Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “M1 Garand vs. M1941 Johnson Rifle Debate” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/m1941-johnson-rifle/.



Nice icons of American greatness there GunzI've never seen a Johnson outside of pictures. The Johnson kind of went the way of the Reising submachine gun. Got combat time but never was able to compete with the legendary M-1, the M-1 Carbine, or in the Reising's case, the Thompson or the M3 Grease Gun.
10 rounds are better than 8 but I still like my M1 and my M1 Carbine.
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That pretty much sums it up.The Johnson rifle, and LMG were near equals to the M1, the Garand just had the advantage of being developed by a government arsenal. And by the time the M1941 came along, the Garand was already standardized.
That being said, Melvin Johnsons weapons worked, and worked well.
They were used by the Para-Marines early on, and the Devils Brigade.
I missed the chance years ago to get a Mil Tech M1941 restoration, as well as MANY other missed, bucket list guns.......
BTW, a fine article on the Johnson!I would love to have the M1 carbine in the folding paratrooper model!
I should add that maybe it was just something with the mag's feed lips and the stripping angle as off a bit. HA! I don't remember even thinking of that. Geeesch.I never owned one, but a customer brought one in the shop - back in the 1970s. It was from his deceased father and when he took it to the wood it jammed often, according to him. Having been Army Infantry, I was very familiar with the M1, M14, M1 Carbine, etc. My assistant and I took it to the club and spent a fun afternoon with it and various samples of ammo. All I can say is it's a friendly rifle, points naturally, accurate and sort of reliable. It did jam on me 2 times in 100-150 rounds (guessing). It was G.I. ammo plus smatterings of other brands and loads. I tried oiling, drying, empty cycling, etc. Back at the shop I got to study the guts. Well made machined parts, nice fitting and apparently not too complex with the fire control design/layout. I couldn't find anything suspicious but remember thinking that the way the top cartridge was presented to the chamber seemed a bit iffy. To me the top cartridge should sit as high in the magazine as possible for the bolt to strip it off, but at the same time as close to the chamber as possible to eliminate 'free flight' going into battery (think controlled feed Mauser 98 vs. Springfield '03). That's just my opinion. I'd love to have it back and study more. That's all I recall from almost 60-years ago
Here's my hindsight engineering:
Garand with box magazine, a la M14. Otherwise a super reliable, accurate weapon.
Johnson; Investigate feed geometry, maybe employ some kind of ramping element at the breach??? dunno.
Johnson; I've read that during military evaluations they had some parts breakage in the fire control mechanisms, That may be true or just the Ordnance Dept. trying to sell their own product. They did that with Stoner, but got caught.
And that's it. I loved the M1, good old American iron and walnut. Solid, reliable and durable. The Garand was pretty much soldier-proof. I know that from experience. Give a G.I. something and he'll figure out how to abuse it. I'd love to have one hanging in the vault, but I don't want to sell my house.
Only one day and you're already cheating on me!I have held a johnson but never fired one and i know i'm bout to catch hell for the holding a johnson remark.![]()
I thought we were meant to be!A guy i used to know had a Johnson, wait that didn't sound right either. lol he actually had the GUN. i never shot it but seen it many times. pretty neat lookin.