They were used much later than that. I was still being issued one for the top of my M113 until spring of 1997.C5 was the designation of the old Browning M1919 GPMG. Yeah, we used them until 1985.
Canada adopted the Browning M1919A4, rechambered 7.62mm NATO ammunition, and designated it the C1 for fixed applications and C1A1 for flexible applications. Product improvements to the gun saw them redesignated C5 and C5A1 respectively.
And I thought in 1978 that it was incredible that we were still using a WW2 GPMG! (That being said, it was cool to fire those long bursts).stencollector said:They were used much later than that. I was still being issued one for the top of my M113 until spring of 1997.
This one is from late '70's timeframe. Still says C1 at that time. (Knew I had one so I dug it up and just took a couple pics of it).stencollector said:That said, the operators handbook for this gun is titled:
"The machine gun, 7.62mm C5"
1. The Machine-Gun, 7.62 millimetre, C5A1 is the second generation of the C1 general purpose machine-gun. Normally the C1 weapon upon modification would have been designated C1A1, the "A1" suffix denoting the first major change. However, this would have confused the weapon with the C1A1 rifle, so a new specific identifier was deemed necessary for this new weapon configuration. In 1978, the new identifier C5A1 was adopted to designate weapons modified to the current configuration.
2. The Machine-Gun, 7.62 millimetre, C1, which is the basis for the C5A1 weapon, was itself a converted weapon. The C1 weapon was a standard Browning .30 calibre 1919A4 general purpose machine-gun converted to accept and fire 7.62 millimetre NATO standard ammunition. The first generation configuration, embodied in 1967, suffered from some basic design problems creating operative malfunctions. Further design problems that were required to solve these problems and create the C5A1 configuration weapon are as follows:...
stencollector said:This is from the FRT. I had to take a photo of the photo on my monitor, since the FRT doesn't allow you to export the photos, other than to your printer. Someone more computer literate than me might be able to do it, but this is as far as my computer skills will take me.
Sure. Check your PM.stencollector said:Your copy of CFP 317-4 is one I do not have in my collection. Do you want to part with it? Another item I need for my GPMG collection is the checklist for either the C1 or the C5A1 GPMG. I would like to make sure I have all the appropriate goodies in the chest.



























