Having troubles telling the Japanese Rifles apart? Didn’t know they had more than one type? Bored with your troops all carrying only 1 Arisaka rifle?
I was. So, I did some research to find out what other weapons I could outfit my soldiers with, and uncovered a lot of information about the Arisaka that might be of interest out there. Along the way, I also discovered that you can make your own versions of most Japanese Rifles with the basic 21C Arisaka, razor saw, and glue. At least then, you can have some variety.
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| Kitbashing the IJA Rifle |
Some notes and claims: Model and Type are interchangeable in this discourse. Model 38 and Type 38 are the same weapon. All information was garnered from accurate resources, pictures, reference guides, etc. whenever possible. There are lots of areas where this info could be wrong, but I tried to only take the best references I could. Any errors are probably mine in interpreting.
Let’s go back to the beginning: The basic Japanese Army rifle was built from the Mauser model. The Type 30 was created in 1897, and was a near copy of the mauser. No 1/6th scale company makes a type 30 that I am aware of. This model was phased out prior to WWII, and replaced by the Type 38 (model 38). The Type 38 was a 6.5 mm Arisaka (mauser inspired) bolt action rifle. It was manufactured originally in 3 lengths: 50.25”, 44.25”, and 38”. The 38” version was a carbine. The only difference in these rifles is the length of the barrel and forestock.
Later, the Japanese needed a higher power cartridge, and they rechambered the type 38 to accept the 7.7 mm cartridge. This became the Type 99 (model 99) Arisaka. It was made in two lengths, a long (50.25”) and short (44.25”) version. The carbine was NOT rechambered for the 7.7 mm cartridge, so no short version of the Type 99 is known that I could find, BUT, there are pictures of a pretty short version of the rifle that is claimed to be the Type 99.
The type 99 can be told from the type 38 by two differences: The Type 99 had a wire “monopod” (actually, a simple wire bipod) mounted under either the Front retaining band or the Mid retaining band, and the sling attached to the SIDE of the buttstock, not the underneath.
Thus, the Rifle that 21C includes in their Japanese Set is a Model/Type 38, 6.5 mm Ariska (the sling gives it away.. the monopod does too, but I have seen lots of pictures of Type 99’s were the monopod was torn off by the owner and disregarded. The effectiveness of the wire device was less than expected in the field).
The longer version of both Types were the most often issued rifles of the war. However, shorter version were highly sought after by the Jungle troops, as hauling 4 feet of rifle (and another two feet of bayonet!) through the jungle growth was horrendous. Many many soldiers traded/stole to get the coveted 44” version, or even the 38”.
To complicate things, let’s look at the Japanese Sniper rifle and some experimental/later war models.
Two types of sniper rifles were made, a Model 97 and a Model 99. The Model 97 was simply a Model/Type 38, 6.5 mm, 50.25” long, with a wire monopod on the front, a turned down bolt, and a left mounted 2.5x telescope. The model 99 was a 7.7 mm, 50.25” long Type 99 with the turned down bolt, monopod, and 2.5x scope left mounted.