M1942 Machete

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Factions Weapon Icon Damage
Primary Attack Secondary Attack

US

M1942 Machete
42
63 headshot
Charged 84 (25 bleed)
Full name Weapon Type Place of Origin Date Manufacturer Blade Length Total Length Weapon Script Name
FN Melee USA 1942 Arm in ( mm) in ( mm) weapon_m1942



The M1942 Machete is a U.S. military machete with an approximately 18-inch blade, intended primarily as a field tool for clearing brush and vegetation. It was issued across multiple theaters and is most associated with jungle and tropical operations where troops needed a durable cutting tool. While not designed as a fighting knife, it could serve as an emergency melee weapon at very close range.

HISTORY

The U.S. standardized the M1942 pattern during World War II to support operations in environments where entrenching tools and knives were inefficient for cutting trails, vines, and dense undergrowth. The design emphasized a long, robust blade with riveted grip scales and a simple scabbard suited to field carry, and it was produced by multiple contractors to meet wartime demand. Surviving wartime examples in major museum collections show the typical markings and construction used on issued machetes of the period.

After World War II, M1942-pattern machetes remained a practical, low-tech tool and continued to appear where U.S. forces operated in heavy vegetation. In the Vietnam era, machetes were carried for trail clearing, improving fields of fire, and routine camp tasks, and the M1942 pattern could be encountered through remaining stocks and continued use of standard-issue field equipment. In practice, many units also used locally obtained or commercially sourced machetes, but the M1942 remains one of the best-documented U.S. military machete patterns tied to jungle operations across the mid-20th century.

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