The Beretta Model 1923 pistol was a service pistol used by the Italian Army from 1923 until 1945. The M1923 was designed to consolidate the improvements of the 1915/19 model and to use the 9mm Glisenti round. However, due to the vast amount of handguns available after the end of World War I only 3000 samples, of about 10.000 produced, were purchased by the Italian Army.
9-607: M1923 may refer to: Beretta M1923 , a semi-automatic pistol M1923 helmet (Denmark) , a combat helmet used by the Danish military M1923 medium tank prototype, United States; pre–World War II M1923 sniper rifle, a subtype of the Krag–Jørgensen sniper rifle Thompson Model 1923, a heavy submachine gun variant of the Thompson submachine gun [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
18-516: A pistol in 9mm Glisenti caliber as a replacement for the military’s M1915 pistols. It incorporated the M1915/1919 changes plus adding an external hammer. The M1923 is a semi-automatic pistol with a 4-inch (100 mm) barrel and 7 shot detachable magazine. The slide is marked "Brev 1915-1919 Mlo 1923". Some of the M1923 pistols have grooves for a shoulder stock holster machined into the bottom of
27-464: Is a small lever on the rear of the frame. If either safety is set, the pistol will not fire. Also manufactured by Beretta and adopted by the Italian military was a scaled-down version of this pistol in 7.65mm . In addition to being smaller, it did not have the manual safety at the rear of the frame. In 1919 improvements were made to the smaller 7.65mm M1915 design. The round post barrel mount where
36-475: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Beretta M1923 The Glisenti Model 1910 was the first Italian produced semi auto pistol adopted by the Italian military. Designed by Bethel Revelli it was originally chambered for a bottlenecked 7.65 mm round, which was similar to the 7.65×21mm Parabellum . Later, having the Italian Army judged
45-550: The 7.65 round to be too light for military use, and having launched a competition for 9mm handguns instead, the Metallurgica Bresciana Tampini, owner of the design, adapted the Glisenti pistol to fire a 9mm round, obtained enlarging the original one (eliminating the bottleneck) without changing the load. Therefore, although being the cartridge dimensionally identical to the 9mm Luger (that was obtained in
54-507: The barrel was lifted straight up out of the frame was replaced with a T slot mount. This required a larger opening in the top of the slide so the double opening of the M1915 was changed to a single longer one. The slide now looked like the characteristic open-top Beretta style. The redesigned pistol is marked on the slide 1915–1919, otherwise known as the M1915/19 . In 1921 Beretta introduced
63-474: The need for more military pistols increased dramatically. In 1915, Tullio Marengoni from Beretta completed his design of a simple blowback action pistol that could fire the same 9mm Glisenti cartridge. This pistol was adopted by the Italian Army as the Beretta M1915 . The M1915 is unusual in the fact that it used two manual safeties. One is a slide stop safety on the left side of the frame. The other
72-450: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=M1923&oldid=1100005658 " Category : Letter–number combination disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
81-494: The same way from the 7.65×21mm Parabellum , but increasing the load) the 9mm Glisenti cartridge has a load that is about 1/4 lighter than the original military load of the 9mm Luger. The Glisenti Model 1910 suffered however from a lack of robustness due to its weak frame design. The bolt assembly in the receiver is supported only on one side. This lack of structural integrity led all of the stresses of firing to be taken up by just one side rail. When Italy entered World War I ,
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