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Frommer Stop: Difference between revisions
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The Stop was the fourth in a line of pistols with similar design principals, and the most successful of Rudolph Frommer's designs. The Stop is unique for its use of a long-recoil action, in which the breech is locked during the entire action of recoil, and only separates once the bolt has fully traveled rearward. The Stop could also be converted to be a machine pistol. The pistol is mechanically complex and was thus difficult and expensive to manufacture. Nonetheless, around 360,000 were manufactured between 1912 and 1929. The Stop was widely used as a sidearm by Austria-Hungary during World War I and continued to see use throughout World War II. | The Stop was the fourth in a line of pistols with similar design principals, and the most successful of Rudolph Frommer's designs. The Stop is unique for its use of a long-recoil action, in which the breech is locked during the entire action of recoil, and only separates once the bolt has fully traveled rearward. The Stop could also be converted to be a machine pistol. The pistol is mechanically complex and was thus difficult and expensive to manufacture. Nonetheless, around 360,000 were manufactured between 1912 and 1929. The Stop was widely used as a sidearm by Austria-Hungary during World War I and continued to see use throughout World War II. | ||
A full-automatic version was also introduced in 1917, with an extended barrel and magazines. However, the | A full-automatic version was also introduced in 1917, with an extended barrel and magazines. However, the standalone machine pistol variant was very rare. Much more common were bizarre (by today's standards) "machine gun" variants consisting of twin Frommer Stop machine pistols mounted side-by-side, upside-down, with triggers transferred to the back of the grip (for convenient shooting from this position) and mounted on bipods. Sights, and often wooden handles, were also removed as unnecessary. This strange decision was made to counter the Italian [[Villar-Perosa M1915]]; however, unsatisfied with this, the Austrians would later start simply making their own copies of the OVP M1915. | ||
== Specifications == | == Specifications == |
Revision as of 01:54, 9 August 2021
The Frommer Stop is a Hungarian semi-automatic pistol manufactured by FÉG. It is named after its designer, Rudolph Frommer, and was originally designed for use by the Royal Hungarian Army in 1912.
The Stop was the fourth in a line of pistols with similar design principals, and the most successful of Rudolph Frommer's designs. The Stop is unique for its use of a long-recoil action, in which the breech is locked during the entire action of recoil, and only separates once the bolt has fully traveled rearward. The Stop could also be converted to be a machine pistol. The pistol is mechanically complex and was thus difficult and expensive to manufacture. Nonetheless, around 360,000 were manufactured between 1912 and 1929. The Stop was widely used as a sidearm by Austria-Hungary during World War I and continued to see use throughout World War II.
A full-automatic version was also introduced in 1917, with an extended barrel and magazines. However, the standalone machine pistol variant was very rare. Much more common were bizarre (by today's standards) "machine gun" variants consisting of twin Frommer Stop machine pistols mounted side-by-side, upside-down, with triggers transferred to the back of the grip (for convenient shooting from this position) and mounted on bipods. Sights, and often wooden handles, were also removed as unnecessary. This strange decision was made to counter the Italian Villar-Perosa M1915; however, unsatisfied with this, the Austrians would later start simply making their own copies of the OVP M1915.
Specifications
(1912 - 1929 (manufacture)/1945 (service))
- Type: Pistol
- Calibers: .32 ACP, .380 ACP
- Weight: 1.4 lbs (0.61 kg)
- Length: 6.5 in (16.5 cm)
- Barrel length: 3.7 in (9.5 cm)
- Capacity: 7, 15 (machine-pistol version)
- Fire Modes: Semi-Auto, Full-Auto (machine-pistol version)
The Frommer Stop and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:
Film
Title | Actor | Character | Note | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dr. Mabuse The Gambler | Bernhard Goetzke | Norbert von Wenk | 1922 | |
Zigmund Kolosovskiy | Vladimir Shishkin | Stanislaw Orlik | 1946 | |
Irena Murova | Yuliya Rakushka | |||
Secret Agent (Podvig razvedchika) | Pavel Kadochnikov | Maj. Fedotov alias Eckert | 1947 | |
The Mask of the Gorilla (Le Gorille vous salue bien) | François Darbon | Popaul | 1958 | |
Consider All Risks (Classe tous risques) | Jean-Paul Belmondo | Eric Stark | 1960 | |
Two Half-Times in Hell | German general | 1961 | ||
Funeral in Berlin | 1966 | |||
You Are a Widow, Sir! | Hanging on the wall | 1970 | ||
The Golden Fleece (Beshenoe zoloto) | Gleb Strizhenov | Joe Parsons | 1976 | |
Maija Eglite | Roberta Croy | |||
Anthropoid | Czech resistence fighter | 2016 |
Television
Title | Actor | Character | Note/Episode | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bors | Various | Various | 1968 | |
Hitler: The Rise of Evil | Robert Carlyle | Adolf Hitler | 2003 | |
Jena Malone | Geli Raubal | |||
Julianna Margulies | Helene Hanfstaeng |
Video Game
Game Title | Appears as | Note | Release Date |
---|---|---|---|
World of Guns: Gun Disassembly | Frommer Stop | 2014 | |
Battlefield 1 | "Frommer Stop" | Pistol & machine pistol versions available | 2016 |
"Frommer Stop Auto" | |||
Tannenberg | "Frommer Stop" | 2019 |
Anime
Title | Character | Note | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Fullmetal Alchemist: Conqueror of Shamballa | Adolf Hitler | scene taken from Hitler: The Rise of Evil | 2005 |