The SVT failed in its design goals of being sufficiently reliable and soldier-proof and had a limited production run by Soviet standards. Other than captured examples used by the Axis, I've never really heard of it being well spoken of, nor are here derivatives of still in service with real militaries today as with the Garand.
If not a flop, it was disappointingly meh.
No actually it didn't flop. The SVT 40 was being utilized in the worse combat conditions of the entire war. Winters and mud that were taking out even bolt action rifles and tanks. It was previously used in the Winter war, the continuation war against the fins as well as WWII when the Germans invaded Russia. The invasion was a surprise to the Russians who were in the process of outfitting 1/3rd of their army with the SVT40 but were unable to do so when they took on horrendous casualties from the Germans. Troop training was non existent as they had to throw farmers out onto the front lines. People forget that
the Eastern front had more casualties than all the other theatres of WWII combined. Add in scorched earth polices, lack of ammunition/food and pretty much all supplies being scarce.
The M1 Garrand was with the right military and on the right front to be successful. The American Army started two years later as they frankly needed to gear up, so were able to field enough of them and trained people on how to use them. They weren't sending the common person into combat with a couple days training as the Russians were being forced to. The Russians were literally rolling T34 tanks partially finished of the manufacturing line and fighting with them to survive. The only reason they couldn't keep making the SVT 40 was due to needing cheap fast to make weapons right away that anyone seeing a rifle for the first time could use, as their loses were horrendous.
With the fastest way to reload being to fire off the remaining rounds, the Garand was again with the right military. Any other military in WWII under the conditions they were fighting wouldn't be able to waste ammunition like that. Also the Garand didn't have a dust cover which would have also been an issue on the Eastern front. The SVT 40 had a dust cover, could use stripper clips and had detachable magazines.
The SVT40 was prolific on the Eastern front and used by both sides. That Eastern front frankly really changed the way the war was going. Contrary to saving private ryan and all the other WWII American movies.
I don't know where you guys are getting this idea that they weren't reliable from. I've shot a number of them and they were very reliable. I never even thought about that until I read it here. The operating principle is exactly the same as the FN FAl. There is
nothing unreliable about it. The only reason some on here think they are unreliable is because the gas block isn't set right or they are throwing all kinds of ammunition in it with the setting specifically setup for something else. Think what the quality of ammunition would have been like on the Eastern front!! In the video of the SVT40 vs Garrand you will notice he had issues when he went to Russian surplus while the previous owner had used Bulgarian surplus. Different ammunition!! Also the ammunition wouldn't be loaded for the SVT40 and instead most likely the Draganuv etc. The
only real issue with the SVT 40 was the light stock which they often field rigged with cross bolts to fix that. Or you will see many of our refurbs n the heavier AVT stock.
Specifications of the SVT 40:
8.5 pounds with 24" barrel. Long action, detachable magazines, 1:10 twist 24" barrel, adjustable gas block, muzzle brake, FN FAL style gas piston/tilting block action. Anyone else noting that this compares not too bad to today's 308 semi autos? put on a 20" barrel and you are right there.
Let's look again at how this rifle was actually regarded.
1) Finns captured a lot of them and reissued them to their troops in the Winter War and continuation War. They retired them from service in 1958.
2) Finns made a prototype copy of the SVT 40 the Tapako
3) Germans captured hundreds of thousands of them, reissued them as the 259r including manuals and made ammunition for them. Then based their gas system for the G43 off the SVT40.
4) The Swiss made a SVT 40 copy called the AK44 . It wasn't adopted but still they respected the rifle enough to make a copy of it.
5) It wasn't until about 1955 that the SVT40 was out of service
By the way the SKS borrowed from the SVT40. The SKS was a progression from the SVT40 before being replaced by the AK. SKS tilting block, short stroke.
The end of the SVT 40 was really the AK. Which goes back to the Russian experience of having to face the SGT44. They learned and changed their army to reflect those lessons. They were one if not the first military to change over that quickly to a shorter intermediate cartridge so called assault rifle over the main battle rifle. The rest of the world was still using the battle rifle until the 60's or in Canada and other Commonwealth countries the 80s.
I will also add that the M14 is really the progression for the M1 Garrand. The shortest used US military main issue battle rifle ever. It's replacement? The M16 an intermediate cartridge "assault rifle" that replaced it in the 60's. I would also argue that the concept of the SVT 40 lived on in the FN FAL. The FN FAL was a better execution and had some changes, but the operating mechanism was the same. That lived on into the 80's for Canada. My point is
the short lived lifespan of the SVT 40 seemed to be more of a result of the Europeans being faster on the draw to change their army philosophies and adapt the intermediate cartridge rifle (after seeing it in action with the STG44) as their main military arm. Almost 20 years before the Americans and 37 years before Canada.