Maschinengewehr 34

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Maschinengewehr 34 (MG 34)
Specifications
Type General Purpose Machine Gun
Caliber 7.92mm
Feed System 50 Round Drum
Muzzle Velocity 755m/s
Rate of Fire 900 Rounds/Min
Maximum Rffective Range 1000m

History

The Wehrmacht perceived the role of the machine gun differently than most other nations, which viewed riflemen as the basic unit of infantry warfare with machine-gun support. German doctrine emphasized the machine gun as the basic squad weapon, with the rifle squad supporting it. German tactical theory did not differentiate between light and heavy machine guns. It called for an air-cooled, portable machine gun that could lay down sustained fire. When fitted with a bipod and a box feed device, this gun would be used in the light role; with a tripod and a belt-feed arrangement, the weapon could serve as a heavy machine gun.

Rheinmetall-Borsig tried to design a machine gun to meet these requirements in the late 1920s, the Maschinengewehr (Machine Gun; MG) 30. Its advanced design, with a butt in line with the barrel, wandered less when fired automatically and kept the weapon more accurately on target. The design let operators quickly change the barrel by twisting and removing the butt, then withdrawing the bolt and barrel through the receiver.

The German Army evaluated the MG 30s and, although they did not place an order, requested further development. The gun’s high rate of fire and low weight intrigued the Luftwaffe, which requested the development of an aircraft version in 1932. In response, Rheinmetall-Borsig produced the MG 15.

During the early 1930s, Mauser-Werke and Rheinmetall-Borsig collaborated on a new machine gun. The belt-feed weapon could also use the MG 15’s 75-round double-drum magazine. A hinge connecting the weapons receiver to the rear of the barrel jacket let the receiver swing aside to allow the barrel to be pulled straight from the barrel jacket. The trigger could be squeezed for single shots or automatic fire at a high 900 rounds per minute.

This new weapon, the MG 34, found work in all branches of the German armed services. A wide range of accessories included a periscope that enabled the MG 34 to be fired from below cover and a plethora of mounts for everything from single or twin-gun anti-aircraft defence to fortification installations to vehicles - some were even installed in remote-control mounts atop StuG assault guns. Long-range sights allowed effective fire to reach 3,500 m (3,800 yd) with a tripod.

A heavy MG 34 crew consisted of a commander (usually a NCO), a gunner, and an assistant who usually carried the tripod mount, extra ammunition, and three spare barrels.

Deliveries of the MG 34, the world’s first general-purpose air-cooled machine gun, commenced in 1936 and the gun remained in production until 1945. It was the main infantry-support weapon of the Heer (German Army) during the first half of the World War II and the primary vehicle-mounted machine gun throughout the war.

More MG 34s may have seen service during World War II than any other single model of machine gun. Still, production of this excellent weapon could not match demand. The design and workmanship of the MG 34 required precise, lengthy, and expensive manufacturing processes. With such fine tolerances, the weapon easily succumbed to dust and grit. By late 1940, the Germans recognized that they had to replace the MG 34 with something better suited to large-scale production.

Game Play

See Also

Infantry Weapons of Battleground Europe

American Weapons

Boys Anti-Tank Rifle ·Browning M1919A6 . BAR · M1903 Springfield · M1 Garand ·M1 carbine ·M1A1 Thompson · M3A1 Grease Gun · Mk 2 Fragmentation_Grenade · M8 Smoke Grenade · LG 50 mm mortar · M1911 Colt · M9 Bazooka

British Weapons

Boys Anti-Tank Rifle · Bren Mk II LMG · Lee-Enfield No.4 Mk I · M1928 Thompson · sten Mk II · No.36 Mills Bomb · No.77 Smoke Grenade · 2 inch mortar · Webley Pistol · PIAT

French Weapons

Boys Anti-Tank Rifle · FM 1924/29 LMG · Fusil MAS mle 1936 · Fusil MAS mle 1940 · Fusil mle 1886 M93 "Lebel · MAS.38 · Grenade à main offensive modèle 1915 · Grenade fumigène · LG 50 mm mortar · Pistolet mle 1935S · M9 Bazooka

German Weapons

Panzerbüchse 39 · MG-34 · Karabiner 98k· Gewehr 43 · Gewehr 41 · FG42 · STG44 · MP-40 · MP34 · Stielhandgranate 24 · Nebelhandgranate 39 · Granatwerfer 36 · Luger P08 · Panzerschreck 54

Italian Weapons

Beretta Model 38 · Carcano Modello 1891

Universal Weapons

Ammo Resupply Pack · Combat Knife · Satchel Charge