Table of Contents
Did the Germans use 50 Cal?
50 caliber was being developed, some German T Gewehr 1918 anti-tank rifles and ammunition were seized. The German rounds had a muzzle velocity of 2,700 ft/s (820 m/s), an 800 gr (52 g) bullet, and could penetrate armor 1 in (25 mm) thick at a range of 250 yd (230 m).
What caliber was the German MG42?
7.92 mm
The MG42 was designed in Germany in 1938, and it was placed in action on all fronts by mid-1942. Its original calibre was 7.92 mm, but when West Germany entered the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the weapon’s bore was modified to fire the NATO standard rifle and machine-gun cartridge of 7.62 mm.
Was the MG42 better than MG 34?
Designed and put into service in 1942, the MG 42 with its stamped metal parts was cheaper, easier to produce, more reliable, more user-friendly and arguably more lethal than the MG 34. The new gun boasted a nearly 100\% increase in range to 2000 meters and 50\% increase in rate of fire to 1500 rounds per minute.
What caliber was Hitler’s Buzzsaw?
The MG42 continued to serve in the post-war West German Bundeswehr. Rechambered so it would fire the NATO 7.62-millimeter cartridge, the Germans designated the weapon the MG3. It kept its blistering rate of fire. Today Germany and 30 other countries still use Hitler’s buzz saw.
What is the difference between mg34 and MG42?
The main difference between the MG 34 and MG 42 is reliability in combat action. The MG 34 was a precision manufactured weapon and quite unreliable in muddy, dusty, cold and humid conditions. In comparison the MG42 was mainly manufactured with stamped metal parts and had higher tolerances.
How many rounds could a MG42 shoot?
You’ve been in combat long enough to know that the German gun spits out 1,550 rounds of high-velocity, 7.92 millimeter ammunition per minute, a rate of fire that roughly works out to 25 rounds per second.
How can you tell the difference between MG34 and MG42?
Does Germany still use the MG42?
The MG3 and its latest version, the H&K MG5, come from the MG42, which is the infamous portable machine gun that started it all. This weapon was so well made that to this very day, the modern German Armed forces are still using what is essentially the same friggin machine gun they used all the way back in World War II.