Submachine Guns

Submachine Guns

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Submachine Guns
  • Stemple Makes a Star Wars Blaster: the STG-34k

    One of the best-looking versions of the Stemple is, I believe, the STG-34k. This was the result of BRP obtaining a whole bunch of MG-34 parts kits as part of a separate project to make an MG-34-style upper for the AR platform, and thus having all the grip models leftover. Well, why not fit the...

  • Stemple 76/45 + Russian Lend-Lease Thompson Kit = STG-M1A

    The modularity and clever design of the Stemple Takedown Gun is perhaps best illustrated by the STG-M1A and STG-1928 (these are the same gun with either a horizontal or vertical front grip). In the early 2000s a bunch of Thompson parts kits came into the US, WW2 vintage lend-lease guns sent to Ru...

  • Stemple STG-M1A (Thompson) at the Range

    The STG-M1A certainly looks and feels like a Thompson, but does it shoot like a Thompson? Let's find out!

  • Stemple STG-34k at the Range

    Today's video is the Stemple STG-34k at the range...but if I'm going to be honest, it was mostly just an excuse for me to try it out for fun. :) It's definitely the least practical version of the Stemple, but still the coolest looking one.

  • The Sneaky Silent Sten MkII(S) at the Range

    Today we are taking an original Sten MkII(S) out to the range - something I am excited to be able to do! The suppressor on this Sten is all original, and about 80 years old...and I'm very curious to see how effective it really is.

  • Best SMG of World War Two: The Beretta M38A

    The Beretta Model 38A was one of the very best submachine guns of World War Two. Designed by veteran Beretta engineer Tullio Marengoni (who designed most of Beretta’s pistols as well as the Beretta M1918 SMG and 1918/30 carbine), it was the first Italian weapon to use a cartridge equivalent to 9x...

  • A Police SMG Upgrade: the MP-18 System Schmeisser

    When the MP-18 was issued by the German Army in World War One, it used the then-in-production Luger "snail drum" magazines. These were expensive, awkward, and generally not ideal. Once the war ended, Hugo Schmeisser quickly developed an alternative box magazine design. The initial goal was simply...

  • MP-28: Hugo Schmeisser Improves the MP18

    The MP28,II was Hugo Schmeisser’s improved take on the original World War One MP18,I design. It used a simple box magazine in place of the Luger drum magazines, and this magazine would form the basis for a long series of military SMG magazines. It was a double-stack, single feed design because Sc...

  • Croatian Sokac SMG - A PPSh-41 Copy from the 1990s

    The Šokac is just one of more than a dozen different submachine guns developed and produced domestically in Croatia during the Yugoslavian civil war of the early 1990s. It is a mechanical copy of the Soviet PPSh-41 made in 9x19mm and a folding stock modeled after the vz25 family of submachine gun...

  • Weapons as Political Protest: P.A. Luty's Submachine Gun

    Phillip A. Luty was a Briton who took a hard philosophical line against gun control legislation in the UK in the 1990s. In response to more restrictive gun control laws, he set out to prove that all such laws were ultimately futile by showing that one could manufacture a functional firearm from h...

  • Shooting the MP40 Submachine Gun

    A bit of shooting with an MP40 at an indoor range, courtesy of Hill & Mac Gunworks.

  • m/26 Suomi: Aimo Lahti's First Production Design

    Aimo Lahti was the premier firearms designer, and the m/26 was his first significant design. Lahti was a Civil Guard armorer, and upon seeing the Lindelof copy of the Bergmann SMG in 1921 he thought he could make something better and cheaper. He took on three partners and formed Konepistooli Osak...

  • SITES Spectre: Think of it as an SMG, not a pistol

    The SITES Spectre was originally developed by the SITES company (Societa Italiana a Technologie Speciali SPA) of Torino to be the best police and counterterrorist submachine gun on the market. To this end, they studied the other guns on the market and what made a good SMG. The results were rolle...

  • Suomi Korsu: A Special Mannerheim Line Bunker SMG

    The "Korsu" is a special version of the Suomi made for use in the bunkers of the Mannerheim Line. When construction on the Line really kicked into high gear in the summer of 1939, is was discovered that the vision slits in the bunkers were too small to fit the muzzle of a standard m/31 Suomi. In ...

  • The Iconic "Burp Gun" - Shooting the PPSh-41

    The Soviet PPSh-41 submachine gun is most distinctive for its very high rate of fire - approximately 1250 rounds/minute - and large drum magazine. What may come as a surprise to those who have not tried it is how this very high rate of fire does not actually make the weapon difficult to control o...

  • The Beretta PM-12S Submachine Gun

    For several decades, the Beretta company’s handguns and submachine guns were nearly all designed by the very talented Tulio Marengoni…but nothing can last forever. After World War 2, Beretta engineer Domenico Salza began working on a new SMG design, one which would be more compact and more contro...

  • M3 and M3A1 Grease Gun SMGs

    The US began looking for a cost-effective replacement for the Thompson submachine gun in 1942, and the “Grease Gun” was the result. Designed by George Hyde (a noted firearms designer at the time) and Frederick Sampson (GM/Inland chief engineer), it was a very simple and almost entirely stamped fi...

  • Soviet PPD-40: Degtyarev's Submachine Gun

    Degtyarev’s PPD-40 was the first submachine gun adopted in a large scale by the Soviet Union. Its development began in 1929 with a locked breech gun modeled after Degtyarev’s DP light machine gun, but evolved into a much simpler blowback system. It was accepted as the best performing gun of 14 di...

  • Sudayev's PPS-43: Submachine Gun Simplicity Perfected

    The PPS-43, designed by Alexei Sudayev based on a previous submachine gun design by I.K. Bezruchko-Vysotsky, was the Soviet replacement for the PPSh-41. The Shpagin submachine gun was a very effective combat weapon, but was time-consuming to produce and required specialized manufacturing tools. T...

  • The French MAS-38 Submachine Gun

    The MAS-38 was France’s first officially adopted submachine gun, rushed into service in 1940. It was basically too late to help with the defense of France, with less than a thousand delivered by June 1940. The Germans kept the gun in production, making 20-30 thousand under the designation MP722(f...

  • The Star Z-63 Submachine Gun: Better Than You Think

    The Star Z-63 is a 9x19mm version of the Star Z-62, which was made in both 9x19 and 9x23. Together, these represent the company’s effort to produce a more modern submachine gun than their Z-45, which was basically a copy of the German MP-40. The Z-63 is, contrary to its external appearance, a wel...

  • The Brazilian Uru SMG: A Study in Simplicity

    The Uru, named for a tropical bird, is a Brazilian 9mm submachine gun made from 1977 until 1985 and used by Brazilian military and police forces. What makes it interesting is the designer’s focus on simplicity - the gun has just 17 parts, and basically no screws or pins (except the bolt holding t...

  • The Yugoslav M56 Submachine Gun: Perhaps Too Simple?

    The M-56 is a Yugoslav take on the MP-40 design, produced starting in 1956 to replace its previously issued M49 submachine gun (which was a copy of the Soviet PPSh-41). The M56 is simpler than the MP40, however, and chambered for the 7.62x25mm Tokarev cartridge. It is a simple gun to make, but qu...

  • Spanish MP41/44 - A Copy of the Erma EMP

    The Spanish-made MP41/44 is a licensed copy of the Erma EMP submachine gun. The development begins with Heinrich Vollmer in 1925, designing a submachine gun for German military testing. The military trials showed a number of flaws in the gun, and Vollmer updated the design to fix them - but by th...