Original Item: One-of-a-kind. This is an excellent condition MP40 Maschinenpistole 40 display gun, built from an original parts set and constructed on a legal non-firing BATF compliant fabricated steel dummy receiver, making this a 100% legal display Sub-Machine gun. It has properly had a 25% section of the total length made 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. Additionally, it has had a deactivated FBP bolt welded inside the receiver to increase the display potential. As the receiver is a complete inert fabricated piece, this display gun is totally legal to own without a license of any kind.
Offered with exceptional original dark brown / black bakelite stock and grips, this is the real thing that will only appreciate in value over time. The extending butt stock is present and fully functional. The inert aluminum receiver has a complete, simulated fixed aluminum bolt system, giving the impression of an original unit, and is fitted with a fabricated replica safety bolt handle. The barrel is original and has not been deactivated in any way, and the bore is in very good shape, with a bright finish and clear lands and grooves, showing just a bit of wear. Original markings have been maintained and make a keystone item for any serious WWII collection. Please note that the lower frame assembly is only press fit onto the dummy receiver to avoid damaging it.
The rear receiver cup of this display gun is marked with the model and manufacture codes:
MP40
bnz. 42
This indicates 1942 manufacture by Steyr-Daimler-Puch AG, Werk Steyr, the legendary Austrian arms company. The rear receiver cup base is marked with serial number 2795 / J, which is also marked on the trigger housing and the folding stock. There are also Waffenamt proofs on the left side of the base cup and rear housing, but we are not able to read them as they are not struck well.
The barrel is marked with non matching serial number 8689, while the front sight base is marked with 117 and the barrel nut 591. However all three are marked with Waffenamt Eagle / 280, usually associated with ERMA, the designer of the MP40. There are also other markings and Waffenamt proofs throughout the display gun, as well as mis-matched serial numbers, so this was probably made from a gun that saw long service, with parts from several guns used to repair it.
Included is an original MP 40 magazine in very good to excellent condition, which is correctly marked MP. 38 u. 40 on the side, with maker code bte 42 on the back for 1942 production by Frank’sche Eisenwerke AG, located in Adolfshütte, Niederscheld / Dillkreis. This ironworking company is a known maker of MP 40 magazines, and it is also marked on the back with Waffenamt WaAB37 stamps, correct for this maker. Magazine will have the spring and follower removed if shipped to a state that prohibits high capacity magazines.
A great chance to pick up a very great MP40 display gun with a live barrel, complete with an original magazine! We rarely seem them this nice! Ready to display!
History of the MP40
The Maschinenpistole 40 (“Machine pistol 40”) descended from its predecessor the MP 38, which was in turn based on the MP 36, a prototype made of machined steel. The MP 36 was developed independently by Erma Werke’s Berthold Geipel with funding from the German Army. It took design elements from Heinrich Vollmer’s VPM 1930 and EMP. Vollmer then worked on Berthold Geipel’s MP 36 and in 1938 submitted a prototype to answer a request from the Heereswaffenamt (Army Weapons Office) for a new submachine gun, which was adopted as MP 38. The MP 38 was a simplification of the MP 36, and the MP 40 was a further simplification of the MP 38, with certain cost-saving alterations, most notably in the more extensive use of stamped steel rather than machined parts.
It was heavily used by infantrymen (particularly platoon and squad leaders), and by paratroopers, on the Eastern and Western Fronts. Its advanced and modern features made it a favorite among soldiers and popular in countries from various parts of the world after the war. It was often erroneously called “Schmeisser” by the Allies, despite Hugo Schmeisser’s non-involvement in the weapon’s design and production. From 1940 to 1945, an estimated 1.1 million were produced by Erma Werke.