returning from a 1943 patrol in North Africa with their twin-mounted Vickers K machine guns. . The turret has a Vickers K machine gun; for protection against beam attacks, another K gun is mounted in the port entry hatch. The Vickers K was fitted to light and medium bombers in RAF service such as the
Fairey Battle and
Handley Page Hampden. It was also used in
gun turrets, such as the dorsal turret in the
Bristol Blenheim, the nose turret in the
Armstrong Whitworth Whitley and the rear of the cockpit in the Fairey Battle. It was the standard
Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm "Telegraphist Air Gunner" machine gun, on British built carrier Torpedo Strike Reconnaissance aircraft - the
Fairey Swordfish, the
Fairey Albacore and the
Fairey Barracuda. As supplies of air-cooled .303 in (7.7 mm) Browning machine guns increased the Vickers G.O. was phased out of use with the RAF. These machine guns were then reallocated from RAF stocks to units of the British and Commonwealth armies. The gun continued in service with the Fleet Air Arm and its last recorded use by the navy was by
812 Squadron RNAS Barracudas in anti piracy patrols off Hong Kong in October 1945. The
Long Range Desert Group was supplied with large numbers of the Vickers G.O. for use on its vehicles. They were used in single or custom built twin mountings. The
Special Air Service adopted it for their hit and run tactics, mounting it in pairs on their jeeps. Over the years, it was assumed by some that the latter services took the phased-out VGO because they could obtain no other suitable machine guns but with its high rate of fire and low-friction locking design (which proved resistant to jams from sand), the LRDG and SAS found the G.O. markedly superior to either the .303 in (7.7 mm)
water-cooled Vickers or the Bren gun. In a similar manner, the Airborne Reconnaissance Squadron of the
Reconnaissance Corps mounted the VGO on jeeps when they were attached to the
1st Airborne Division during
Operation Market-Garden in September 1944.
Royal Marine and Army Commandos used the VGO for infantry support/
squad automatic weapon briefly around
D-Day. In the
Coastal Forces of the Royal Navy, the Vickers K began to replace the
Lewis gun on board
Motor Torpedo Boats,
Motor Launches and other light craft, from 1942. ==See also==