The M6 is made of stamped sheet steel, with a forged steel removable barrel assembly. The barrel assembly is connected to the stock/action group by means of a removable hinge pin. Unlike nearly all other firearms, there is no "furniture" on the M6 like a butt stock or a
forearm, the only parts which are not steel are the rubber butt plate and cheek rest. Aircrew were instructed to wrap the barrels with
parachute cord as a field expedient fore-stock. The M6 was a superposed ("over-under")
combination gun, with a
.22 Hornet rifle barrel located above the
.410 bore shotgun barrel. It has 14-inch barrels and folds in half to a minimum size of 15 inches. A firing pin selector allowed the shooter to choose which barrel would be fired. The M6 was not intended to engage hostile troops, but to enable downed aircrew to forage for wild game and defend themselves from dangerous animals. Its rifle element was considered to be accurate up to 200
yards. Overall weight of the initial version, including stored ammunition, was around three pounds. ==Other versions==