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The MGD PM-9 was a French open bolt submachine gun, designed in the late 1940s or early 1950s by Louis Debuit and manufactured in small numbers by French firm Merlin and Gerin in the 1950s. [1]
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Machine gun used by the Luftwaffe. Kg m/40 Automatic Rifle: Knorr-Bremse: 6.5×55mm Swedish: Waffen-SS: A few thousands of these guns delivered for the Waffen-SS, under the name MG35/36A. In 1940, the Waffen-SS decided to replace the 36A variant because it is unreliable and sometimes the wooden stock fell off. Maschinengewehr 13: Dreyse: 7.92× ...
Type 97 light machine gun: 7.70×58mm Arisaka: Detachable box magazine Japan: 1937 Type 97 aircraft machine gun: 7.70x56mmR Type 87: Ammunition belt Japan: 1937 Type 99 light machine gun: Kokura Arsenal Nagoya Arsenal: 7.70×58mm Arisaka: Detachable box magazine Japan: 1939 Type 100 machine gun: 7.92×57mm Mauser: Drum magazine Japan: UKM-2000 ...
MG 34 general-purpose machine gun mounted on a Lafette 34 tripod. In the German heavy machine gun (HMG) platoons, each platoon served four MG 34/MG 42 machine guns, used in the sustained fire mode mounted on tripods. [34] In 1944, this was altered to six machine guns in three sections with two seven-man heavy machine gun squads per section as ...
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The machine gun was developed as GVG (after last names of three designers) from February 1940 to November 1942, originally to be fired from either a magazine or belt-fed, however in spring 1942 the magazine feeding was dropped. After field trials on the frontline it was adopted as the M1943 Goryunov machine gun in May 1943.
The .45 Reising submachine gun was manufactured by Harrington & Richardson (H&R) Arms Company in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA, and was designed and patented by Eugene Reising in 1940. The three versions of the weapon were the Model 50 , the folding stock Model 55 , and the semiautomatic Model 60 rifle. [ 4 ]