Item:
ON13488M

Original British Sterling SMG Mk IV L2A3 Display Gun with Magazine

Item Description

Original Item: Very Few Available. Fantastic condition Sterling Mark 4 (L2A3) display guns. You don't see these often and if you do it has generally been adapted for use in a STAR WARS film. This is the most exciting SMG of post WWII years, the British 9mm Sterling MkIV SMG!

These display guns are superbly built from all original post WWII parts then fitted with a solid steel totally non-operational non-firing BATF compliant display receiver, making it legal to own in the USA. All have  markings mostly visible on the magazine well:

[STERLING]
SMG
9M/M MK 4 (L2A3)
No ******

These are each painted with a very nice crinkle black paint, to approximate the powder coating many received while in service. Occasionally the paint makes the magazine well markings a bit hard to read close to the receiver tube.

Each has a fully operational folding stock and moveable trigger, which still has a functional selector switch. All come complete with a curved Sterling 9mm Magazine (where permitted). The magazine catch is fully functional, and the folding stock properly stows under the front of the gun.

This is our final "batch" of these guns for the foreseeable future, and they will not last long!

History of the Sterling submachine gun-

The Sterling submachine gun is a British submachine gun. It was trialed with the British Army in 1944-1945 as replacement for the Sten but it did not start to replace the Sten until 1953. It remained in use until 1994, when it was phased out with the introduction of the L85A1 assault rifle.

In 1944 the British General Staff issued a specification for a new submachine gun. It stated that the weapon should not weigh more than six pounds (2.7 kg), should fire 9×19mm Parabellum calibre ammunition, have a rate of fire of no more than 500 rounds per minute and be sufficiently accurate to allow five single shots to be fired into a one foot square target at 100 yards (91 m).

To meet the new requirement, George William Patchett, the chief designer at the Sterling Armaments Company of Dagenham submitted a sample weapon of new design in early 1944. The army quickly recognised its potential (i.e. significantly increased accuracy and reliability when compared to the Sten) and ordered 120 examples for trials. Towards the end of the Second World War, some of these trial samples were used in combat by airborne troops at Arnhem and elsewhere, where it was known as the Patchett submachine gun. Given that the Patchett/Sterling can use straight Sten submachine gun magazines as well as the curved Sterling design, there were no interoperability problems.

After the war, with large numbers of Sten guns in the inventory there was little interest in replacing them with a superior design. However, in 1947 a competitive trial between the Patchett, an Enfield design, a new BSA design and an experimental Australian design was held, with the Sten for comparison. The trial was inconclusive but was followed by further development and more trials. Eventually the Patchett design won and the decision was made in 1951 for the British Army to adopt it. It started to replace the Sten in 1953 as the Sub-Machine Gun L2A1. Its last non-suppressed variation was the L2A3, but the model changes were minimal throughout its development life.

Sterling submachine guns with minor cosmetic alterations were used in the production of the Star Wars movies as blaster rifle props.

Variants:

British Army

Unassigned: Patchett Machine Carbine Mark 1 (trials commenced in 1944)

Unassigned: Patchett Machine Carbine Mark 1 & Folding Bayonet (same as above but with folding bayonet, never accepted)

L2A1: (Patchett Machine Carbine Mark 2) Adopted in 1953.

L2A2: (Sterling Mark 3) Adopted in 1955.

L2A3: (Sterling Mark 4) Adopted in 1956. Last regular version in service with the British Army.

L34A1: Suppressed version (Sterling-Patchett Mark 5). Held in reserve by the British Army. 

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