Original Item: Only One available. Constructed from a legally demilitarized (de-milled) parts set, this is a wonderful and rare German WWII MG 34 Display Machine Gun. It is built from all original parts on an original BATF compliant non-firing display receiver, making this a 100% legal display 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. We have also included a basket belt drum carrier painted with our Panzergrau (Amor Gray) spray paint to complete the look.
This is one of our original WWII issue MG34 display machine guns, an early war manufacture example with a very desirable Bakelite Butt Stock. It is coded along with multiple German wartime markings and has multiple Waffenamts. It bears original serial number 1641 / h on the barrel jacket, along with dfb / 1941 for manufacture by Gustloff-Werke, Waffenfabrik, in Suhl, Germany. This company had originally been known as Gebrüder Simson (Simson Brothers) and later Simson & Co., based in Suhl, Thuringia and founded in the mid 19th century. Originally a maker of bayonets and other edged weapons, later moving into making bicycles and small motor vehicles in the late 19th century. The company continued trading after WWI and was again successful, however since the Simson family were Jewish, they found the company headquarters occupied by the SA in 1933.
With the family now exiled from their own factory, the company was then forcibly renamed Berlin Suhler Waffen- und Fahrzeugwerke (Berlin Suhl Weapons and Vehicle works or BSW) and pressed into service making small arms, beginning with the MG 13 machine gun. Thankfully, the Simson family was able to emigrate to the U.S.A. in 1936.
In 1939, the factory was renamed to Gustloff-Werke – Waffenwerk Suhl, named after assassinated Swiss NSDAP member Wilhelm Gustloff. This company would continue manufacturing MG 34 and MG 42 machine guns under German three letter code “dfb”.
The top cover is marked with bpr, for Johannes Grossfuss of Dölbeln in Sachsen, a known maker of feed trays and top covers for both the MG 34 and 42. The top cover is Waffenamt marked with inspector code WaA497, based in Döbeln/Sachsen, and WaA4, both correct for Johannes Grossfuss. The top cover is also marked with original serial number 1641 / h, matching the one on the barrel jacket. There is also a 41 matching number marked on the top cover latch, and the fitting for the butt stock is marked 1641 as well. The feed mechanism and feed tray have additional Waffenamt proofs on them, which are not clear enoguh to read. There are serial numbers and German proof marks on many other parts of the display gun. There really are some great markings on this very fine example of the most prolific German issued Light Machine gun of WWII, with lots of potential for research.
The bipod included is of the early war design, with the central height adjustment knob, and is in excellent condition. It is maker marked dfb 1941 on the central hub, next to an Eagle / 4 inspection stamp. This indicates 1942 manufacture by Gustloff-Werke, Waffenfabrik, in Suhl, Germany, who made the barrel jacket and probably the entire original gun this parts set came from. This company made many components for the MG 34 and MG 42, including entire guns. The front and rear sight still flip up and function correctly, and the bipod folds away and locks in correctly. The rear bakelite butt stock is in great shape, showing only very minor wear, and a few stress cracks from age.
A fantastic display MG 34 LMG, made with a partially matching parts set along with a very desirable bakelite butt stock. One the very last we have to offer, just perfect for your collection!
Please note that there may be various post-war markings on this display gun, in addition to the German WW2 markings. Many of these were acquired out of Israel, so many parts may have markings in Hebrew and “Star of David” proofs.
The Maschinengewehr 34, or MG 34, is a German recoil-operated air-cooled machine gun, first tested in 1929, introduced in 1934, and issued to units in 1936. It accepts the 7.92×57mm Mauser cartridge, and is generally considered the world’s first general-purpose machine gun.
The versatile MG 34 was arguably the most advanced machine gun in the world at the time of its deployment. Its combination of exceptional mobility – being light enough to be carried by one man – and high rate of fire (of up to 900 rounds per minute) was unmatched. It entered service in great numbers following AH’s repudiation of the Versailles Treaty in 1936, and was first combat tested by German troops aiding Franco’s Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War. Nonetheless, the design proved too complex for mass production, and was supplemented by the cheaper and simpler MG 42, though both remained in service and production until the end of the war.
History
The MG 34 was based on a 1930 Rheinmetall design, the MG 30. The Swiss and Austrian militaries had both licensed and produced the MG 30 from Rheinmetall shortly after patent. The MG 30 design was adapted and modified by Heinrich Vollmer of Mauser Industries. Vollmer modified the feed mechanism to accept either drum magazines or belt ammunition. He also increased the rate of fire. The MG 34’s double crescent trigger dictated either semiautomatic or fully automatic firing modes.
In the field, the weapon could operate in offensive or defensive applications. The offensive model, with a mobile soldier, used a drum magazine that could hold either 50 or 75 rounds of ammunition. In a stationary defensive role, the gun was mounted on a bipod or tripod and fed by an ammunition belt. Belts were carried in boxes of five. Each belt contained 50 rounds. Belt lengths could be linked for sustained fire. During sustained fire, barrels would have to be changed at intervals due to the heat generated by the rapid rate of fire. If the barrels were not changed properly, the weapon would misfire. Changing barrels was a rapid process for the trained operator and involved disengaging a latch and swinging the receiver to the right for the insertion of a new barrel. Accordingly, stationary defensive positions required more than one operator.
The MG 34 was the mainstay of German Army support weapons from the time of its first issue in 1935 until 1942, when it was supplanted by the next generation Maschinengewehr 42 or MG 42. Although the 34 was very reliable and dominant on the battlefield, its dissemination throughout the German forces was hampered due to its precision engineering, which resulted in high production costs and a relatively slower rate of production. For its successor, the MG 42, the Germans instead used mass production techniques similar to those that created the MP 40 submachine gun. However, the Germans nevertheless continued widespread production of MG 34s until the end of the war.
The MG 34 was used as the primary infantry machine gun during the 1930s, and remained as the primary armored vehicle defensive weapon. It was to be replaced in infantry service by the related MG 42, but there were never enough quantities of the new design to go around, and MG 34s soldiered on in all roles until the end of World War II. The MG 34 was intended to replace the MG 13 and other older machine guns, but these were still being used in World War II as demand was never met.
It was designed primarily by Heinrich Vollmer from the Mauser Werke, based on the recently introduced Rheinmetall-designed Solothurn 1930 (MG 30) that was starting to enter service in Switzerland. Changes to the operating mechanism improved the rate of fire to between 800 and 900 rpm.
The new gun was accepted for service almost immediately and was generally liked by the troops, and it was used to great effect by German soldiers assisting Nationalist Spain in the Spanish Civil War. At the time it was introduced, it had a number of advanced features and the general-purpose machine gun concept that it aspired to was an influential one. However, the MG 34 was also expensive, both in terms of construction and the raw materials needed (49 kg (108.0 lb) of steel),[citation needed] and its manufacture was too time-consuming to be built in the numbers required for the ever-expanding German armed forces. It was the standard machine gun of the Kriegsmarine (German navy).