This video explores the rare Huot Automatic Rifle, a Canadian World War I era experimental machine gun based on the Ross rifle. It delves into the history and mechanics of this unique firearm, highlighting its status as a forgotten weapon. The analysis focuses on its design and potential role in military history, contrasting it with more common firearms of the era.
This YouTube video focuses on the Canadian Ross Rifle MkIII, offering a comprehensive look at this historical firearm. While the description doesn't detail the specific content, it directs viewers to a full documentary for deeper insight and provides links for supporting the creator and purchasing merchandise. The video is part of a series from CandRsenal, known for their detailed firearm content.
This "I Have This Old Gun" segment from American Rifleman Television explores the history and evolution of the Canadian Ross Rifle, specifically the Mk III model. The video details Canada's desire for its own distinct military equipment in the early 20th century, leading to the development of the Ross straight-pull bolt-action rifle. It highlights inventor Sir Charles Ross's character, early design flaws, and improvements made by the Mk III. The segment also discusses the rifle's challenges during trench warfare in World War I due to mud, ultimately leading to its replacement by the Lee-Enfield SMLE. The video concludes by noting the rifle's eventual retirement from Canadian service.
This YouTube video segment from CandRsenal focuses on the Canadian Ross Rifle MkIII. It is part of a larger Primer episode, and viewers are encouraged to support the channel through Patreon, SubscribeStar, or by purchasing merchandise. The video likely provides an in-depth look at this historical firearm, its features, and its context within firearm history. The description emphasizes that this is a smaller piece of a more comprehensive episode.
This YouTube video, titled "Clips: How Hard is it to Misassemble a Ross Rifle?", is a concise review of facts and information derived from more in-depth content. It focuses on the Canadian Ross Rifle Mark III and its assembly, likely demonstrating potential pitfalls or difficulties. The video also links to a full-length episode about the Ross MkIII and a related video from Forgotten Weapons, offering viewers avenues for deeper exploration into the rifle's history and perceived myths.
This video delves into a rare World War I sniper rifle configuration, specifically the MkIII Ross rifle equipped with a Winchester A5 scope. While the standard Canadian sniper rifle used a Warner & Swasey "musket sight," this example showcases how armorers in the field adapted commercial optics like the A5 to create effective sniping platforms. The A5, a 5x magnification scope with external adjustments, was also found on other military rifles. The video highlights the solid provenance of this particular rifle, noting the difficulty in counterfeiting such custom builds, and the presenter expresses a personal preference for the A5 over the Warner & Swasey.
This video explores a rare toolroom prototype of the Ross rifle from approximately 1909, designated "H5". This experimental rifle was developed to address the Canadian military's need for charger clip compatibility, a feature missing in the successful Ross MkII (1905). The "H5" incorporates a combined stripper clip guide and rear sight, a staggered Mauser-type magazine, a Lee Enfield buttstock, and a Springfield bolt stop, along with a thinner barrel profile. Despite these innovations, the Ross MkIII ultimately did not adopt most of these unique features.
This video showcases an extremely unusual experimental pre-WWI Ross .30-06 machine gun, a prototype submitted to the British War Office in 1914. While its Ross MkIII lineage is visible in the bolt and receiver, it features a long-stroke gas piston, an upside-down action, a 25-round magazine, and a thumbhole stock reminiscent of the Lewis gun. One example was tested in .303 caliber in the UK, while the .30-06 variant featured here was sent to the US for testing. The featured gun, from the Canadian War Museum's collection, offers a rare look at this obscure piece of firearms history.
This Q&A episode of Forgotten Weapons features a discussion with Jonathan Ferguson from the Royal Armouries, focusing on various firearms-related topics. The conversation covers the military wing of the Campaign for Beautiful Rifles, questions about modern rifle cartridge taper, dealing with criticism, unique rimfire rifle designs, hypothetical adaptations of the Pedersen device in WW1, backlog of Zastava videos, the classification of the FG-42, comparisons of Carcano, Ross, and Steyr rifles, favorite pistol-caliber lever actions, filming personal firearms, rifle-caliber blowback designs, rechambering historical rifles, concealing serial numbers, European military surplus in the Old West, audio editing, and "three-gun" choices for fun. They also touch upon the provenance of guns, identifying erroneous historical literature, the effectiveness of belt-fed versus magazine-fed LMGs, details on the M1919 rear sight bracket, the development of 7.62x51mm NATO from .300 Savage, and early British semi-automatic rifle development. Ferguson, as an expert, contributes significantly to the historical and technical discussions.
This video delves into the Canadian Ross MkIII sniper rifle, specifically focusing on its modification and use during World War I. Despite its problematic service as an infantry rifle due to ammunition issues, the Ross found success as a sniper weapon. The video highlights the Canadian modification of 500 Ross rifles with American Warner & Swasey M1913 'Musket Sight' scopes, detailing the scope's features and identification markers. While the scope had its flaws, it was a readily available solution for equipping Canadian snipers when British resources were strained. The rifles were produced in two batches, and many remained in Canada for training, even seeing use until 1942.
This video examines an experimental Ross Machine Gun, a modified Mk III straight-pull bolt-action rifle. The modification includes a gas piston and trigger for automatic fire, and a unique forced-air cooling system. The cooling system features a one-way ratchet mechanism that spins a fan when the bolt cycles, directing air through a barrel shroud. This innovation was likely developed around 1915-1916 for potential military contracts that never materialized. The firearm was filmed with the cooperation of the Canadian War Museum.
This video delves into the history and details of the Royal North West Mounted Police's use of the Ross MkI Carbine and MkII Rifle. It highlights the carbines as the only factory-made Ross carbines, their early production issues in 1904-1905, and the RNWMP's subsequent replacement with MkII rifles. The description details the MkII's delayed arrival, storage by the police commissioner due to quality concerns, a devastating warehouse fire that destroyed most of them, and the eventual adoption of Lee Enfield carbines. The video thanks a collector for providing the firearms for demonstration.