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Gewehr 43
One of three semi-automatic rifles issued by Germany (the others being the FG 42 and the Gewehr 41) during WWII. This weapon itself was an evolution of the Gewehr 41 (made by Mauser and Walther). The Gewehr 43 was made exclusively by Walther and addressed many of the problems the 41 encountered during the invasion of the Soviet Union (in particular the gas system and use of stripper clips instead of a removable box magazine).
The Gewehr 43 was never mass produced, and although a better rifle than the G41, it was still known for its mechanical malfunctions, mainly due to cheap parts and exposed extracting spring, causing jams if not cleaned constantly. When parts wore out or broke it was difficult to get replacements in the field and many German soldiers simply got rid of it when this happened. It was also a complicated design, and required some practice to know how it all worked. When put up against the U.S. M1 Garand, it was apparent that the G43 was outclassed by the M1's superior machined parts, extremely reliable design, better gas system, better sights, faster and more reliable en-bloc clip system, simplicity and ease of maintenance, as well as it being general issue to all infantry; whereas for every 50 Mauser rifles produced by Germany during the war, they only produced 1 G43 rifle. The German High Command saw this, and decided to issue the G43 3 rifles for every platoon, 2 of which were to be used as sniper rifles away from frontline action, fitted with a Zeiss ZF 4 scope.
According to accounts and testimony from German veterans of WWII, many German soldiers disliked the G43, and preferred the tried and true Mauser 98k, or, if they were lucky enough, scavenged American M1 rifles and Carbines whenever possible, despite this being officially against regulations. However, as a sniping platform many German snipers liked the Gewehr 43's semi-automatic abilities, good range, good ammo capacity and accuracy, however extreme long range sniping was best left to the more accurate bolt action Mauser rifles.
Specifications
(1943 - Present)
- Type: Battle Rifle
- Caliber: 7.92 x 57mm Mauser
- Weight: 9.7 lbs (4.4 kg)
- Length: 44.5 in (113 cm)
- Barrel length: 21.7 in (55 cm)
- Capacity: 10
- Fire Modes: Semi-Auto
The Gewehr 43 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 |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Enforcer | A Mobster | 1951 | ||
Go for Broke! | German soldier | 1951 | ||
Suddenly | Frank Sinatra | 1954 | ||
Brother's War | A German soldier | 2009 | ||
Saints and Soldiers: Airborne Creed | German soldier | 2012 |
Video Games
- Battlefield: 1942 (fitted with ZF 4 scope)
- Brothers in Arms: Hell's Highway (With and without ZF 4 scope)
- Call of Duty: Finest Hour (with and without ZF 4 scope)
- Call of Duty 2 (with and without ZF 4 scope)
- Darkest Hour: Europe '44-'45 (With and without scope)
- Forgotten Hope (With and without scope)
- Medal of Honor: Frontline (fitted with ZF 4 scope)
- Red Orchestra: Ostfront 41-45 (w/o ZF 4 scope)
- Sniper Elite (with ZF 4 scope)
- Seen in a cutscene in Call of Duty: World at War: Final Fronts
- Medal of Honor: Heroes (fitted with ZF 4 scope)
- Medal of Honor: Underground (With ZF 4 scope)
- Medal of Honor: European Assault (With and without ZF 4 scope)
- Medal of Honor: Airborne (with and without ZF 4 scope)
- Medal of Honor: Allied Assault (with ZF 4 scope, expansion packs only)
- Forgotten Hope 2 (With and without ZF 4 scope)
- Velvet Assassin (with scope, shown as a bolt-action rifle)
- Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory (with and without scope, optionally suppressed)
- Call of Duty: Black Ops (without scope)