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Standschütze Hellriegel 1915: Difference between revisions

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The '''Standschütze Hellriegel 1915''' is an Austro-Hungarian crew-served "heavy" submachine gun produced during World War 1, however the term "submachine gun" was first coined in 1921 to advertise the [[Thompson Submachine Gun]] and at the time it was referred to as a machine gun. It could feed from standard box magazines, or from a large drum magazine which was not actually connected to the weapon and instead fed the cartridges through a flexible chute. The unusual appearance of this drum magazine led to some assumptions that it was belt fed, however this is not the case with the rounds being unconnected from one another and are propelled along the drum and feed chute by a spring in a similar manner to the ''Trommelmagazin'' snail drum used by the Luger pistol. The drum magazine can supposedly hold up to one hundred and sixty rounds while the box mag is limited to twenty or so. As of current knowledge, there was only ever one example of the Hellriegel and it did not survive the war. It is assumed to have been blowback operated with the projections at the rear being a pair of recoil springs, and the large structure over the barrel is thought to have been a leather-wrapped water or oil jacket for cooling.
The '''Standschütze Hellriegel 1915''' is an Austro-Hungarian crew-served "heavy" submachine gun produced during World War 1, however the term "submachine gun" was first coined in 1921 to advertise the [[Thompson Submachine Gun]] and at the time it was referred to as a machine gun. It could feed from standard box magazines, or from a large drum magazine which was not actually connected to the weapon and instead fed the cartridges through a flexible chute. The unusual appearance of this drum magazine led to some assumptions that it was belt fed, however this is not the case with the rounds being unconnected from one another and are propelled along the drum and feed chute by a spring in a similar manner to the ''Trommelmagazin'' snail drum used by the Luger pistol. The drum magazine can supposedly hold up to one hundred and sixty rounds while the box mag is limited to twenty or so. As of current knowledge, there was only ever one example of the Hellriegel and it did not survive the war. It is assumed to have been blowback operated with the projections at the rear being a pair of recoil springs, and the large structure over the barrel is thought to have been a leather-wrapped water or oil jacket for cooling.


The only visual evidence the gun ever existed is three pictures of a prototype being tested, found in an Austrian military archive captioned ''Maschinengewehr des Standschützen Hellriegel'' and dated 10.1915. All three pictures were taken from the right side of the gun, so what the left side looks like is a complete mystery. Very little is known about this SMG as not even its name can be fully explained: ''Standschütze'' refers to the Austro-Hungarian reserve forces during World War 1, and Hellriegel is an Austrian surname. This is thought to mean that it was either designed for the reserve forces by someone named Hellriegel, or designed by someone named Hellriegel who was a member of the reserve forces. Its ammunition capacity, operating method and which 9mm round it actually fired are conjecture based on analysis of the photographs and historical context. The provision for a drum but not a bipod means it is also not clear what exactly the weapon was intended to be used for.
The only visual evidence the gun ever existed is three pictures of a prototype being tested, found in an Austrian military archive captioned ''Maschinengewehr des Standschützen Hellriegel'' and dated 10.1915. All three pictures were taken from the right side of the gun, so what the left side looked like is a complete mystery. Not even its name can be fully explained: ''Standschütze'' refers to the Austro-Hungarian reserve forces during World War 1, and Hellriegel is an Austrian surname. This is thought to mean that it was either designed for the reserve forces by someone named Hellriegel, or designed by someone named Hellriegel who was a member of the reserve forces. Its ammunition capacity, operating method and which 9mm round it actually fired are conjecture based on analysis of the photographs and historical context. The provision for a drum but not a bipod means it is also not clear what exactly the weapon was intended to be used for.





Revision as of 14:07, 26 March 2018

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Standschütze Hellriegel 1915 heavy submachine gun with straight magazines and open ~160-round drum - 9x23mm Steyr. The strange object at the top-left is a weighted base for the drum to hold it upright, since it did not actually mount to the gun and was rested on the ground next to it.
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Standschütze Hellriegel 1915 heavy submachine gun with ~160-round drum - 9x23mm Steyr. This is how the drum was actually employed.

The Standschütze Hellriegel 1915 is an Austro-Hungarian crew-served "heavy" submachine gun produced during World War 1, however the term "submachine gun" was first coined in 1921 to advertise the Thompson Submachine Gun and at the time it was referred to as a machine gun. It could feed from standard box magazines, or from a large drum magazine which was not actually connected to the weapon and instead fed the cartridges through a flexible chute. The unusual appearance of this drum magazine led to some assumptions that it was belt fed, however this is not the case with the rounds being unconnected from one another and are propelled along the drum and feed chute by a spring in a similar manner to the Trommelmagazin snail drum used by the Luger pistol. The drum magazine can supposedly hold up to one hundred and sixty rounds while the box mag is limited to twenty or so. As of current knowledge, there was only ever one example of the Hellriegel and it did not survive the war. It is assumed to have been blowback operated with the projections at the rear being a pair of recoil springs, and the large structure over the barrel is thought to have been a leather-wrapped water or oil jacket for cooling.

The only visual evidence the gun ever existed is three pictures of a prototype being tested, found in an Austrian military archive captioned Maschinengewehr des Standschützen Hellriegel and dated 10.1915. All three pictures were taken from the right side of the gun, so what the left side looked like is a complete mystery. Not even its name can be fully explained: Standschütze refers to the Austro-Hungarian reserve forces during World War 1, and Hellriegel is an Austrian surname. This is thought to mean that it was either designed for the reserve forces by someone named Hellriegel, or designed by someone named Hellriegel who was a member of the reserve forces. Its ammunition capacity, operating method and which 9mm round it actually fired are conjecture based on analysis of the photographs and historical context. The provision for a drum but not a bipod means it is also not clear what exactly the weapon was intended to be used for.


Specifications

  • Caliber: 9mm, most likely 9x23mm Steyr though 9x19mm Parabellum has also been speculated



The Standschütze Hellriegel 1915 and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:


Video Games

Game Title Appears as Mods Notation Release Date
Battlefield 1 Hellriegel 1915 Shown with fictional side-mounted drum 2016