beretta also produced Garands using Winchester tooling.
In 1939, the British Army looked at the M1 as a possible replacement for its bolt-action Lee-Enfield No.1 Mk III., but decided against it as by January 1940 the Birmingham Small Arms Company was already preparing production of the Lee-Enfield Mk IV.[34] However, surplus M1 rifles were provided as foreign aid to American allies, including South Korea, West Germany, Italy, Japan, Denmark, Greece, Turkey, Iran, South Vietnam, the Philippines, etc. Most Garands shipped to allied nations were predominantly manufactured by International Harvester Corporation during the period of 1953-56, and second from Springfield Armory from all periods.[33]
Some Garands were still being used by the United States into the Vietnam War in 1963; despite the M14's official adoption in 1958, it was not until 1965 that the changeover from the M1 Garand was fully completed in the active-duty component of the Army (with the exception of the sniper variants, which were introduced in World War II and saw action in Korea and Vietnam). The Garand remained in service with the Army Reserve, Army National Guard, and the Navy into the early 1970s. The South Korean Army was using M1 Garands in the Vietnam War as late as 1966.[35]
Guys I found the quite kid
Bonbo your literally sus yourself....
Hey bonbon daddy 😏
3:42 he mean milk sus🤨
Daddy bonbo
I think I need therapy 😃
Same
i was your 1k like
3:59 OUR???!?!??!?!
TH-cam: deleted
My life: restarted
Therapist: greeted
Bleach and holy water: needed
Search history: deleted
Bonbo you should live stream again, but last time you live streamed I was in school so rip
What if you make a video that you have to say every time your friend says do stuff
"A pig,no bro i already got one next to me"💀💀
His friend being Him:being sus to youtuber
AYO SUS 🤨 8:06
Bonb.If u don't want so break it.If u don't want so stand over there.If u want too.
What kind of cream? 8:10
Wassup daddy
I watch this 1000 times because it’s so freaking funny
I really hope y’all were trolling 😂😂😂😂😂
Also let’s appreciate how he dies for youtube 😂❤
Uh uh uh ah uwu ah uh- Finally my Brain Activated
Bonbo your buddy tap did actual sus things
How
Bruh 2:00
6:46 the screammmmmm 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Even tho Ik that this vid is fake, it’s still really good!
W Daddy banbo
Real taste of own medicine. You being sus to tap. Digito and other
BONBO YOU CRACK ME UP I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS AND I LIKE YOUR DRIP AND THIS IS THE FIRST TIME WATCHING YOUR VID
Great video Bonbo! As the 1 viewer as u said, I must comment on every video
@@ericsysccc no like he said I’m his 1 viewer ever
@@Sirmanwiththeplan rly?
DID ANYONE SEE THE CHAT SAYING “mwa mwa” “ come back too bed daddy”
I had a bully friend😭😭😭😭
BananaRblx pov:
Our content monitors that your behavior in Roblox has been in violation of our *Terms of use.*
Reason: Online dating
Offensive item: Zaddy
*Your account has been terminated.*
Btw you could just leave the game lol
I'm shocked beacuse I was playing brookhaven, a person said "you're beautiful please can you be my girlfriend?" then I told: "Ty for the compliment, but I arleady have a boyfriend" (Thats not true, BUT I DIDNT WANTED TO DATE HIM, SO I TOLD HIM THAT 😭✋), NOW I'M SHOCKED EVEN MORE! 💀✋
U did right thing
The ”AAHHAHAHHH“ just to loud
I LIKE IT
I like how bonbo said a pig uh no thanks bro I already got one next to me so funny
AYO THAT'S WHY I DON'T HAVE A SUNDAY FRIEND BONBO
This sus video make me laugh😂🤣😂🤣😂
I actually like your sus videos more than other ytbr's
I am gonna sit my pants
*Moans proudly*
I love how this is just Bonbo with Tap, but a pig
That’s not Tap that’s the worst TH-camr BananaRblx
@@splitsrt no I know this isn't tap, I'm just saying this is how bonbo is so sus with tap
@@thedollinyourcloset Oh
Bonbo I friended ur sus friend on roblox to see if my sus friend wants to be friends with him
Bombo now:
Bombo before:
Which is better.
I started to cough when I was yawning I think this vid made me cough
Hahahaha this is so funny 😂😂😂😂 2:31
😅😮😅😅😅😅😅
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🤮🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😭😭😭😭😭😂😂😂🤣🤣😭😭😭😭😭🤣🤣🤣🤣😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭🤣🤣🤣😭🤣🤣😭🤣😭😭🤣😭
RIP BONBO
I almost fell if my chair from laughing
I wish i did that with my friend lemon.
I MEAN no
Ayooooooo this video is so sus bonbo I feel bad
Grass:is a plant that grows from the ground.
Fun fact:I like every plant!
Do anyone know that Bonbo is a kid 🤔
👁👄👁
you started youtube 1 day after my birthday!
This is a funny video what is his friend be doing the guy with the orange
Tally did something like this
Tappy
Nice
w video dude 😎 but you're still sus
EARLY NGGAS
You were sus to tapwater in roblox Bedwars💀💀💀💀💀💀☠☠☠☠
Like you were SUSSY💀💀💀
Bruh💀💀💀
Why Sussy backa to tapwater
Okay keep it up tho I like your videos but idk if u were sus to tapwater 😳
Uhh when he said cream means the milk from a man😂 I'm sorry but someone had to say it-
youtubers catch you in 4k
📸👈😶 im speechless
can i die now?
Me when i saw the video thumbnail:
Uhhhhh ya i need to watch this.......
I love your vids
Bonbo I just met you where did you go?
W bonbo you new play brookhaven
I subbed and like your vid 0:53 it was great w video daddy
When you said my sus friend i thought your friend was mirror
💀📷caught in 4k
Now I got why your friend is sus
This reminds me of wilfie my stalker
that dude is crazy bro why can,t this dude leve you alone its so mad sus like really mad sus
-Nice-edit-
Bonbo what is your sus friend TH-cam channel name
friend after the vid:when i can stop making these videos😢
BOMBO!!!,why did you do this.ahhh!!! my eye!!!
3:41 thats sus