, Beijing The Type 11 light machine gun was a design by famed arms designer
Kijirō Nambu, based on a modification of the French
Hotchkiss M1909 Benét–Mercié machine gun. It was an air-cooled, gas-operated design, using the same
6.5×50mm Arisaka cartridges as the
Type 38 infantry rifle. A feature of the Type 11 machine gun is its detachable hopper; it can be refilled while attached and does not require removal during operation. Instead of a belt or box magazine, the Type 11 was designed to hold up to six of the same
cartridge clips used on the Type 38 rifle. The five-round clips were stacked lying flat above the receiver, secured by a spring arm, and the rounds were stripped from the lowest clip one at a time, with the empty clip dropped out the bottom and the next clip automatically falling into place as the gun was fired. The system had the advantage that any squad member could supply ammunition and that the hopper could be replenished at any time. The relatively short barrel (17.5 inches) produced excessive flash with standard ammunition (initially intended for Type 38 rifles with barrels more than a foot longer). A new load was introduced which burned much more completely in the Type 11's short barrel and produced much less flash as a result. This new round was called the
6.5×50mm Arisaka genso round and the ammunition cartons were identified by a circled "G". The inherent disadvantage of the hopper was that the open feeder box allowed dust and grit to enter the gun, which was liable to jam in muddy or dirty conditions due to issues with poor dimensional tolerances, Another issue was that the weight of the rifle cartridges in the side-mounted hopper unbalanced the weapon when fully loaded. To compensate, the buttstock was designed in a way that it bent to the right, leading to the Chinese nickname for the weapon as the "bent buttstock" (). Reloading the weapon during an assault charge proved impossible due to the clip feeding system. ==Variants==