Item:
ONSV24TSA069

In stock

Original German WWII MP44 STG 44 Sturmgewehr Display Machine Gun with Live Barrel and GDR Magazine

Regular price $6,495.00

Item Description

Original Item: Only One Available. This is an exceptional STG 44 display machine gun, built using all original German WWII manufactured parts, attached to a BATF approved cast aluminum display receiver, making this a 100% legal display Machine gun. As the receiver is a mostly solid complete inert fabricated aluminum piece, this display gun is totally legal to own without a license of any kind. There are some markings on the display receiver, but they are replicated.

The live barrel, gas tube assembly, rear sight, trigger group, ejection port cover, and butt stock are completely original, and were secured to the display receiver & stock cup to make a BATF compliant non-firing inert display gun! Called the Sturmgewehr (Storm / Assault Rifle) 44, it was considered by many to be the original pattern for the modern assault rifle. The MP44 was developed to give German troops fighting in Russia a means of delivering large volumes of fire at the seemingly endless supply of Soviet troops.

This sample is in excellent condition, bearing German maker codes and proof marks on many components. The trigger group of this example is not maker marked, but does have serial number 9897 / rs marked on the rear under the butt stock cup. The left front side of the trigger group is also marked with Waffenamt WaA254, which is a known inspection stamp seen on MP44 / STG44 trigger groups, associated with maker ERMA-Erfurter Maschinenfabrik B Geipel GmbH, Erfurt. The safety and fire selectors are still intact and movable, as is the trigger, however the trigger spring is missing, so it just moves back and forth. We checked the rear sight, and it has a Waffenamt proof on the base, but we are not able to read the inspector number.

The barrel has an intact chamber and is live, with the bore in excellent condition, showing a bright bore with crisp lands and grooves. It shows very little sign of ever having been used, and is definitely a top quality bore! The barrel and gas piston adjustment fitting are marked with a Waffenamt EAGLE / 280 inspection stamp, which is usually associated with manufacture by ERMA, the designer of the MP40, as well as Mauser and J.P. Sauer & Sohn. The front side of the front sight base is marked with ce, for the famous J.P. Sauer und Sohn, Waffenfabrik, located in Suhl, Thuringia, and also bears the correct Waffenamt Eagle / 37 inspection stamp, associated with manufacture in Suhl, Germany, home of many weapons manufacturers, including Sauer.

The butt stock is an early solid wood version, and has very nice hardware, with the finish well retained except on the lower rear corner. The stock cup is marked with serial number 6803, along with some other markings, which are unfortunately partly covered by the number. It looks like this is not the first serial number this cup had. The underside of the hand guard is marked with aqr, for Lux, R. u. O., Metallwaren- und Maschinenfabrik A.-G., located in Marienthal-Bad Liebenstein/Thuringen. This was another known maker of MP44 parts.

Included is an original post war East German MP44 marked magazine, maker marked 1001, for Ernst-Thälmann-Werke in Suhl, Thüringen. Suhl had long been a center of weapons manufacturing, and once East Germany had a referendum approving re-armament in 1951, the city quickly began production again, if it had not already under Soviet occupation. These magazines are functionally identical to the WWII production, most likely made on the same tooling. Magazine will have the spring and follower removed if shipped to a state that prohibits high capacity magazines.

Condition is just great, with the finish on the original and replica parts still in great shape. This is a true collector's piece that will only appreciate in value over the years to come!

History of the MP44-
The StG 44 (Sturmgewehr 44, literally "storm rifle" model of 1944 was an assault rifle developed in NSDAP Germany during World War II that was the first of its kind to see major deployment and is considered by many historians to be the first modern assault rifle. It is also known under the designations MP 43 and MP 44 (Maschinenpistole 43, Maschinenpistole 44 respectively), which denote earlier development versions of the same weapon with some differences like a different butt end, muzzle nut, shape of the front sight base or with an unstepped barrel, all only visible with close inspection.

MP 43, MP 44, and StG 44 were different designations for what was essentially the same rifle, with minor updates in production. The variety in nomenclatures resulted from the complicated bureaucracy in NSDAP Germany. Developed from the Mkb 42(H) "machine carbine", the StG44 combined the characteristics of a carbine, submachine gun and automatic rifle. StG is an abbreviation of Sturmgewehr. The name was chosen for propaganda reasons and literally means "storm rifle" as in "to storm (i.e. "assault") an enemy position". After the adoption of the StG 44, the English translation "assault rifle" became the accepted designation for this type of infantry small arm.

The rifle was chambered for the 7.92×33mm Kurz cartridge. This shorter version of the German standard (7.92x57mm) rifle round, in combination with the weapon's selective-fire design, provided a compromise between the controllable firepower of a submachine gun at close quarters with the accuracy and power of a Karabiner 98k bolt action rifle at intermediate ranges. While the StG44 had less range and power than the more powerful infantry rifles of the day, Wehrmacht studies had shown that most combat engagements occurred at less than 300 m, with the majority within 200 m. Full-power rifle cartridges were excessive for the vast majority of uses for the average soldier. Only a trained specialist, such as a sniper, could make full use of the standard rifle round's range and power.

The StG 44's receiver was made of heavy stamped and welded steel as were other contemporary arms such as the MP 40 and MG 42. This made for a fairly heavy rifle, especially one firing an intermediate-power cartridge. Difficulties with fabrication, the need to use available non-priority steels, and the exigencies of war resulted in a heavy receiver. U.S. military intelligence criticized the weight of the weapon along with the inclusion of the fully automatic feature which it considered "ineffectual for all practical purposes", convinced that full automatic fire with StG 44 was permitted in emergencies only. This was a misinterpretation of the manual however, as the German manual states that automatic fire was "advised only in emergencies", this was mainly to make sure that the regular soldier didn't unnecessarily waste his ammunition spraying at targets, but instead fired in short accurate bursts to achieve maximum accuracy and effect; the StG could easily and safely be used in full automatic mode. The British were also critical saying that the receiver could be bent and the bolt locked up by the mere act of knocking a leaning rifle onto a hard floor. Many of these criticisms are more a testimonial of the Allied aversion rather than an accurate view of the weapon's characteristics that were proven highly effective during combat in the war.

To its credit, it was the first successful weapon of its class, and the concept had a major impact on modern infantry small arms development. By all accounts, the StG 44 fulfilled its role admirably, particularly on the Eastern Front, offering a greatly increased volume of fire compared to standard infantry rifles. In the end, it came too late to have a significant effect on the outcome of the war.

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