Forgotten Weapons

Forgotten Weapons is the blog and video series of mechanical engineer Ian Mccollum, in which he takes a look at obscure and unusual firearms.

His YouTube channel is here and his blog can be found at forgottenweapons.com.


 * BFG: A few real life examples, such as the Chinese "Jingal" guns intended to be balanced on fortification walls, and 4-bore rifles meant to stop a charging elephant.
 * Cool Gun: Naturally.
 * Couldn't Find a Lighter: An interview with flamethrower expert Charlie Hobson includes this as a question. Hobson replied that he has done it with propane torch ignited flamethrowers when he used to smoke, but he notes the chemicals involved in period igniter cartridges would make this a bad idea when using one.
 * Gun Accessories: An entire category of weird ones like the "Krummlauf" curved barrel attachment.
 * Gun Porn
 * Grail in the Garbage: The Volkssturm VG-5 is one the most valuable non-automatic rifles of World War II because it looked like garbage and nobody brought them back as trophies, compounding their low production and rare use against Americans.
 * Nice Hat: Ian regularly wears a replica of a World War I British officer's hat in outdoor shoots.
 * Older Than They Think: Several firearms concepts appeared before they made it big yet never quite took off. An intermediate cartridge, select fire, man portable rifle ("Assault Rifle") in... 1917?
 * Rare Guns: In his videos on the SPAS and the Jackhammer Ian notes they are largely known for their appearances in video games
 * Reliably Unreliable Guns: The most frequent reasons featured guns were forgotten is exceptionally poor reliability and/or safety. Ian notes that however rare it actually happening was, the possibility a turret revolver would shoot its wielder if the percussion caps chain fired was enough to make all attempts flop.
 * Wall of Weapons: Ian notes his dad (who literally wrote the book on Arisaka collecting) had one of all Arisaka variants, which showed the slow degradation of features and quality as the war progressed. Ian credits it with inspiring his passion for firearms.