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MG34

 

MG34


The Maschinengewehr 34, or MG34, was a German machine gun that went into production and was accepted for serivce in 1934 and first issued to units in 1935. It was a air-cooled machine gun firing 7.92 mm Mauser rounds and had similar performance to other medium machine guns.

However, also introduced along with it was with a concept that it could perform both as a light squad machine gun and also in heavier rolls, which was described a being a General purpose machine gun. In the light roll, it was intended to be eqipped with a bipod and 60-round drum. In the heavier roll it was mounted on a larger tripod (MG-34 Laffette) and was belt fed. In practice the infantry usually just belt-fed the bipod version, resulting in it functioning as a classic medium support weapon.

It was used as the primary infantry machine gun during the 1930s, and remained as the primary tank and aircraft defensive weapon. It was intended that it would be replaced in infantry service by the related MG42, but there were never enough of the new design to go around, and MG34s soldiered on in all roles until the end of World War II. It was intended that it would replace MG-13 and some other MG's but these ended up still being used in WWII as demand was never met.

The MG34 was designed primarily by Heinrich Vollmer from Mauser Werke, based on the recently introduced Rheinmetall designed Solothurn 1930 (MG30) that was starting to enter service in Switzerland. The principle changes were to move the feed mechanism to a more convenient location on the left of the breech, and the addition of a shroud around the barrel. Changes to the operating mechanism improved the rate of fire to between 800 and 900 RPM.

The MG34 could use both magazine-fed and belt-fed 7.92 mm ammunition. Belts were supplied in 50-round single strips or 250-round boxes. The drums held either 50 rounds in the standard version, or 75 in the "double drum" version. Early guns had to be modified to use the drums by replacing a part on the gun, but this modification was later supplied from the factory.

In the light machine gun role it was used with a bipod and weighed only 12.1 kg. In the medium machine gun role it could be mounted on one of two tripods, a smaller one weighing 6.75 kg, the larger 23.6 kg. The larger tripod, the MG-34 Laffette included a number of features such as a scope, and special sighting eqipment for indirect fire. The legs could be extended to allow it to be used in the anti-aircraft role (and many were), and when lowered it could be placed to allow the gun to be fired "remotely" while it swept an arc in front of the mounting with fire, or aimed through a periscope attached to the tripod.

The new gun was accepted for service almost immediately and was generally liked by the troops. It was used to great effect by German soldiers assisting the fascists in the Spanish Civil War. At the time it was introduced it had a number of advanced features and the GPMG concept that it aspired to was a influential one. However the MG34 was also expensive, both in terms of construction and the raw materials needed (49 kg of steel) and it was unable to be built in the sorts of numbers required for the ever expanding German army. It also proved to be rather temperamental, jamming easily when dirty.

By the late 1930s an effort had started to simplify the MG34, leading to the MG42. The MG42's square barrel cover made it unsuitable for use in tank cupolas however, and the MG34 remained in production until the end of the war for this role. Tank normally use the MG34-T model, whose main difference was that it had a different barrel sheath that was heavier and only had a few holes on it.

The MG34 was also used as the basis of a new aircraft gun, the MG81. For this role the breech was slightly modified to allow feeds from either side, and in one version two guns were bolted together on a single trigger to form a weapon known as the MG81Z (for zwilling, twin in German). Production of the MG34 was never enough to satisfy any of its users, and while the MG81 was a huge improvement over the earlier MG30-based MG15 and MG17, those guns could be still found in use until the end of the war.

Statistics

  • Caliber: 7.92 mm
  • Load: continuous belt feed (50 or 200 round strips) or 75 round beltless saddle drum
  • Action: select fire, air cooled
  • Rate of fire: 800 to 900 round/min
  • Weight: 12.1 kg (26.7 lb)
  • Weight with tripod: 19.2 kg (42.3 lb)

    See also

  • List of Axis firearms of WW2



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