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MG 42

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 08:43, 26 November 2010 by PistolJunkie (talk | contribs) (→‎Anime)
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The MG42 was the World War II upgrade of the MG34. Though a different enough design to merit being listed as a different gun, the MG42 was an attempt by Wartime Germany to create a crew served machine gun that was easier to manufacture. The MG42 used stampings whereas the MG34 was a finely machined gun, thus slow to produce in large quantities. It was chambered in 7.92x57mm Mauser aka 8mm Mauser also tested after the war in .30-06 at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Maryland.

Adopted by Germany in 1942, in an effort to reduce the machining time and cost inherent in the production of the MG34, the MG42 is perhaps the deadliest machine gun used during the war. With a cyclic rate of 1200 rounds per minute, individual shots are mostly indiscernible. The demoralizing and psychological effect of its very sound prompted the U.S. to make a training film for troops who would encounter it.

The gun is fed from a 50-round belt just as with the MG34. These belts can be linked together for upwards of 250 continuous rounds from one can, with any number of cans in tow given the situation or position. The gun is chambered in the 7.92x57mm Mauser cartridge, the same cartridge used in the well known K98k infantry rifles, and ammunition is interchangeable, although machine gun ammunition was often slightly more powerful in order to avoid jams and run the guns mechanism more reliably. It can be used with a fold-up bipod, or with the more complicated Lafette tripod, which could have optics and remote control firing capabilities. The MG42 was often seen mounted on an anti-aircraft tripod for use against low altitude aircraft.

Its downfalls were its notably high rate of fire which exhausted ammunition supplies very quickly. This was very apparent on the Russian front, where the weather often delayed much needed supplies. Its most effective use (as with most machine guns) was not in sweeping fire, but in concentrated direct fire using the shortest burst possible, and directing these bursts over the intended area.


MG42

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MG42 Machine Gun - 7.92x57mm Mauser

Specifications

  • Caliber: 7.92x57mm Mauser, .30-06
  • Length: 48 inches
  • Barrel Length: 20.18 inches
  • Weight: Gun: 25.50 pounds
  • Muzzle Velocity: 2475 feet per second
  • Maximum range: is 3,500 meters
  • Maximum effective range: is 914 meters
  • Cyclic rate of fire: 1200-1350 rounds per minute


The MG42 machine gun appears in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:

Film

Title Actor Character Note Date
To Hell and Back Audie Murphy Audie Murphy 1955
To Hell and Back German Soldiers 1955
The Young Lions German soldiers 1958
Darby's Rangers German soldiers 1958
The Great Escape German prison guards 1963
The Longest Day German soldiers 1963
The Devil's Brigade German soldiers 1968
Where Eagles Dare German soldiers 1968
The Bridge at Remagen German soldiers 1969
Fistful of Dynamite 1971
A Bridge Too Far German soldiers 1977
Death Wish 3 Martin Balsam Bennett 1985
The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission Sonny Landham Sam Sixkiller 1985
The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission German Soldiers 1985
The Park is Mine Tommy Lee Jones Mitch Garnett 1985
Aliens Jenette Goldstein PFC J. Vasquez Mocked up as M56 Smart Gun 1986
Aliens Mark Rolston Private M. Drake Mocked up as M56 Smart Gun 1986
Stray Dog: Kerberos Panzer Cops Yoshikatsu Fujiki Inui 1991
Saving Private Ryan German soldiers 1998
Valkyrie German soldier 2008
Brother's War German and Soviet soldiers 2009

Television

Video Games

  • Wolfenstein (MG42 mounted, and as part of the fictional Particle Cannon)

Anime


MG3

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MG3 Machine Gun in 7.62x51mm NATO

The MG3 is the modern rendition of the MG42 machine gun. Changes include a chrome-lined barrel, a new friction ring buffer, an improved feeding mechanism, recalibrated sights and NATO compatibility.[1] The MG3 is chambered in 7.62x51mm NATO.

Specifications

  • Caliber: 7.62x51mm NATO
  • Length: 48.22 inches
  • Barrel Length: 22.24 inches
  • Weight:
  • :Gun: 25 pounds
  • :Tripod: 36 pounds
  • :Total: 61 pounds
  • Muzzle Velocity: 2,690 feet per second
  • Maximum range: is 3,500 meters
  • Maximum effective range: is 1,200 meters
  • Cyclic rate of fire: 700-800 or 1100-1200 rounds per minute depending on the Booster and Bolt


The MG3 machine gun appears in the following films and video games used by the following actors:

Film

Video Games

Game Title Appears as Mods Notation Release Date
Steel Beasts MG3A1 Mounted on Leopard 2A4 tanks 2000
Battlefield: Bad Company 2008
Counter-Strike Online Terminator Christmas Special 2008
Socom Confrontation 2008
Battlefield 2 MG3A1, coaxial mounting Mounted on Leopard 2A6 tanks 2005
Project Reality Hand-held & fixed defensive mounting, with optional ELCAN scope & 75-round ammo drum 2005
Project Reality MG3A1, coaxial mounting Mounted on Leopard 2A6 tanks 2005
Battlefield: Bad Company 2 With optional C-More red dot sight or ACOG scope 2010

Anime


CETME Ameli

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CETME Ameli Light Machine Gun - 5.56x45mm. Basically a miniaturized version of the the full sized MG42/MG3 with some modern design changes.

A Spanish-made light machine gun externally based off the MG42/MG3, designed by CETME (Centre for Technical Studies of Military Equipment), chambered in 5.56x45mm NATO / .223 Remington. It has been in service from 1982 to the present day. Despite it's very close external resemblance to the German MGs, the weapon operates using a roller-locked delayed-blowback mechanism, similar to the the vast majority of Heckler & Koch weapons.

Specifications

  • Caliber: 5.56x45mm NATO
  • Length: 38.2 inches
  • Barrel Length: 15.75 inches
  • Weight: Gun: 14 pounds
  • Cyclic rate of fire: 850 or 1200 rounds per minute


The CETME Ameli machine gun appears 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
SOCOM: Confrontation With 200-round ammo drum 2008