The 'Vickers machine gun' or 'Vickers gun' is a name primarily used to refer to the
water-cooled .303 inch machine gun produced by
Vickers Limited, originally for the
British Army. The
machine gun typically required a six to eight-man team to operate: one to fire, one to feed the ammunition, and the rest to help carry the weapon, its ammunition and spare parts.
The gun had a reputation for great solidity and reliability.
Ian V. Hogg, in ''Weapons & War Machines'', describes an action that took place in August, 1916, during which the 100th Company of the
Machine Gun Corps fired their ten Vickers guns continuously for twelve hours. They fired a million rounds between them, using one hundred new barrels, without a single breakdown. "It was this absolute foolproof reliability which endeared the Vickers to every British soldier who ever fired one."
[1]
History
The Vickers machine gun was based on the successful
Maxim gun of the late 19th Century. After purchasing the Maxim company outright in 1896, Vickers took the design of the Maxim gun and improved it, reducing its weight, and adding a
muzzle booster.
The British Army formally adopted the Vickers gun as its standard machine gun on
26 November 1912, using it alongside their Maxims. There were still great shortages when the First World War began, and the
British Expeditionary Force was still equipped with Maxims when sent to France in 1914. Vickers was, in fact, threatened with prosecution for war-profiteering, due to the exorbitant price it was demanding for the gun. The price was slashed as a result. As the war progressed, and numbers increased, it became the British Army's primary machine gun, and served on all fronts during the conflict. When the
Lewis Gun was adopted as a ''light'' machine gun, and issued to infantry units, the Vickers guns, redefined as ''heavy'' machine guns were withdrawn from infantry units and grouped in the hands of the new
Machine Gun Corps (when 0.5" calibre machine guns appeared, the tripod-mounted, rifle calibre machine guns like the Vickers became ''medium'' machine guns). After the War, the Machine Gun Corps (MGC) was disbanded and the Vickers returned to infantry units. Before the Second World War there were plans to replace it; one of the contenders was the 7.92 mm
Besa machine gun (a Czech design), which eventually became the British Army's standard tank-mounted machine gun. However, the Vickers remained in service with the British Army until
30 March 1968. Its last operational use was in the
Radfan during the
Aden Emergency. Its successor in UK service is the
L7 GPMG.
The Vickers became standard weapons on all
British and
French military aircraft after 1916, including the famous
Sopwith Camel and the
SPAD XIII. The gun was usually fitted with a form of
synchronizer gear to allow it to fire through aircraft
propellers, and slots were cut in the water jacket so that it was cooled by air flow instead of water, a common practice on WWI airplanes.
As the machine gun armament of fighters moved from the fuselage to the wings in the years before WW2, the Vickers with its cloth belts was generally replaced by the faster-firing
Browning Model 1919. Several British bombers and attack aircraft of WW2 mounted the
Vickers K machine gun, a completely different design.
Variants
The larger calibre (half-inch) version of the Vickers was used as an anti-aircraft gun on British ships as the '0.5"/62 Vickers Machine Gun Mark III'. These were typically four guns on rotating (360°) elevating (+80° to -10°) mounting. The belts were rolled into a spiral and placed in hoppers beside each gun. The heavy plain bullet weighed 1.3 oz and was good for 1,500 yd range (1,300 m). They were fitted from the 1920s onwards but in practical terms proved of little use.
Foreign service
The Vickers was widely sold commercially and saw service with many nations and their own particular ammunition. For example:
★ 6.5 mm Italian
★
6.5 mm Arisaka
★ 6.5x54R Dutch
★
7x57 Mauser
★ 7.5x55
Swiss
★
7.62x51 NATO
★
.30-06 Springfield
★
7.62x54R Russian
★ 7.65x53 Mauser
★ 8 mm Lebel
The Vickers MG remains in service with the
Indian,
Pakistani, and
Nepalese armed forces, albeit as a reserve weapon, intended for emergency use in the event of a major conflict.
Specifications
The weight of the gun itself varied based on the gear attached, but was generally between 25 and 30 pounds (11 and 13 kg), with a 40 to 50 pound (18 to 23 kg) tripod. The ammunition boxes for the 250 round ammunition belts weighed 22 pounds (10 kg) each. In addition, it required about 7.5 imperial
pints (4.3 litres) of water in its
evaporative cooling system to prevent overheating. The heat of the barrel boiled the water in the jacket surrounding it. The resulting steam was taken off by flexible tube to a condenser container - this had the dual benefits of avoiding giving away the gun's location, and also enabling re-use of the water, which was very important in arid environments.

Rimmed, centrefire .303 inch (7.7 mm) cartridge from WWII.
In British service, the Vickers gun fired the standard
.303 inch (7.7 x 56 mm) cartridges used in the
Lee Enfield rifle, which generally had to be hand-loaded into the cloth ammunition belts. There was also a 0.5 inch (12.7 mm) calibre version used as an anti-aircraft weapon and various other calibres produced for foreign buyers. Some British tanks of the early Second World War were equipped with the 0.5 inch (12.7 mm) Vickers.
The gun was 3 feet 8 inches (1.1 m) long and its cyclic rate of fire was between 450 and 600 rounds per minute. In practice, it was expected that 10,000 rounds would be fired per hour, and that the barrel would be changed every hour - a two-minute job for a trained team. Firing the Mark 8 cartridge, which had a streamlined bullet, it could be used against targets at a range of approximately 4,500
yards (4.1
kilometres).
See also
★
Vickers K Machine gun
★
Kjellman machine gun
★
Schwarzlose MG M.07/12
★
Vickers .50 machine gun
Notes
1. Weapons & War Machines, , Ian V., Hogg, Phoebus, , ISBN 0-7026-0008-3
"The Vickers gun accompanied the BEF to France in 1914, and in the years that followed proved itself to be the most reliable weapon on the battlefield, some of its feats of endurance entering military mythology. Perhaps the most incredible was the action by the 100th Company of the Machine Gun Corps at High Wood on August 24, 1916. This company had ten Vickers guns, and it was ordered to give sustained covering fire for 12 hours onto a selected area 2,000 yards away in order to prevent German troops forming up there for a counter-attack while a British attack was in progress. Two whole companies of infantrymen were allocated as carriers of ammunition, rations and water for the machine-gunners. Two men worked a belt-filling machine non-stop for 12 hours keeping up a supply of 250-round belts. One hundred new barrels were used up, and every drop of water in the neighbourhood, including the men’s drinking water and contents of the latrine buckets, went up in steam to keep the guns cool. And in that 12-hour period the ten guns fired a million rounds between them. One team fired 120,000 from one gun to win a five-franc prize offered to the highest-scoring gun. And at the end of that 12 hours every gun was working perfectly and not one gun had broken down during the whole period. It was this absolute foolproof reliability which endeared the Vickers to every British soldier who ever fired one. It never broke down; it just kept on firing and came back for more. And that was why the Mark 1 Vickers gun was to remain the standard medium machine-gun from 1912 to 1968."
Further reading
★ Anon, ''Vickers, Sons and Maxim Limited: Their Works and Manufactures. (Reprinted from 'Engineering')'' London (1898).
:Plates showing the mechanism of the forerunner of the Vickers gun, the Vickers Maxim gun as well as numerous plates of the factories in which they and other arms were made.
External links
★
Vickers machine gun
★
Spartacus Educational - Vickers machine gun