Hosted by gatnerd
This is intended for people interested in the subject of military guns and their ammunition, with emphasis on automatic weapons.
Latest 13:39 by stancrist
Latest 7:02 by autogun
Latest 6:34 by schnuersi
Latest 5:40 by schnuersi
Latest 9-Dec by mpopenker
Latest 7-Dec by gatnerd
Latest 7-Dec by gatnerd
Latest 7-Dec by farmplinker2
Latest 2-Dec by schnuersi
Latest 1-Dec by EmericD
Latest 1-Dec by Mr. T (MrT4)
Latest 29-Nov by stancrist
Latest 27-Nov by renatohm
Latest 25-Nov by stancrist
Latest 24-Nov by farmplinker2
Latest 23-Nov by schnuersi
Latest 23-Nov by autogun
Latest 23-Nov by gatnerd
Latest 22-Nov by gatnerd
Latest 22-Nov by Mr. T (MrT4)
Latest 17-Nov by gatnerd
Latest 16-Nov by stancrist
Latest 11-Nov by stancrist
Latest 11-Nov by schnuersi
Latest 11-Nov by smg762
1/1/23
Brian Lanckiewicz brings you MG-42 machine gun vs Van ! This is the best mg-42 video ever made ! It has the mg-42 ,m53, mg-74 ! We shoot this gun in every a...
3/1/23
I heard a machinegun owner refer to this as "how to turn money into noise and smoke" (and in this case, fire). Just watching that video caused a significant pain in my wallet!
3/1/23
LOL. Yeah, it's certainly expensive. However, I think most machine gun hobbyists are wealthy enough that they don't care about the $$$ spent.
25/2/23
The German MG-42 is a legendary World War II machine gun known for its exceptional speed and reliability. With a rate of fire of up to 1,500 rounds per minut...
25/2/23
By the way, carrying the MG42 (as well as the MG34) in the way shown (muzzle forward) was explicitly forbidden. Allegedly, it could result in bent receivers. I was not convinced, but in my Bundeswehr time of course I carried it muzzle rearward when shouldered.
Edit: On second thought, the picture shown looks very unrealistic. If you carry an MG 42 in the way shown, you have to pull down(!) on the forward part. In the image it looks as if the person supports the forward part. That is not in line with reality.
25/2/23
The video is not meant to be realistic or historically accurate. It was made purely for entertainment.
26/2/23
JPeelen said:By the way, carrying the MG42 (as well as the MG34) in the way shown (muzzle forward) was explicitly forbidden. Allegedly, it could result in bent receivers. I was not convinced, but in my Bundeswehr time of course I carried it muzzle rearward when shouldered.
I don't know about bent receivers and i am rather sceptical about that but the manual describes carrying over the shoulder with muzzle backwards. Its also the more natural way to do it. As righ hander you pick the gun up and up it on your left shoulder muzzle backwards. Its a simple motion. After that the gun rests at its center of gravity on your shoulder and the left hand can either steady it at the pistol grip or sling.
JPeelen said:Edit: On second thought, the picture shown looks very unrealistic. If you carry an MG 42 in the way shown, you have to pull down(!) on the forward part. In the image it looks as if the person supports the forward part. That is not in line with reality.
Yes the center of gravity is where the exjection port is. In front of the pistol grip.
During my service time carrying the MG over the shoulder was heavily discouraged if not forbidden when out of the barracks for training. So we would not be looking like "die Contras auf dem Rückzug" or other more colourfull descriptions.
You either carried ready like a rifle or used the two sling halves like a carrying handle.