Original Item: Only One Available. Offered in great condition is this lovely Finnish Suomi M-31 Display Submachine gun, built from all original parts on an original BATF compliant non-firing display receiver, making this a 100% legal display Sub-Machine gun. This receiver was created by using portions of the original torch cut receiver, including the barrel bushing, combined with some new made steel portions. It has properly had a 25% section of the total length completely replaced entirely with solid steel bar stock. Meaning a 1/4 length section of the display receiver is solid steel, making this totally legal to own without a license of any kind. Every part on this display gun is original WWII manufacture other than 25% of the receiver replaced by solid steel (as required by BATF). The receiver has been painted with our gunmetal gray paint.
The display gun comes complete with an original drum magazine, which will be deactivated where required. Due to how the receiver was demilitarized, with a cut right through the magazine lock, the magazine has been press fit into the magazine well, and requires a rubber mallet to remove. A replica bolt forward section has been welded into the magazine well of the display receiver to give it a better look.
The rear sight and trigger are all still intact and movable, while the safety only moves a tiny bit. The cocking handle can also be pulled back a bit, though it must be moved back forward by hand as the spring is weak. The barrel jacket lock on this example is unfortunately non-functional, so it had to be secured in place, so the barrel jacket can no longer be removed. The barrel looks to be live with an intact chamber, however it is not currently removable from the display gun, and may have suffered damage to the trunion area. Overall a very nice condition piece and very attractive, especially with the wood stock!
The sides of the sight are marked: SUOMI / Tikkakoski (left) and PATENT / 1932. (right), which are still easily legible. There are also stamped with the logo of the factory, a T inside a Triangle inside a Circle. The left side of the receiver is stamped with serial number 46488, while butt cap is stamped with serial number 6009. The barrel jacket is marked with 65824, so parts were definitely swapped out on these guns over their service life. It also bears the SA mark of the Finnish Army (Suomen Armeija), which is present on the base of the rear sight and on the magazine, which also has the Tikkakoski logo. There are additional markings and proofs on various parts of the gun.
The stock of the gun is in very good shape, though it has some interesting repairs on the right side, which look to have been cracks in the original or gouges from use. These were sanded a bit, and then had a series of holes drilled, which were then plugged with wood and re shaped. This definitely looks to be an arsenal level repair.
We have not had one of these in quite some time. A really great example with some great markings, ready to display!
The Suomi KP/-31 (Suomi-konepistooli or “Submachine-gun Finland”) was a submachine gun (SMG) of Finnish design used during World War II. It was a descendant of the M-22 prototype and the KP/-26 production model, which was revealed to the public in 1925. The Suomi-konepistooli KP/-31 is often abbreviated to Suomi KP or M31.
The Suomi KP/-31 is regarded by many as one of the most successful submachine guns of WW2, also the soon developed 71-round drum magazine was later copied and adopted by the Soviets for their PPD-40 and PPSh-41 submachine guns. The accuracy of the Suomi was superior to that of the mass-produced PPSh-41, thanks in part to a noticeably longer barrel, with the same rate of fire and the equally large magazine capacity. The major disadvantage of the Suomi KP/-31 was its high production cost.
The Suomi KP/-31 also incorporated a few new design features, including an arrangement whereby the spring was mounted inside the bolt in order to make the gun shorter. Its 50-round quad-column “Casket” box magazine was more reliable than the early 40-round “bullets loaded nose down” drum magazine, and similar applications were used on the Argentinian C-4 submachine gun and present-day 60-round 5.45x39mm AK-74 compatible magazines.
The Suomi KP/-31 went into serial production in 1931 by Tikkakoski Oy and most of these weapons were bought by the Finnish Defense Forces. The Finnish Defense Forces were equipped with about 4000 Suomi KP/-31 submachine guns when the Winter War started. During the course of the war, the design was altered with the addition of a muzzle brake, which increased the submachine gun’s overall length by 55 mm. The revised version was designated KP/-31 SJR (suujarru, or “muzzle brake”). Aimo Lahti was displeased with this revision, believing that it decreased muzzle velocity and reduced the weapon’s reliability, and even sought in vain to have the muzzle brake’s designer court-martialed. Ultimately, roughly half of the KP/-31s in Finnish service were of the SJR version. Initially the KP/-31 was issued as a substitute for a light machine gun, and proved inadequate in this role. Instead, soldiers learned by trial and error how to use submachine guns to the best effect.
By the time of the Continuation War, Finnish doctrine had been altered to include both a KP/-31 and a light machine gun (usually a captured Degtyaryov DP) in every infantry squad, and by 1943 this had been expanded to two KP/-31s per squad. KP/-31 production continued with the intention of adding a third submachine gun to each squad, but this plan was shelved in 1944 when the Continuation War ended.
The Suomi KP was also manufactured under license in Sweden, Denmark, and Switzerland, where it was known as the Hispano-Suiza MP43/44.