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  1. Weight (loaded): 33.25 pounds (15.1kg) Rate of fire: 470 rounds/minute. Bibliography. Dupuis, Frank J. “The Huot Automatic Rifle” Published in The Canadian Journal: Arms Collecting, 1973. The Huot was a conversion of a Ross straight-pull rifle into light machine gun configuration, which was nearly adopted by the Canadian military in WWI.

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  2. Jul 17, 2013 · The Huot Machine Rifle: A Ross Conversion. The first serious automatic weapon considered for military service in Canada was the brainchild of Joseph Alphonse Huot, a machinist and blacksmith from Quebec. Born in 1878, Huot was a large and strong man (not surprising for a blacksmith), standing 6’1″ tall and weighing in at a muscular 210 pounds.

  3. Since the Ross rifle had finally been taken out of service, there were large numbers of surplus rifles. [citation needed] Joseph Alphonse Huot (1918) That year, Joseph Huot, an engineer from Richmond, Quebec, [ 3 ] adapted the Ross' straight-pull bolt action. His sample model, which shared 33 parts with the Ross Mark III, [ 4 ] had a pneumatic ...

  4. May 1, 2011 · The Huot automatic rifle was tested against other available light machine guns like the Lewis and Farquhar-Hill, and proved surprisingly successful. It was very reliable, even in poor conditions, and was popular with soldiers who used it. Best of all from the government’s view, it was far cheaper to manufacture than the Lewis. An order for ...

  5. Jul 19, 2019 · July 19, 2019. Due to a shortage of Lewis guns and a glut of withdrawn Ross Mk.III rifles once the Canadian Expeditionary Force had been completely re-equipped with Lee-Enfield SMLE rifles, Monsieur Huot proposed to modify Ross rifles into an automatic rifle / light machine gun (LMG) configuration. 5 of these are known to exist, this is number ...

  6. The Huot was also examined at the Rockcliffe Rifle Range on 22 October 1917, which led S. C. Meuburn to recommend it be adopted by the British Army. [4] To further this aim, Blair, A.A. Janson, and Huot sailed for Britain, arriving at Sandling , Hythe on 10 January 1918, for an extensive British trial at the arms testing establishment at RSAF Enfield .

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  8. Dec 14, 2019 · The Ross was the standard issue Canadian rifle at the beginning of the war, and Huot wanted to find a way to economically provide Canadian forces with an automatic weapon. His conversion functioned by mounting a gas piston onto the side of the Ross barrel, adding a large action cover and 25-round drum magazine, and a Lewis-style cooling shroud over the barrel.

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