Pedersen device used in a modified Mosin Nagant bolt action rifle that allowed it to fire a .30 caliber pistol-type cartridge in semi-automatic mode.
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Pedersen device used in a modified Mosin Nagant bolt action rifle that allowed it to fire a .30 caliber pistol-type cartridge in semi-automatic mode.

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Could you please do a write-up of the M1918 Pedersen Device?
I have been intending to cover the Pedersen for such a long time. I do have upcoming posts on a few other of Pedersenās designs but I will try and get a proper piece on the Pedersen Device done in the near future!Ā
Thanks for the suggestion
John Pedersenās Military Combination Rifle
In July 1920,Ā John Pedersen filed a patent for a military combination rifle combining a bolt action rifle with a submachine gun. No doubt an evolution of Pedersenās work with the Pedersen Device developed during the First World War.
Pedersen sought to combine the power, range and accuracy of a full-power rifle cartridge but also give soldiers the shorter range firepower of a blowback actioned, submachine gun. Pedersenās patent explains his aims:Ā
āA principal object of the invention is to furnish a weapon of that class comprising a pair of firearms, preferably each having a magazine, - one for each of said purposes, respectively combined in a system whereby each of said firearms may be used either independently of or concurrently with the other, and so arranged that while the gunner may be using one firearm the other may be held loaded and the magazine thereof fully charged, in readiness for instant use without regard to the use or non-use of such firearm.ā
The rifle featured in the patent drawings is a Springfield M1903 but Pedersen states that the system could be adapted to any service rifle. Below the main barrel is a secondary barrel capable of both semi-automatic and full-automatic fire depending on trigger pull. The secondary barrel ran from just in front of the rifleās magazine to the rifleās nose cap. Holding the trigger depressed causes the ā...loading and firing operations [to] become automatic and may so continue until the supply of cartridges in the magazine is exhausted.ā
Springfield 1903 fitted with Pedersen Device and magazine (source)
Pedersen also explains his system for aligning the two barrels so that āthe trajectory of the short-range projectiles may cross that of the long-range projectiles in two points, and thereby provide for the proper sighting of each said firearms by the use of the same sights.ā Pedersen explains that āthe soldier when surprised by a nearby enemy... can instantly bring into action the rapid-fire automatic mechanism without having to change the sights or make any allowance for the different range.ā (see image #3)
Pedersen remained wedded to the marching/walking fire concept that grew during World War One, and on which the Pedersen Device was based, seeking to give troops both an accurate long range rifle and increased short range firepower. This design followed the practical criticisms aimed at Pedersenās earlierĀ āDeviceā. The new design removed the need to remove the rifle bolt, it also re-positioned the magazine to a more ergonomic position. And it also separated the trigger mechanisms of the two elements of the weapon - the Pedersen Device had a notoriously heavy trigger pull.Ā
Traditionally, combination guns were hunting weapons although there have been some practical military applications. Some of the earliest were used during the 18th and 19th centuries. Later examples include the M6 Aircrew Survival Weapon issued by the US Air Force in aircraft survival kits combined either a .22 or .45 calibre rifled barrel with a .410 shotgun barrel. Another example are the Heckler & Koch and AAI prototypes developed for the Objective Individual Combat Weapon program during the 1990s which combined a 5.56mm rifle with a 20mm grenade launcher.Ā
Heckler & Koch XM29 OICW entry with integrated 20 mm smart grenade launcher and 5.56mm assault rifle (source)
Pedersenās combination rifle had two triggers, one for the rifle and a second for the submachine gun. The second trigger was linked by a transfer bar to the action of the submachine gun (see image #2). While the main barrel fed from the rifleās normal internal box magazine the secondary submachine gun barrel fed from a short, single-stack box magazine. With two barrels, actions and loaded magazines the rifle would certainly have been heavier than standard rifles. Pedersen makes no mention of the calibre of the submachine gun but does warn that more powerful ammunition would require a heavier bolt which would increase the weaponās weight. It is likely that Pedersen envisaged the submachine gun using the .30 Pedersen (later known as 7.65Ć20mm Longue) round developed for the Pedersen Device.Ā
One of the positives of the combination rifle over the earlier Pedersen Device was that the two barrels allowed for optimisation of the barrelsā rifling for the two different projectiles. As the submachine gunās barrel would heat up quickly the main barrel acts as a heatsink. While Pedersenās patent was granted in 1924, it is unknown if a prototype of his ingenious combination rifle was ever made.Ā
Source:
āFirearmā, J. D. Pedersen, US Patent #1487801, 25th March, 1924 (source)
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The Peterson Device
I found a lot of useful information today while researching but one memo that stood out amongst the hundreds of pages was this one about theĀ āPeterson Deviceā.
The memo to one of Winchesterās Vice Presidents, JE Otterson, reports a conversation with a USMC major who told Brewer that the Springfield Armory was working on 60,000 rifles capable of mounting the mysteriousĀ āPeterson Deviceā. Clearly Brewer misheard and Major Dooley was referring to the top secret Pedersen Device (or US Automatic Pistol, Caliber .30, Model of 1918), designed by John Pedersen to allow standard issue M1903ā²s to fire a pistol calibre round semi-automatically.Ā
A disassembled Pedersen Device (source)
The āG17Rā in the memoās header is the internal Winchester designation for the M1917. It appears the Ordnance Department hadnāt approached Winchester about the Pedersen Device. The date of the memo is a little unclear, but probably dates from March 1918.
Although the M1917 was adapted to mount the Pedersen Device, the work was done by Remington who produced M1917s and their engineer, Pedersen, had developed the device. Reportedly, three M1917 Pedersen Device-capable prototypes but the adaptation wasnāt made on a mass scale. The Pedersen Device was never fielded but as the memo notes tests indicated it wasĀ
Source:
Winchester Records held by the McCracken Research Library at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West
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