Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord! |
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here. |
PPSh-41: Difference between revisions
(→PPD 40) |
|||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
*Rate of fire: 800 round/min (1000rpm PPD-40) | *Rate of fire: 800 round/min (1000rpm PPD-40) | ||
*Muzzle velocity: 489 m/s (1,603.9 ft/s) | *Muzzle velocity: 489 m/s (1,603.9 ft/s) | ||
*Effective range: | *Effective range: 300 m | ||
*Feed system: 25 detachable box magazine, | *Feed system: 25 detachable box magazine, | ||
*71 detachable drum magazine | *71 detachable drum magazine |
Revision as of 16:07, 22 April 2011
The PPD, PPSh, and PPS series of submachine guns can be seen in the following films, television series, and video games used by the following actors:
PPD 40
Specifications
- Weight: 3.2 kg empty
- Length: 788 mm
- Barrel length: 273 mm
- Cartridge: 7.62x25mm Tokarev
- Action: blowback, open bolt
- Rate of fire: 800 round/min (1000rpm PPD-40)
- Muzzle velocity: 489 m/s (1,603.9 ft/s)
- Effective range: 300 m
- Feed system: 25 detachable box magazine,
- 71 detachable drum magazine
Film
- East German soldiers in Torn Curtain
Television
Video Games
PPSh-41
Information
The PPSh-41, "Pistolet Pulemyot Shpagina model of 1941", was a mass produced Submachine gun used by the Red Army during World War 2. Designed to be easier to manufacture and more reliable than the PPD-38/40 that it replaced, it was a great success in spite of its weight. This gun was used with 71 round drum magazine, but since 1942 PPSh was also used with 35 round stick magazine, since the "disk" (as the Soviets preferred to call it) was heavy and hard to load. Completely inseparable from the image of a generic WWII Red Army trooper, thus found on countless monuments.
Specifications
- Weight: 3.63 kg (8 lb)(without magazine)
- Length: 843 mm (33.2 in)
- Barrel length: 269 mm (10.6 in)
- Cartridge: 7.62x25mm Tokarev
- Action: Blowback, open bolt
- Rate of fire: 900 rounds/min[2]
- Muzzle velocity: 488 m/s (1,600.6 ft/s)
- Effective range: 200–300 m
- Maximum range: ~500 m
- Feed system: 35-round box magazine or 71-round drum magazine
- Sights: Iron sights
Film
- Az oroszlán ugrani készül (1969)
- Soviet soldiers in The Good German (2006)
- Republican soldier in Behold A Pale Horse (1964)
- Chinese soldiers in Pork Chop Hill (1959)
- Michael Berryman as Col. Petrov in Brother's War (2009) (9mm Conversion?)
- Olivier Gruner as Anton in Brother's War (2009) (9mm Conversion)
- Tino Struckmann as Capt. Klaus Mueller in Brother's War (2009) (9mm Conversion)
- Soviet soldiers in Brother's War (2009) (9mm Conversion)
- Viet Minh, North Vietnamise and Vietcong Forces in We Were Soldiers
- Border Guards in Escape from East Berlin.
- Rolf Steiner, played by James Coburn and Soviet and German soldiers in Cross of Iron.
- Soviet soldiers in Enemy at the Gates
- Soviet soldiers in Downfall aka "Der Untergang" :
- Soviet soldiers in Hitler: The Last Ten Days:
- Soviet Soldiers (rather anachronistically) in The Amateur:
- Soviet and German soldiers in Stalingrad
- Guerillas in The Rundown
- Luke Ford as Alex ,Brendan Fraser as Rick and General Yang's troops in The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor
- Used by Robert Mitchum and Robert Wagner in The Hunters (1958)
- North Korean soldiers in Tae Guk Gi
- Polish and Soviet soldiers in The Pianist
- Brother 2, in illegal Fascist's gunshop
- Two are mounted in the hood of the 1966 Buick Riviera in Death Race
- A nomad is seen with one slung on his back in Flight of the Phoenix (2004)
- Seen weilded by the African guerrillas in Red Scorpion
- When searching for intel the jungle, D'Ambrosio finds one in Dead Presidents
- When young Hannibal collapses the Red Army soldier that carries him has one in Hannibal Rising
- Many of the Russians carry one, with box magazine in The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming
- Chinese guards in the the room during the brainwashing in The Manchurian Candidate
- Used by one of Cruncher Block's thugs to try and shoot Racer X in Speed Racer
- Nomad inFlight of the Phoenix
- Jamie Bell as Asael Bielski, Soviet soldiers, Partisans, in Defiance
- Eurasian soldiers in 1984 (aka Nineteen Eighty-Four)
- Soviet and Finnish soldiers in Ambush (Rukajärven tie)
- Mujaheddin in Afghan Breakdown
- Seen hanging from a pillar in Assembly (Ji jie hao)
Television
- Stargate: SG1
- In "The Garden Party", they can be seen in Ed III's cache in the animated series The Boondocks
- Lock 'n Load With R. Lee Ermey
- East German soldier in War Game, The (1965)
- Guns of the World
- Weaponology
Video Games
- Red Orchestra: Ostfront 41-45
- Call of Duty
- Call of Duty: United Offensive (with drum mag and box (non-playable) magazines)
- Call of Duty: Finest Hour
- Call of Duty 2
- Call of Duty: World at War
• "Call of Duty: Black Ops" (Only seen in the campaign level "Project Nova")
- Commandos: Strike Force (as "PPSH41")
- Sniper Elite
- Medal of Honor: European Assault
- Medal of Honor: Allied Assault Expansion Pack seen in two expansion packs:
- 1. Spearhead Expansion Pack (in the Berlin mission and multiplayer mode on Russian side)
- 2. Breakthrough Expansion Pack (in multiplayer mode on Russian side)
- Silent Storm (with drum and box magazines)
- Vietcong (with drum and box magazines)
- Shellshock Nam '67
- Conflict: Vietnam
- Empires: Dawn of the Modern World
- Cryostasis (with 71-round drum magazine)
- Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2
- Indiana Jones and The Infernal Machine (9mm coversion)
- Fallout 3 (with drum mag but strangely converted into a semi-automatic shotgun))
- Project Reality (with drum mag)
- Battlefield: Bad Company 2: Vietnam (as "PPSH")
Animation
Anime
PPS-43
Information
During the siege of Leningrad, the PPS-43 "Pistolet-Pulemyot Sudaeva" submachine gun was developed. Manufactured entirely within the city under siege, it was lighter and easier to use than the PPSh-41, dispensing with the drum magazine in favor of the 35 round stick magazine. However, the design was virtually suppressed after the war, though some production did occur in Soviet satellite states. Note: The PPS-43 is commonly misidentified as the PPSh-43, which is incorrect, but understandable since it is a descendant of the PPSh-41.
Film
- Mel Gibson as Gene Ryack in Air America
- Viet Minh, North Vietnamese and Vietcong Forces in We Were Soldiers
- Nicholas Gonzalez as Lt. Robert James in Behind Enemy Lines II: Axis of Evil (mocked up to resemble a Heckler & Koch MP5)
- Luke Ford as Alex in The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor
- Jewish Prisoners during revolt in The Grey Zone (fitted with a wood stock)
- Czech soldiers in The Brothers Bloom
- Communist and Nationalist Chinese forces in Assembly (Ji jie hao)
- Mocked up as the Heckler & Koch MP5 in Submerged and used by various US soldiers.
Television
- In "The Garden Party", they can be seen in Ed III's cache in the animated series The Boondocks
Video Games
Animation
Anime
Suomi KP/-31
Information
Suomi KP/-31 (aka Suomi M/31), commonly known as Suomi submachine gun (Suomi konepistooli) in Finland, was a sub-machine gun based on the early Bergmann MP18 design. First designed in 1922, by Aimo J. Lahti, the gun was revealed to public in 1925. It is among one of the most successful gun designs of World War II, and many of the designs were later copied by the Soviets for their PPSh-41 and PPD-40 sub-machine guns. The Suomi (which means Finland) KP/-31 was in service in the Finnish Armed Forces from 1931 to the 1960's, when it finally became obsolete as the Rk 62 replaced it. Some special versions stayed in service through the 1980.
Specifications
- Cartridge: 9x19mm Parabellum
- Action: Straight blowback
- Rate of fire: 750–900 rounds/min
- Muzzle velocity: 750–900 rounds/min
- Effective range: up to 500m
- Feed system: 20, 36, 40, 50 box or 71-round drum
Film
- Finnish troops in The Winter War
- Finnish troops in Tali-Ihantala 1944
- Finnish troops in Etulinjan edessä
- Finnish troops in Ambush (Rukajärven tie)
- Finnish troops in Max Manus
Television
- East German soldier in The War Game
Video Games
K-50M
Information
K-50M submachine gun is a blowback-operated weapon that fires from open bolt, in either single shots or fully automatic. Fire mode selector is located in front of the trigger, safety is built into the bolt handle. The receiver of the weapon is stamped from steel. The gun uses a PPSh-41 type 35-round curved box magazines or the 71-round PPSh-41 drum that can only be used if the telescoping butt is retracted. Open sights feature a flip-up L-shaped rear blade, set up for 100 and 200 meters range.
Film
- On a weapons display in The Green Berets