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Hitler's StG-44 in Postwar Service 

Mark Felton Productions
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Go to kamikoto.com/M... and get an additional $50 off on any purchase with code MARKFELTON. Thanks to Kamikoto for sponsoring this video!
It's the world's first assault rifle - hundreds of thousands of StG-44s have ended up serving postwar right up to the present conflict in Ukraine.
Dr. Mark Felton FRHistS, FRSA is a well-known British historian, the author of 22 non-fiction books, including bestsellers 'Zero Night' and 'Castle of the Eagles', both currently being developed into movies in Hollywood. In addition to writing, Mark also appears regularly in television documentaries around the world, including on The History Channel, Netflix, National Geographic, Quest, American Heroes Channel and RMC Decouverte. His books have formed the background to several TV and radio documentaries. More information about Mark can be found at: en.wikipedia.o...
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Disclaimer: All opinions and comments expressed in the 'Comments' section do not reflect the opinions of Mark Felton Productions. All opinions and comments should contribute to the dialogue. Mark Felton Productions does not condone written attacks, insults, racism, sexism, extremism, violence or otherwise questionable comments or material in the 'Comments' section, and reserves the right to delete any comment violating this rule or to block any poster from the channel.
Source: 'StG-44 in Africa after WWII', wwiiafterwwii....
Credits: US National Archives; Library of Congress; The Full 9; Redut Film; Ralf Dillenburger; KrisfromGermany; DDT.

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12 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 1,6 тыс.   
@MarkFeltonProductions
@MarkFeltonProductions Год назад
Go to kamikoto.com/MARKFELTON and get an additional $50 off on any purchase with code MARKFELTON. Thanks to Kamikoto for sponsoring this video!
@bosnjakball
@bosnjakball Год назад
Epic bro keep up good work
@vorynrosethorn903
@vorynrosethorn903 Год назад
This company is a scam, their knives are made in China with low quality steel and the company itself is a Chinese one with a front office in Japan. Do not buy from them, there are plenty of genuine Japanese knife makers, local retail stores might even stock them but one thing is certain, they will be both much better quality and a good deal cheaper than a Chinese scam company.
@victorbeauvois
@victorbeauvois Год назад
The GERMAN'S gun technology still the best today 👍very interesting and content top notch
@Mr_Fancypants
@Mr_Fancypants Год назад
No. They are just chinese factory tin knifes.
@jms972
@jms972 Год назад
I would say the Russian Fedorov Avtomat designed in 1913 was the first assault rifle, in service 1915 by the Russian empire, only about 3000 was produced . But in mass production the sturmgewehr was the true first assault rifle.
@junfour
@junfour Год назад
*Fun fact:* In this video, Dr. Mark Felton says "StG-44" a total of 23 times. Excluding the Kamikoto ad, this is a rate of about three and a half StG-44s per minute.
@mistergrosbig4085
@mistergrosbig4085 Год назад
Époustouflant
@HollandNights
@HollandNights Год назад
These are the stats we need
@junfour
@junfour Год назад
@@HollandNights We should all have Sturmgewehrs!
@seavixen125
@seavixen125 Год назад
Now that's a drinking game I can get behind
@chapman9230
@chapman9230 Год назад
Thats very funny
@johncole2469
@johncole2469 Год назад
Iraq, May 2003, OIF-1: I got my hands on the following in Baghdad: STG-44, MP-38, P-08 Luger, Artillery Luger, 2x consecutively serial numbered C-93 Borchardts, Mauser C-96. The drool was flowing. I have pics I took of it all.
@rustcohle379
@rustcohle379 Год назад
U obviously weren’t allowed to bring those back home with you right?
@johncole2469
@johncole2469 Год назад
@@rustcohle379 Correct.
@rileyp1419
@rileyp1419 Год назад
I've heard stories of guys hiding AK parts in oil pans before being shipped home.
@johncole2469
@johncole2469 Год назад
@@rileyp1419 actually in fuel tanks of various vehicles. Primarily M1A1 Abrams tanks.
@samallardyce2522
@samallardyce2522 4 месяца назад
thats cool but did you find weapon of mass destruction?
@fortis3686
@fortis3686 Год назад
Ah yes, whether it’s modern ww2 games, re-enactors, museums, or random 3rd world insurgents, it seems this gun is just everywhere no matter where you look.
@Mr_Fancypants
@Mr_Fancypants Год назад
Yet the AK 47 gets all the glory
@auyongahmeng2588
@auyongahmeng2588 Год назад
Won't be surprise if we ever get off planet earth...and colonize other worlds...it and the AK47 will probably end up there too : )
@FindecanorNotGmail
@FindecanorNotGmail Год назад
It was used without a magazine by the Rebel Alliance defenders on planet Hoth a long long time ago in a galaxy far far away. Those were also equipped with a scope of sorts, telescoping stock, proper front grip and extra knobs and doodads.
@miguelgameiro8063
@miguelgameiro8063 Год назад
@@Mr_Fancypants 1 in every 3 guns in this world is an automatic kalashikov that why they get the glory
@amirhaikal6672
@amirhaikal6672 Год назад
@@auyongahmeng2588 probably some fucked up version of it made even worst than china.
@thedoctor755
@thedoctor755 Год назад
A friend of mine was a peacekeeper in Serbia in the 90's, and remembers seeing StG's still in crates, being issued in that conflict.
@nicholasdiaz9424
@nicholasdiaz9424 Год назад
Don't open those old wounds, that was a political nightmare for Bosnia and Croatia's war for independence.
@thedoctor755
@thedoctor755 Год назад
@@nicholasdiaz9424 just passing on what my friend saw.
@TroyTempest777
@TroyTempest777 Год назад
@@nicholasdiaz9424 Don't be such a drama queen..if we can't talk about wars ,we won't learn from them.
@castronator29
@castronator29 Год назад
@@haltungsprechen Tito is called Tito because he was in a war full of "Díaz". What do you know about this guy's reasons to say that? I personally know many "Díaz" and "Fernández" that were present in Bosnia at that time.
@rickieboy246
@rickieboy246 Год назад
@@haltungsprechen Both sides should have been genocided :) coming from a non biased third party ;)
@clarkcoleman9793
@clarkcoleman9793 Год назад
I owned a legal one 30 years ago. Also I had a MP40 parts gun. Wish I still had them .They are worth much more now than when I sold them.
@bobdollaz3391
@bobdollaz3391 Год назад
Why did you sell them?
@kre1187
@kre1187 Год назад
@@bobdollaz3391 Rough times financially or maybe moved to a state not pro 2A if I had to guess. We all have regrets like that.
@Jreb1865
@Jreb1865 Год назад
There's actually quite a few on the registry... You don't see many for sale because it's a weapon collectors tend to hold once they acquire one. Same with MG-42s... Neither one are shooters guns any longer. Ammo cost took care of that. Not gonna find much 8mm for 10 cents a round any longer...
@ChairmanPaulieD
@ChairmanPaulieD Год назад
@@kre1187 yup Governor Kathy Hochul wouldn’t allow it in NYC .. how the HELL did she actually win last night’s midterm election 🤷‍♂ 😒
@alexsurber3424
@alexsurber3424 Год назад
That's pretty cool, I myself am trying to build one that's semi auto atf compliant mp44 from gathering parts as well as incorporating new parts made by SSD such as a newly made receiver flat i just aquired recently.
@dmeinhertzhagen8764
@dmeinhertzhagen8764 Год назад
During my second tour in Bosnia in 2001. One of the duties incumbent to my platoon was to perform a weekly inspection on a Bosnian Army weapons cantonment site. Beside the hundreds of Yugoslav and Soviet made firearms, the place was a gold mine for German WW2 firearms. Several dozens Stg-44, MP-40’s, crates of walthers and Lugers still in cosmoline. German marked MG-34’s & MG-42’s, they even had a three or four Pak-40 anti-tank guns with German made ammo dated 1944. We never knew how they got this equipment, nor where it came from and what became of it?
@richardcowling7381
@richardcowling7381 Год назад
A lot of it was basically left behind when the Whermacht was withdrawing from Yugoslavia at the end of ww2. Wasn't just weapons, a friend of mine was part of the peacekeeping operation there and recalled, (and swiped), WW2 German uniform items and webbing packed in crates being used as packing material for other items, as well as things like range finders, radio equipment, vehicle spares, which were still in the original grease and packing material.
@JohnDoe-pv2iu
@JohnDoe-pv2iu Год назад
Some of the material went back in storage and some got 'redistributed'. A lot of that material turned up later in Irag and Afghanistan. It seems Bin Laden's money (and others) bought a lot of 'Cheap' gear for their low level fighters... Ya'll Take Care and be safe, John
@johnmc8785
@johnmc8785 Год назад
During German occupation, MG-42's, Mauser K-98's, and other German-designed small arms were manufactured in Yugoslavia. There were several postwar Yugo variants of the Mauser K-98 produced, including the M-42/47, and M-48/48a. MG-42's were manufactured postwar as the MG-53(?), still in 7.92 Mauser caliber. The Yugoslavians had incredible amounts of surplus WW2 arms and ammo held in reserve.
@hankjones7829
@hankjones7829 Год назад
You should have taken Everything, moved to Montana and lived like a king.
@schmitzkatzewupper
@schmitzkatzewupper Год назад
@@richardcowling7381 Wehrmacht ...sorry I couldn't resist 😅
@rocco74superhuman45
@rocco74superhuman45 Год назад
Thanks for this video. Its like Christmas to me. 😃When I was about 15 years old, I found a Sturmgewehr in the woods with a metal detector with my uncle back home in Czechoslovakia. It was my first find, and it looked as if someone had put it there a month ago. Just thrown away with a leaf in the ditch and 2 spare magazine on top of that. I remember that day I couldn't even sleep and I looked at her all night. Only the stack was eat up. Since then I have loved this submachine gun and would not trade it for anything else.
@RyleKittenhouse
@RyleKittenhouse Год назад
Amazing story. Does it still work ?
@RogerThat787
@RogerThat787 Год назад
Merry Xmas
@KRACKER13
@KRACKER13 Год назад
Brother that is too awesome good for you I wish I could go there more than anything to help find soldiers that were lost for their families but finding stuff would be damn sure cool all the same great story brother
@matty6848
@matty6848 Год назад
@@KRACKER13 nothing stopping you Joe. If it’s a passion you would like too fulfil in your life why don’t you look into it? You can get flights very cheap these days and a cheap hotel for a couple of week. That’s something to put on your bucket list maybe🙂👍
@hades0572
@hades0572 Год назад
@@matty6848 Few hundred for your passports, couple grand for flights maybe a grand in total for hotels (cheap one) that's almost 3 thousand dollars right there but then the bills stack up back home and no income coming in to counter them. Yeah, you might be able to go overseas and strike something off your bucket list but most can't. Suggesting this is feasible for most just tells us that you live a privileged life.
@tdhawk7284
@tdhawk7284 Год назад
Fascinating. I figured these weapons would be as rare as hens’ teeth, a few sitting in museums. I had no idea. Thank you, sir.
@opoxious1592
@opoxious1592 Год назад
Yet, they cost a fortune if you want to own one.
@Matt_w739
@Matt_w739 Год назад
@@opoxious1592 That's because they were only imported to the West (mainly America) in tiny numbers during the 50s & 60s. And the ones that weren't are war trophies. I bet less than one in 30 ever manufactured, made it into western civilian hands.
@minuteman4199
@minuteman4199 Год назад
In about 1983 my local gun store was selling an Stg 44 and a crate of ammo for about 300 bucks. They had been converted to semi auto, probably by Century Arms.
@browngreen933
@browngreen933 Год назад
That needs verification.
@derekp2674
@derekp2674 Год назад
At roughly the same time, some semiauto converted examples could also be found in the hands of keen UK shooters. But, after the 1987 mass shooting at Hungerford, semi auto centrefire rifles became 'prohibited items' in the UK.
@Zogerpogger
@Zogerpogger Год назад
That woud be worth thousands today.
@minuteman4199
@minuteman4199 Год назад
@@Zogerpogger Except for the fact that this is Canada and they were banned and probably either buried or chopped up. It's also relative since I had a Mosin Nagant that I bought back then for 40 dollars.
@Zogerpogger
@Zogerpogger Год назад
@@minuteman4199 I would like to get a mosin one day, I imagine it would be about 300 USD now.
@mrivantchernegovski3869
@mrivantchernegovski3869 Год назад
One of my Dads mates had STG44 here in New Zealand,Dad had a M1 Carbine and bunch of mags that he had traded a GI a Luger for in Lower Germany,Dad was in the 2NDNZEF in WW2,brother got his carbine and he was buried with his Issue 303 that he brought home somehow.
@mattyb567567
@mattyb567567 Год назад
Thanks for the great content Mark! You have reignited my passion for WW2 era history.
@dr.wilfriedhitzler1885
@dr.wilfriedhitzler1885 Год назад
We had all, but in less numbers to win the war.
@LTPottenger
@LTPottenger Год назад
There is an stg45 prototype and they fire it on forgotten weapons. Don't know why but this weapon just calls out to me, truly amazing.
@coversum
@coversum Год назад
you can clearly see its genes in the later Cetme and G3s... amazing
@browngreen933
@browngreen933 Год назад
Not just you. Everybody.
@AndrewAMartin
@AndrewAMartin Год назад
@@coversum The StG44 and StG45 are different designs, the 44 being gas operated and the 45 being delayed blowback. The 45 evolved into the CETME and then the G3 -- the Mauser engineers behind the design making their way to France and Spain before eventually going back to Germany.
@LTPottenger
@LTPottenger Год назад
ak is probably based on stg but stg is more accurate. If it had a little more range it would be like combining the best of ak and m16. That's essentially what the cetme does, with even greater range than the m16, but it never caught on due to nato nonsense.
@johncole2469
@johncole2469 Год назад
I have the following: HK-91, HK-93, SP-5. All trace origins to the G3, further to STG-45(M), STG-44, and to the MKb-42. Glad I have them.
@hairydogstail
@hairydogstail Год назад
The STG.-44 (MP-44) has constant recoil and Eugene Stoner stated it was this rifle where he and Sullivan first saw constant recoil. Today it still is the most controllable assault rifle with full auto..
@vevenaneathna
@vevenaneathna Год назад
eh, an M4 with like a tungsten bolt or m11 223 conversion w/ tungsten bolt has a similar rate of fire, around 600, way less mass going down range 55 grain vs 125 grain, and the bolt in the m4 cycles directly backwards, instead of the clunky up and back slamming linkage of the stg44. yeah it weights a lot more so it might feel like less recoil, but imo its not. the Cetme-L is a similar weight and fires 223. seems like its rate of fire is around 900 rpm but i think would have less felt recoil if the weapons weight was a major factor.
@John77Doe
@John77Doe Год назад
The M-14 jerks up when fired full automatic. 😃😃😃😃😃
@azkrouzreimertz9784
@azkrouzreimertz9784 Год назад
You have a source on the constant recoil bit? I cant find a reference to it. Also the most controllable assault rifle? Idk man makes no sense
@TADP0LE9806
@TADP0LE9806 Год назад
I doubt very much that it's the most controllable in auto at all. The stock isn't in-line with the action like on an AR-style rifle and the action doesn't move in a purely linear fashion either. The cartridge itself by its very nature will kick harder than 5.56 or 5.45mm
@jeffb-c
@jeffb-c Год назад
Lmao yeah idk why ur trying to fit the whole barrel down ur mouth, no weapon from 1944 is going to be at all relevant to the capabilities of modern firearms
@KK-zq3dm
@KK-zq3dm Год назад
You are always amazing professor Felton. The numbers of German WW2 weapons is a testimony to their quality and craftsmanship. Absolutely fascinating again! Thanks Mark
@RogerThat787
@RogerThat787 Год назад
Thank you for thanking Mark
@mitchjames9350
@mitchjames9350 Год назад
I am pretty sure these are made in the modern day.
@matty6848
@matty6848 Год назад
Ironically it was they’re over engineering that was they’re biggest downfall on the eastern front in Russia, especially with the harsh winters. When roughly made Soviet guns would rattle, you could drop them in mud, pick them and they’d still work. Not the finally engineered German guns that would jam, pins would snap etc. same with they’re tanks and fighter planes and bombers. Cheap Mass production won against small, superior production of the Germans
@RT-mm8rq
@RT-mm8rq Год назад
I can imagine the additional carnage this weapon would of caused if it had been issued to the Wehrmacht earlier in the war.
@danielaramburo7648
@danielaramburo7648 Год назад
The Germans would have lost anyway. They had a severe lethal shortage of fuel, with a fuel shortage in a modern war, you will lose.
@WormholeJim
@WormholeJim Год назад
If it had been standard issue at the onset of Barbarossa, possibly it would have provided that extra umph to have made Germany capture Moscow at end of '41. This doesn't necessarily mean the war in the east would have been won. USSR likely would have fallen, but the huge landmass of Russia would likely have splintered up in so many sovereign states, each with it's wn stance towards the Germans in west Russia.
@alexisXcore93
@alexisXcore93 Год назад
out of all the miracle weapons hitler wanted for germany, the StG had the most potential to change the tides of the war
@kamilpotato3764
@kamilpotato3764 Год назад
@@alexisXcore93 In what way? If war in Europe would drag bit further Germany would get nuked.
@alexisXcore93
@alexisXcore93 Год назад
@@kamilpotato3764 it had the potential to make a more tangible change than, lets say a fucking rail gun lol
@ragingjaguarknight86
@ragingjaguarknight86 Год назад
I got lucky. I scored myself a working, GSG StG-44 in 22LR. One of the coolest things is that since I use mostly old German guns, I was able to reuse my repro sling for my kar98k for it until I could reorder another one. Knowing weapons development history came in very handy, I know that the StG's closest "descendants" are the HK series. I bought an HK scope mount and was able to mount an ACOG clone atop it. I get some weird looks whenever I take it to the range. I also purchased the official scope mount that replaces the rear sight but I don't use it. Overall, an informative and helpful video. 😎👍
@Bigsky1991
@Bigsky1991 Год назад
Months after the Berlin wall came down, I was cruising through various DDR Depots. I saw cases and cases if these in Dresden. With a West German arms dealer we split a truckload of these...around 1500 pcs, to include Ammo and the ultra rare Stg ammo pouches. We kept some for movie work, with most of them going to English arms guys. We split the load up according to condition. Blued, and Parkerized. Very worn and very nice. The loose/beat ones were Demil'd and we sold them as "parts kits" (Teilesätze) in German. We sold these for years to collectors at the Stuttgart and Beltring Militaria shows. Made a ton of money on these and a mountain of MP-44s from the sane cache. All in collectors hands now.
@wolfgangwust5883
@wolfgangwust5883 Год назад
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
@JaegerMatthias
@JaegerMatthias Год назад
Lol thank you for your service 😆👌
@tanthaman
@tanthaman 7 месяцев назад
Prove it.
@ronrobertson59
@ronrobertson59 Год назад
A friend of mine is a class 3 firearms dealer and has one of these along with about a hundred other cool machine guns. I fired the STG-44 it it much more controllable than the AR-47.
@MrSloika
@MrSloika Год назад
I've seen one in the flesh as well, although the collector who owns the thing wouldn't let me fire it, since it was worth $40,000 at time, it's probably appreciated a lot since then.
@ronrobertson59
@ronrobertson59 Год назад
@@gratefulguy4130 AK I'm so used to typing AR-15 I guess my brain got confused.
@ronrobertson59
@ronrobertson59 Год назад
@@MrSloika E.O. Mowrer and son's in Orrville ohio got all has machine guns in the 70's before the manufacturer law bit class 3 ownership in the butt.
@r0ky_M
@r0ky_M Год назад
@@ronrobertson59 Maybe we could talk about all the compromises in the stg.44 that make the AK47 superior for actual combat service.
@onyx9943
@onyx9943 Год назад
the 8mm Kurz is less powerful than 7.62x39mm... Also, the StG-44 is about a full kilogram heavier than an AK...
@AbsoluteKhan.
@AbsoluteKhan. Год назад
A1 content as always! Thank you, Mark!
@DOMINIK99013
@DOMINIK99013 Год назад
This is a lie, in 1955 almost all Sa 23/25 were replaced by Sa 24/26, the last Stg and ww2 submachine guns in general were replaced at the end of 1950 by the Sa 23/25. This is a lie, in 1955 almost all Sa 23/25 were replaced by Sa 24/26, the last Stg and ww2 submachine guns in general were replaced at the end of 1950 by the Sa 23/25.
@mrhamburger6936
@mrhamburger6936 Год назад
A friend of mine's Uncle brought back an STG 44 from World War II it's missing The Recoil spring in the firing pin and the spare firing pin is missing I guess these assault rifles had different design firing pins and Bolt during the mid-90s a lot of STG parts kits were available for a couple hundred dollars in the United States now the kits are several thousand dollars
@wirelessone2986
@wirelessone2986 Год назад
If you can find them
@mrhamburger6936
@mrhamburger6936 Год назад
@@wirelessone2986 I wish I back in the mid 90s I wish I would have picked up two or three of those because they were real cheap even AK-47 parts kits cheap back then
@mrhamburger6936
@mrhamburger6936 Год назад
@@gratefulguy4130 collectors and class three people bought all those kits up and parts to keep their stuff going
@nikopoulos5241
@nikopoulos5241 Год назад
I would for sure buy that rifle lol
@duellingscarguevara
@duellingscarguevara Год назад
A polish guy on YT fires a 9mm modern reproduction. Dunno about parts.
@siegessaule
@siegessaule Год назад
In the film, Danger Close (2019) there is a scene where they cut to a NLF guerilla wielding an STG44. There's lots of cool guns in that movie, but I'm glad they went out of their way to get the STG44 some screen time. If you played WW2 games growing up like a lot of millenials, it's the most legendary firearm of all time.
@kwanchan6745
@kwanchan6745 Год назад
in the classic film "battle of the bulge", the opening scene is of captured german prisoners, an stg44 is picked up as an example of fresh weapons being issued in the modern british film "the bunker", the "cockney krauts" are also sporting stg44
@Zogerpogger
@Zogerpogger Год назад
Perhaps the NLF aquired it from former Waffen SS troops who were deployed by the French in Indochina.
@Gerhold102
@Gerhold102 Год назад
@@Zogerpogger Doubtful those German Heer, Luftwaffe, Waffen SS and Gestapo men recruited to the Foreign Legion would have still had their SMGs or Maschinenpistole with them. I suspect they would have been issued with French equipment.
@Zogerpogger
@Zogerpogger Год назад
@@Gerhold102 You're probably right. I'm too lazy to research it now, but interesting question for sure. I imagine the allied powers would try and find a use for all of the captured equipment though (some examples in the video even).
@Gerhold102
@Gerhold102 Год назад
@@Zogerpogger There's a fictional work written by Robert George Elford (pseudonym?) entitled 'Devil's Guard' based on ex-German WW2 personnel recruited by the Légion Étrangère to fight the Viet Minh. It's based on probable fact - certainly they were very well-versed in anti-partisan operations and interrogation methods. When the Yanks took over from the French these men offered to transfer their services. The Americans declined on the basis that they were too ruthless and brutal for US sensibilities. It's a good read but reflects Nazi ideology.
@tanks1945
@tanks1945 Год назад
Your the man Dr. ! A short history on the gun changer of the 20th century is a good history fix I needed.
@TBagr
@TBagr Год назад
As the owner of several H&K Mp 5 variants, I’d love to add one of these to my collection.
@browngreen933
@browngreen933 Год назад
My pal has a deactivated MP-44. Bought it in a gunshop in West Germany where he was stationed in the US Army in the 1960s. Even then it cost $150 USD.
@Balthorium
@Balthorium Год назад
I remember during the Syria war a entire shipping container was filled with these rifles in a massive pile.
@e30325ikiller
@e30325ikiller 11 месяцев назад
but those were jugo made
@DenisStosic
@DenisStosic Год назад
Thank you dr. Felton for your work. There were Krummerlauf attachments (the curved barrel ) designed for the Sturmgewehr 44; Maschinenpistole-Vorsatz "P" (for tank crews) and Maschinenpistole-Vorsatz "I"(for infantry). Also, there was Vampir Infra red rifle telescope attachment for night vision. You could make a sequel from this episode about that exciting attachments.
@occidentadvocate.9759
@occidentadvocate.9759 Год назад
German Genius. Decades ahead of its time. The fact its still used allmost 80 years later proves its quality.
@wilhelm2462
@wilhelm2462 Год назад
It's quality was proven in the war... what you find these days is simply what is available to the people in warzones because they don't have the modern guns or not enough of them. Just because people still use these after 80 years deoesn't mean it's because of it's quality. The deciding factor usually is that it's available and still somewhat capable or at least useful to fill places until you have more modern equipment. For example when you have a limited ammount of modern weapons you still can arm background units who are not supposed to fight with older equipment and they will do fine. The real prove of quality is the fact that you can see how our weapons inspired future designs for example the similarities of a M9 compared to the fancy old P.38 or MG's that are fully or partly based on the MG42 just to name a few.
@supernovaexpress5241
@supernovaexpress5241 Год назад
Honestly I think the Germans get too much credit for their combat effectiveness in WW2.. When the United States joined the fight, we completely slammed those Nazi scum. For example, during the battle of the Bulge; it was extremely common for entire units of German soldiers to be wiped out in their attempts to launch counter offensives against far superior U.S forces. There are a few instances where entire German regiments charged allied lines and would see high casualty percentages like 70-80%. Meanwhile U.S forces would only lose like 1-5 men during these fights. Once U.S soldiers went on the offensive against German soldiers, we'd still take few casualties. Germans were getting mopped by the Americans. The only reason people applaud the effectiveness of the German army was because of the early war period when they were killing thousands upon thousands of poorly equipped and poorly trained Soviet soldiers. This is not at all impressive. Once the Germans met a real army, we completely wiped them off the face of the Earth. The only reason the United States had so many casualties was because we fought against Imperial Japan. They had rugged terrain and their people were actual warriors who weren't afraid to die.
@thebrettyouneed178
@thebrettyouneed178 Год назад
​@@supernovaexpress5241 I love how your whole post reads as if you were there 😂 besides that, who said they were effective? They just had cool stuff.
@starwarsgames5467
@starwarsgames5467 10 месяцев назад
@@supernovaexpress5241 Americans fought 20% of the Wehrmacht, still took higher casualties and think they were the superior army🤣
@chucknorris6640
@chucknorris6640 9 месяцев назад
@@supernovaexpress5241first of all the us fought like 4% of the German soldiers, and most of them were auxiliary or second line United, the best units were used against the red army and some against the British
@chlebowg
@chlebowg Год назад
Knew of about a dozen in Iraq in 03'. I had two MP44s, one mag and 60 rds of East German ammo.
@wirelessone2986
@wirelessone2986 Год назад
There has to be at least one that came back stashed in a connex box somewhere
@koolaidria4801
@koolaidria4801 Год назад
I wonder what ever happened to them. Probably shredded or steamrolled.
@Blei1986
@Blei1986 Год назад
@@koolaidria4801 waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah
@nmisnotnewandnotmexico.2262
I knew an American WW2 veteran about 1999 who had brought home a captured StG-44. He fought in the Battle of the Bulge at St.Vith. He was very kind to allow me to handle and inspect the demilled weapon because of my interest in military history. He explained that the weapon had to be deactivated before he could bring it back to the U.S. Even in that condition it was still an impressive example of a "Wunderwaffe" actually used in combat in 1944-45.
@stevewilson7819
@stevewilson7819 Год назад
If they were brought back as a DEWAT then the soldiers didn’t have to pay the $200 tax when they registered it with the ATF.
@thedangersofboredom
@thedangersofboredom Год назад
The man firing it from the armored vehicle in the opening of the video is a good friend of mine. Probably one of the most talented and fascinating people I have ever known. A very pleasant surprise along with a great production. Thank you.
@thEannoyingE
@thEannoyingE Год назад
Great video as always, nice to hear your voice again. Incidentally, when my uncle was in Vietnam, I’m sure his platoon captured some SGT-44’s in his service 67-69.
@osier769
@osier769 Год назад
A topic I didn't know I wanted know until seeing the title. In my ignorance I expected most of the remaining units to be in the hands of collectors and museums. Thanks Mark.
@ghostwriter1415
@ghostwriter1415 Год назад
You still don't know their not where you thought they were.
@osier769
@osier769 Год назад
@@ghostwriter1415 _They're_ probably not. 😏
@toddewire13
@toddewire13 Год назад
Thank you Mark for another extraordinary video glad your health is feeling better now!
@michaelashton8754
@michaelashton8754 Год назад
I'd be very interested to hear you explore stories of weapons that have taken long traceable journeys. I suspect some surplus weapons have been bought and sold dozens of times, bouncing from conflict to conflict.
@matty6848
@matty6848 Год назад
True Mike. Most of those WW2 era guns have passed that many borders and hands it would be almost impossible to get a accurate history on them. Shame I know, but that’s the situation.
@Mirokuofnite
@Mirokuofnite Год назад
A few years back I remember seeing a picture from Syria. A guy had a STG-44 hooked up to a remote control arm.
@finallydone8640
@finallydone8640 Год назад
Quite ironic those French Foreign Legion troops capturing these guns .Some probably needed no training on their use and felt quite at home with them
@1982asd
@1982asd Год назад
It is currently $35,000 in the USA for an original STG44, but as far as I know, it requires a separate license even outside the USA, as it is an automatic assault rifel at the same time It is somewhat unusable for today's war, it is not suitable in many respects, but it has a very high price on the weapons market, even among collectors A copy of the STG44 is still produced in Germany today in a semi-automatic version, a 0.22 sport, but it can only be purchased in a semi-automatic version, but the external design fully matches the original STG44
@robertmcbeth5864
@robertmcbeth5864 Год назад
Way more than 35,000
@roywhiteo5
@roywhiteo5 Год назад
Its amazing that these are still in use considering they were designed to be disposable. A soldier could field strip them but it wasn't designed to be rebuilt after getting worn out (according to Ian)
@crownprincesebastianjohano7069
They are also the standard battle rifle of the Rebel Alliance and seen in the battles of Hoth and Endor. The propmasters of Lucasfilm and added a few bits to them to make them look futuristic.
@candyking543
@candyking543 Год назад
I had the chance to fire one in Vegas this past summer, probably was the same one shown in this video! Awesome video Mark, you have the best WW2 content on RU-vid!
@alexbowman7582
@alexbowman7582 Год назад
Mark you should do a video on German general Hans-Valentin Hube who lost an arm at Verdun in 1916. Tank officer Hube fought at Stalingrad and was ordered by Hitler to fly out which Hube refused, he said I took my men in to Stalingrad and ordered them to fight till the last bullet and intend to show them how to do it. Hitler ordered 4 of his SS bodyguards to fly in, Hube was told to report to 6th army headquarters where the SS surprised him and forced Hube out on a plane at gunpoint.
@richardcowling7381
@richardcowling7381 Год назад
Is he the same Gen. Hube who had a Russian AT crew fire at him, the round clipped his empty sleeve, and the Russians were then rather surprised when this German officer stood straight up after having his arm "blown off" with no apparent effect?
@alexbowman7582
@alexbowman7582 Год назад
@@richardcowling7381 possibly
@guyavery513
@guyavery513 Год назад
I used to hate that these were being used in modern combat since they should be in museums, but I think it's quite fitting they are still being used for their intended purpose rather than sitting on a shelf.
@thedoctor755
@thedoctor755 Год назад
Many several are out there in the collector & reenactor world though, still running!
@tavish4699
@tavish4699 Год назад
@@Oberkommando hah you think there isnt a way for serbians to get their ammo to places? my firend have you seen lord of war? there is allways a way to smuggle arms
@Oberkommando
@Oberkommando Год назад
@@tavish4699 of course there is. A few years back newly made Serbian Zastava M70’s started turning up in Iraq. As investigative journalists found out, Zastava Arms of Serbia was funnelling their Rifles through a Bulgarian Warlord who was then sending them to Saudi Arabian government, who then sent them to the Rebels. The question you have forgot to ask yourself here is “is it profitable though?” There is no profit to be made from a grand smuggling scheme of 8mm Mauser Kurz Ammuntion from Serbia to Syria, Lybia etc. The rifles are scattered all over the country and mostly lay forgotten stashed in random basements. There is no central market where this smuggled ammunition could be sold and find many buyers. There is no profit, therefore these rifles will never be fired again.
@Nelis1992
@Nelis1992 Год назад
@@Oberkommando sad isnt the right word honestly. The history is interesting but its still just a gun made to kill people. Whats there to cry for if its lost?
@Nelis1992
@Nelis1992 Год назад
@@Oberkommando Fair enough. My point is that generally, history enthousiasts appreciate killing machines too much, almost to the point of worshipping. I respect the machines too, but from a engineering point of view. If some would get lost, thats okay, theyre just objects. We cant save all historic objects in musuems. The world would one day be one big museum
@QuantumPyrite_88.9
@QuantumPyrite_88.9 Год назад
Another outstanding history lesson and the picture of the Somali woman with her finger on the trigger of an StG is priceless. Thanks again Dr. Felton and all the best.
@HubertofLiege
@HubertofLiege Год назад
I noticed she’s married, “yes, dear, whatever you want, dear”
@QuantumPyrite_88.9
@QuantumPyrite_88.9 Год назад
@@HubertofLiege Just another stone age moron with weapons and explosives. Just like the Ugandan soldiers who jump up and down on landmines to pack down the dirt and who fire mortars from under trees because they want to be in the shade.
@para1324
@para1324 Год назад
I thought the same, how much “friendly fire” happened with those idiots.
@Pavia1525
@Pavia1525 Год назад
@@para1324 Not enough.
@roscoewhite3793
@roscoewhite3793 Год назад
I took a screen shot of that and zoomed in. I think she's actually got her finger behind the trigger, not on it. So she may have listened when gun safety was taught!
@214TwoOneFo
@214TwoOneFo Год назад
1:41 I just imagine Mark gripping that knife with all the anger he has in his body
@SJReid82
@SJReid82 Год назад
You can really see the design lineage from StG44 to the more modern H&K weapons like the HK33 and its related developments.
@tomhenry897
@tomhenry897 Год назад
Same engineers
@nikopoulos5241
@nikopoulos5241 Год назад
The stg45 made at the end of ww2 is actually the precursor to the G3
@chrisdonahue524
@chrisdonahue524 Год назад
"Well that else do you need?" "More of these new rifles Mein Fuhrer!" "Eh?? What new rifles?"
@donlarocque5157
@donlarocque5157 Год назад
When a WWII veteran passed away his daughter found one he brought home and had. Instead of destroying it,the police put it in a museum.
@aldreenbautista2375
@aldreenbautista2375 Год назад
The weapon looks modern and ahead of its time during WW2. I really like using it in Call of Duty World at War but the problem is only a few NPC's carry it. Who knows, maybe one of the guns currently in use was used in WW2 too. That's quite a service lifespan.
@aapje
@aapje Год назад
Then play the Vanguard campaign. There even the Japanese have them.
@thedoctor755
@thedoctor755 Год назад
They're heavy though... got to carry them with full ammo on a couple occasions.
@PanzerBuyer
@PanzerBuyer Год назад
I wonder how much one would cost? Greatly depends on the location I'm sure.
@thomasb1889
@thomasb1889 Год назад
@@thedoctor755 Surprisingly heavy although it is a handier package than the BAR which came so close to what an assault rifle is.
@thomasb1889
@thomasb1889 Год назад
The British Brown Bess was in service for 120 years. The Browning M2 .50 MG shows no sign of leaving the battlefield, Mosin-Nagant rifles keep popping up.
@Material_Monkey
@Material_Monkey Год назад
A few of them where also used in the Battle of Hoth by Rebel Forces, when they tried to defend their base against the Galactic Empire.
@Sporkmaker5150
@Sporkmaker5150 Год назад
Broom handle Mausers always shoot first.
@tos4057
@tos4057 Год назад
Should do a video on the use of the sten and bren gun after ww2.
@jonathanenglish9146
@jonathanenglish9146 Год назад
While in Iraq (04'-05'), Stg44s started making an appearance with insurgents. Many neighboring countries looking to confound the Coalition Forces (ie.Americans), supplied outdated or mostly worn out weapons to insurgent groups in Iraq. Iranian manufactured G3, Syrian Stg44s, and a whole host of WWII weapons from Islamic African nations or rebel groups. Enfield and Mauser rifles were not uncommon, Stens and PPshs or similar were around and we even found a box of Thompson SMG mags, but not the subgun itself.
@Gr8thxAlot
@Gr8thxAlot Год назад
I hope you got to bring back the Thompson mags!
@MQuaritch
@MQuaritch Год назад
Considering it was initially designed to not last more than a couple of months, the StGw 44 so far does pretty well in exceeding this demand...
@Garrattwayne
@Garrattwayne Год назад
Thank you for a another great video. The StG-44 & the K98 was my favourite weapons of WW2. When I went to Poland back in 2019 in the summer with just me and my Son (Nice to get away from the Wife lol) We went to a indoor shooting range and we shot loads of WW2 Guns. A dream Come True. Keep the great Videos coming Mark.
@steffenwurster352
@steffenwurster352 Год назад
Where did the users in Africa and Ukraine got the ammo?
@ATruckCampbell
@ATruckCampbell Год назад
@@steffenwurster352 Africa, more than likely came with the weapons. Ukraine, probably more of a war trophy than actual use.
@bryansmith1920
@bryansmith1920 Год назад
Thank you once again for adding shades to the colour of history Although I'm a 68yr old ex-Soldier that enjoyed weapon training at the butts I loved long distance shooting the Brit Army SLR I used, had to be replaced because of barrel wear But "OMG" didn't someone at procurement get it wrong SA80 really If you can still find it on the internet checkout an interview with an SAS squaddie about combat with the F15 against the Argy Special forces on a mount somewhere on the Falkland's Still using the FN
@anatolib.suvarov6621
@anatolib.suvarov6621 Год назад
Holding the magazine is precisely what causes the failure to feed, the demonstrator experienced. It pulls the front of the magazine down causing the next cartridge to have a steeper climb up the feed ramp or to stop on the magazine face. When the cyclic rate is higher, as it is with the MP/Stg series rifles, this slight delay can cause the bolt face to skip over the slow-feeding cartridge. Thus a failure to feed. Holding the foregrip, or the mag well is much better. The foregrip being stamped steel gets hot fairly quickly, but the mag well itself is OK, just make sure you aren't pressing on the magazine itself.
@kiwimedic319
@kiwimedic319 Год назад
I am not surprised that the use of the STG44 still continues, it was/is a great weapon and really was ahead of its time. What surprises me is the current and post-WW2 users are able to get ammo for them.
@johnryder1713
@johnryder1713 Год назад
A US soldier in the 1980s on Legacy collectables was only walking over a bridge in the then West Germany and found a long decayed STG 44 in a river and brought it home when his service finished
@tomw.6511
@tomw.6511 Год назад
Tremendous! I have done quite a bit of research on this topic myself. There are reports of some being used in the Balkans in the 1990s (Serbian ammunition manufacturer Prvi Partizan still makes 7.92x33mm ammo for it). Another conflict zone where StG44s turned up is Iraq.
@TheEvilmooseofdoom
@TheEvilmooseofdoom Год назад
Well that answers a question I had about sourcing ammo.
@tomw.6511
@tomw.6511 Год назад
@@TheEvilmooseofdoom I have ordered a bunch of it myself. My friend has one and I have been lucky enough to shoot it. It still runs like a train.
@NothusDeusVagus
@NothusDeusVagus Год назад
I enjoy your high-quality presentations and look forward to the next installments. Thank you.
@markjames6669
@markjames6669 Год назад
Great video! If only these guys knew how much this weapon was worth on the European market for collectors!
@philbob_d9254
@philbob_d9254 Год назад
This one was excellent doctor. I also love your dry humor jokes during your analysis. I watch you all the time now. Keep up the good work
@sejembalm
@sejembalm Год назад
Years ago, I heard news reports of fighting groups in Syria using what appeared to be StG-44 assault rifles and Western collectors flocked there to trade used Soviet AK rifles for them and especially their rare 7.92x33 Kurz ammo. A crate of AKs for a working StG-44 and another crate for a full magazine!
@RandomGuy9
@RandomGuy9 Год назад
Serbia sold a lot of them to Syria in the 1960s. They still produce the 8x33mm ammo I think.
@lewisgann280
@lewisgann280 Год назад
If you’d like to know more, as the other fellow hinted the Stgs were all Syrian Govt stock. They had held on to them for years trying to sell them at high dollar to the US sporter market but wanted NFA prices. They did not grasp our rat fucked gun laws and the NFA lol
@carlbrown9082
@carlbrown9082 Год назад
Thanks, Dr. Felton. I've had a fascination with WW2 weaponry since my earliest memories, and the STG-44 is one of my favourites.
@biggietito2633
@biggietito2633 Год назад
In Yugoslavia the STG was used with Paratroopers until its swift replacement with the M70AB2 (AK) in the early 70s, they had pretty much been replaced by the m70 by the mid 70s Also the photos you used of the "Barracked Peoples Police (KVP)" are actually of the Volkspolizei-Bereitschaften (VPB), The KVP did not use the STG as they used soviet weaponry, however the Volkspolzei and VPB did
@thedoctor755
@thedoctor755 Год назад
Another fascinating video, Mark! Don't know if you ran into the details surrounding the development of the weapon, but it of course started out as the MkB-42 (Machinenkarbiner 42), then refined into the StG-43. Hitler initially didn't want any more "rifles", only subguns, so it the name was simply changed to the MP-43. Then later settling on the "Sturmgewehr" name after all. MP-43's saw some of their first front-line trial use with the 5.SS Division "Wiking" on the Eastern front.
@samwill7259
@samwill7259 Год назад
Not QUITE to the AK's level of "you can find these down the back of the couch in most parts of the world" But it's got a longer lifespan than any of us ever will.
@samwill7259
@samwill7259 Год назад
@@gratefulguy4130 I mean doesn't matter how throw away ti is if it keeps getting "thrown away" into the hands of the next group down the line
@bad74maverick1
@bad74maverick1 Год назад
Had a heart attack @5:53!! So much great hardware there. The 44, the M-14, the Colt 604 way in the back, Hakim...
@blacklisted4885
@blacklisted4885 Год назад
I love the stamped sheet metal aesthetic. Shteamphunky
@red9man2130
@red9man2130 Год назад
Mark You forgot the MK42B! It was the first Sturmgewehr however it only fired Full auto from the open bolt and the German high command rejected it as it had no semi auto capability. It did however shoot the hell out of the Soviets at the Battle of Cholm.
@JCredible-has-a-lovely-bottom
00:56 - "As settled upon by Hitler himself" - look forward to that Hitler 'Downfall' parody episode😁
@TylerMcL3more
@TylerMcL3more Год назад
Your videos are amazing as always Mark! May you live a long and happy life so you can keep bringing us these things! :) Cheers bud!
@Lynchfan88
@Lynchfan88 Год назад
I believe Brad Pitt wields one at various points in Fury. Very nice weapon.
@stevewilson7819
@stevewilson7819 Год назад
Around 2001 I was conducting a serialized inventory of weapon at the LE agency I worked for. Another officer mentioned that there was a rifle tucked away in a closet in the Chiefs office. When he described it I knew it had to be an MP43 or variant of that. So I paid the chief a visit and asked if he had it. He said he did. That it was in the closet when he became the chief, and he didn’t know any details about it. He got it out and there was mild surface rust on it. So I used that as an excuse to take it to the range and clean it up. It turned out to be a 1945 production STG-44. The wood stock was pristine. Which led me to believe it had never been used in battle. Closer examination showed that it had been deactivated by welding a plug in the barrel. Nothing else was done to it. So it’s conceivable that it could have been restored to firing condition if you have the tools and training needed. Someone later contacted the NFA Branch of the ATF to see if it was on the NFA Registry, and it was. They wouldn’t tell us anything more than that. Apparently the GI who brought it back registered it as a DEWAT in 1946. And it never changed hands after that…..legally speaking. As a footnote I got the weapon on the department’s serialized inventory and moved it into a secure locker in the armory so it wouldn’t just disappear when the chief retired. Before anyone gets offended at my accusation the chief did steal his dept issued duty pistol when he retired. When I discovered that and reported it the matter was swept under the rug by the Lt in charge of the range.
@jm9371
@jm9371 Год назад
I like how this rifle is described as having a modest production run of only half a million.
@richardcowling7381
@richardcowling7381 Год назад
Check the total manufactured of most other WW2 small arms. Half a million in comparison is a pitifully small amount.
@e30325ikiller
@e30325ikiller 11 месяцев назад
what about fg42 @@richardcowling7381
@americanmilitiaman88
@americanmilitiaman88 Год назад
We had one in our gun shop. Chambered in .22 Long rifle. It was very comfortable to handle. And the sights were good. We can get reproduction rifles in semi auto chambered in 7.92x33 kurz. Hornady makes ammo and i believe Sellior and Bellot makes it also.
@crowsbridge
@crowsbridge Год назад
Who makes the reproduction in 7.92x33?
@barryolaith
@barryolaith Год назад
At 3:15, on the table, is an even more rare WWII German rifle, the FG42 (early model). Used in the Gran Sasso raid to free Mussolini.
@sandwichartist5053
@sandwichartist5053 Год назад
It’s easier to get an fg42. At least fg42s are still being made
@onyx9943
@onyx9943 Год назад
@@sandwichartist5053 limited production hand-made Smith Machine Group FG-42 reproductions aren't exactly cheap...
@sandwichartist5053
@sandwichartist5053 Год назад
@@onyx9943 I never said they were cheap but they are cheaper and more available than an STG44.
@justanothergunnerd8128
@justanothergunnerd8128 Год назад
A truly revolutionary rifle - and fantastically controllable in fully automatic. Good video, mate!
@sumkh3000
@sumkh3000 Год назад
I always mistake it for an AK47 at first glance
@XtreeM_FaiL
@XtreeM_FaiL Год назад
How? Why? They don't look the same.
@Danekim_
@Danekim_ Год назад
Dr Felton hope you are well thank you!!
@fraiday7292
@fraiday7292 Год назад
This was a great video, Dr. Felton. Very informative, as are all of your other videos. Quick side note, did anyone else notice the FG42 on top of the table at 3:14?
@vin_961
@vin_961 Год назад
isnt stg 44 a completely usable rifle in modern combat like in ukraine?
@haviiithelegogunner907
@haviiithelegogunner907 Год назад
It totaly is. If well maintained, it is as capable as any modern assault rifle.
@markoantonijevic5430
@markoantonijevic5430 Год назад
If you watched the video he says this near the end lol
@Perrirodan1
@Perrirodan1 Год назад
The only really important difference is that modern rifles can use scopes which is a big improvement but that's it.
@thedangersofboredom
@thedangersofboredom Год назад
@@Perrirodan1 don’t be surprised if we start seeing rails for mounting optics and accessories being welded on. After all the Ukrainians have managed to refit and adapt just about everything else available. Yes it will bring tears to the eyes of collectors but it is still at the end of the day just a tool of warfare when they find themselves once again in a war.
@tavish4699
@tavish4699 Год назад
your great grandfathers muzzle loader will also work no matter if its in ukraine or the US at some point small arms developement reaches a point where you can only make it more ergonomic but that doesnt change the potency of the rifle
@enscroggs
@enscroggs Год назад
0:50 The Wehrmacht ordnance branch used the prefix MKb (Maschinenkarabiner) and MP (Maschinenpistole) to deceive Hitler into thinking they were developing a replacement for the 9mm MP-40 submachine gun, a secondary weapon used by sergeants and specialist troops, rather than a rifle to replace the standard 8mm bolt-action Mauser rifle. Hitler was adamantly opposed to the adoption of a reduced-power rifle cartridge to replace the 7.92x57mm Mauser round in use by the German army since 1903, even though this made a fully-automatic standard infantry rifle impractical. Instead, Hitler, as always, preferred his own idea -- German infantrymen equipped with 7.92x57mm semi-automatic rifles fitted with magnified optical sights.
@rubberduckindustries6665
@rubberduckindustries6665 Год назад
I remember seeing one in Iraq in 2004. Also a US M1919 with cloth belts.
@olddirtbiker5088
@olddirtbiker5088 Год назад
The 22 caliber semi auto version of this gun has the weight and feel of the original. Wonderful to shoot and fairly accurate.
@alanmoffat4454
@alanmoffat4454 Год назад
If it ain't broke don't change it as long as you have AMMO.
@stephenloy3535
@stephenloy3535 Год назад
another bang up (pardon the pun) job,Dr Felton.A friend of mine was a young leutenant in the French para's in Algeria.He said he encountered these,MP 40's,and even ancient French 'Gras' rifles.
@mlbowen6476
@mlbowen6476 Год назад
Got to love German engineering.
@jackwalker9492
@jackwalker9492 Год назад
There was a restaurant in Kabul that adorned the wall with various old firearms. They had one of these and I thought it was a modern rifle until the owner gave me the background. Gandamack. Very cool owner and place.
@mrhamburger6936
@mrhamburger6936 Год назад
Mark you should do a video on fg42 the German paratroopers rifle that would be an interesting one
@mrhamburger6936
@mrhamburger6936 Год назад
@@gratefulguy4130 but there sure a lot of hype about them
@michaelfite5273
@michaelfite5273 Год назад
Not sure on exact numbers but a sizeable amount in working order were being used in Syria several years back. Sizeable being relative to the amount that were produced. Makes sense when you look at fleeing Nazis that were sheltered and employed by Syria post WW2. Saw a pic of one in Egypt recently as well.
@goranmrdakovic1298
@goranmrdakovic1298 Год назад
There is munitions factory in Serbia, named Prvi Partizan(First Partisan), wich is still capable of producing 7.92X33mm ammo.
@ziptiejedi5658
@ziptiejedi5658 Год назад
I know a few STG44's made it to the Vietnam War also. I believe it was a fairly small amount that were actually used in Vietnam
@wayneantoniazzi2706
@wayneantoniazzi2706 Год назад
Most likely. The VC and the NVA never loved another weapon like they loved the AK-47. The SKS was a close second.
@wayneantoniazzi2706
@wayneantoniazzi2706 Год назад
@@YonIon996 Yes, I used the American designators of the time.
@ArthuriusG99
@ArthuriusG99 Год назад
Also what I find suprising is you can still find authentic parts kit Stg44s takes a little knowledge on putting it back together but its really suprising those kits still exist
@oldesertguy9616
@oldesertguy9616 Год назад
One of my holy grail guns. No chance I can own one but I can dream.
@Tovarishchostdeutsch
@Tovarishchostdeutsch Год назад
fun fact: There was a Mkb42 by Haenel and Walther, they look like stg 44 ad they was made 1942, but hitler dont like the design so he cancel it.
@HaakonTheViking
@HaakonTheViking Год назад
A lot of waffen SS men joined the French foregin legion after the war. Imagine them encountering the stg 44 years later in Vietnam or Algerie....
@tavish4699
@tavish4699 Год назад
@@tomhenry897 surely not the foreighn legion.... it was the communists who supüplied them with guns
@kanth66
@kanth66 Год назад
The problem is not with the weapon, but the problem is obtaining the specific, curious ammo size for the gun.
@Free-Bodge79
@Free-Bodge79 Год назад
She's definitely a icon. A Game changer and design that set new standards world wide. Wouldn't have wanted to go up against troops using them , while armed with a bolt action rifle. Which I imagine would have happened quite a lot. Come to think of it I wouldn't want to be on the Sharpe end of it now either.! Goes to show how well it was made in the first place, that some poor buggers still are doin even today! Thanks to the good doctor once again.! Long may his reign as RU-vid history Overlord continue. Brilliant stuff as always. 💥✊👊👍💛
@bigbadword
@bigbadword Год назад
I would give an arm and a leg to get my hands on one of these.
@sid2112
@sid2112 Год назад
Now that's commitment! But I think if you just gave over a lot of cash you could get the same result.
@TheEvilmooseofdoom
@TheEvilmooseofdoom Год назад
@@sid2112 I'm broke.. so I'm willing to use his arms and legs.. :P
@keithallver2450
@keithallver2450 Год назад
My grandfather brought an StG-44 home with him after the war. Unfortunately, his home was broken into and it was one of the things the crooks made off with.
@cavemanbum
@cavemanbum Год назад
That's an absolute sin. 😭
@John77Doe
@John77Doe Год назад
Fortunately they won't be able to get the ammunition for the SIG-44 state side. 😃😃😃😃😃
@nikopoulos5241
@nikopoulos5241 Год назад
Oh my fucking god really? That gun is worth $50k today. That is so terrible.
@thEannoyingE
@thEannoyingE Год назад
What a shame.
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