German Sten Copy: MP 3008, aka Gerät Neumünster

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2016
  • The MP 3008, aka Gerät Neumünster, was one of two German efforts to copy the British Sten gun. The first was the Gerät Potsdam ("gerät" meaning device or project; basically project code name), which was a direct copy of the Sten distinguishable only by a marking details and a few differences in manufacturing processes. While 10,000 of those were being manufactured by Mauser, R&D engineer Ludwig Vorgrimmler was simplifying the Sten design even farther, resulting in the MP-3008.
    This simplified design did away with the Sten's barrel shroud, and used a vertical magazine well instead of the Sten's distinctive horizontal mounting. These were the significant changes, although there was also a sling loop placed on the front of the magazine well and a few minor simplifications to the fire control parts. Unlike the Potsdam, significant variation can be found in the MP-3008 in the details of stock and grip design.
    In a masterpiece of insane optimism, German official placed and order for literally a million MP-3008 submachine guns, which of course was completely insane. Manufacture was undertaken at a wide scattering of small shops, with guns being assembled by larger manufacturers from supplied parts. The total made is not known, but is probably in the range of 3000-5000. Some are marked with manufacturing codes from recognized factories, some with codes unknown, and some have no marking at all. This particular example is dewat made by "TJK" - an unknown factory.
    / forgottenweapons

Комментарии • 653

  • @fdsdh1
    @fdsdh1 8 лет назад +1446

    the German MP28 was copied by the British to make the Lanchester
    the Lanchester was simplified to make a Sten
    the Sten was simplified by the Germans to make the MP3008
    it went full circle!

    • @mattorama
      @mattorama 8 лет назад +160

      +fdsdh1 Any more simple and you'd just be throwing the cartridges at the enemy with your hand.

    • @MERLK2
      @MERLK2 8 лет назад +51

      +JagerLange Oh well ... at least its no Liberator Pistol ;)

    • @hairyneil
      @hairyneil 8 лет назад +81

      +mattorama
      England, late 1944, a well dressed gent in uniform with an impeccable moustache stands up, "Chaps, Jerry has come out with this, they call it the MP3008. It's damnedably simple, but it's ok, I've had the engineer chappies working overtime to come up with [unveils] the new Lanchester-Enfield-Sterling-Slingshot. The LESS. Chambered in 9x19mm of course."

    • @mattorama
      @mattorama 8 лет назад +46

      +hairyneil Slingshot? A piece of yew wood and elastic? I do protest good lad, we can simply this further!

    • @TheRomanRuler
      @TheRomanRuler 7 лет назад +26

      Slingshot? Are you mad? What is wrong with throwing good old rocks? Too advanced for ya lads?

  • @HellYeahCorp
    @HellYeahCorp 8 лет назад +1019

    The curious case of WW2 Germany actually *simplifying* something.

    • @ForgottenWeapons
      @ForgottenWeapons  8 лет назад +285

      +Aramiro Weird, huh?

    • @davidreynolds8865
      @davidreynolds8865 8 лет назад +116

      +Aramiro managing simplify something the British had already made as simple as they could.
      i didn't eve know that could be done.

    • @commonconservative7551
      @commonconservative7551 6 лет назад +7

      the barrel shroud probably kept the barrel more accurate....less harmonical movement

    • @Hyperus
      @Hyperus 6 лет назад +49

      They overengineered simplicity lmao

    • @survivalinthecity44
      @survivalinthecity44 5 лет назад +5

      They had programs to simplify a number of things in late 44 in to 45

  • @rageagainstthehygiene2357
    @rageagainstthehygiene2357 6 лет назад +615

    "A simplified version of the Sten gun..."
    Did a double take at that. What is it, throwing a 9x19 cartridge at the enemy and yelling "Bang"?

    • @raptorcell6633
      @raptorcell6633 5 лет назад +50

      Not even bullets just rocks shaped vaguely like cartridges.

    • @joeblow9657
      @joeblow9657 4 года назад +26

      that will suffice. Also, I think it would jam less and have more reliable mags

    • @colinmcgrath2392
      @colinmcgrath2392 4 года назад +12

      I believe it's called a stick

    • @aslamnurfikri7640
      @aslamnurfikri7640 4 года назад +5

      Not simple enough. Just throwing brass dust and gunpowder mix and spelling "B-A-N-G!"

    • @thief1779
      @thief1779 4 года назад +3

      @@raptorcell6633 but not over 20mm, cuz youll need to register them :D

  • @Juel92
    @Juel92 5 лет назад +438

    Haha a gun designed to be as cheap as humanly possible and constructed in a single man hour sold for over $12k. Man that gun really appreciated in value.

    • @535tony
      @535tony 5 лет назад +42

      The Sten MkII I bought in 1990 for $600 is worth about $6000 today. Not bad for an SMG that cost less then $10 to make.

    • @535tony
      @535tony 5 лет назад +3

      It is very rare gun.

    • @535tony
      @535tony 5 лет назад +9

      A dewat can be reactivated so it is the same as a transferable. That is what makes it worth so much along with the rarity.

    • @Mikhail-Tkachenko
      @Mikhail-Tkachenko 4 года назад +18

      @@535tony "No one needs a machine gun, that's why I'm against repealing the NFA, but I'm sure glad I bought my Sten when they were cheap!"

    • @creepyendy
      @creepyendy 4 года назад +4

      it has a fun switch thats the money worth

  • @TheSuburban15
    @TheSuburban15 7 лет назад +212

    Well, I feel better about my welding skills now than I did about 10 minutes ago.

    • @arnekrug939
      @arnekrug939 5 лет назад +9

      Can you weld a gun in a single hour?

    • @grahamlopez6202
      @grahamlopez6202 5 лет назад +15

      I built a sten, and it wasn't as easy as I thought it would be, but i bet i could do it in an hour if I had a team of guys making all the other parts and all I had to do was weld.

    • @adrianfirewalker4183
      @adrianfirewalker4183 5 лет назад +2

      Me too, and i don't even consider myself an Amateur

    • @painmagnet1
      @painmagnet1 4 года назад +11

      The welds on this actually look VERY good. Not so pretty, but the operators made them strong and solid. Good penetration and little excess.

    • @subconscious.com_usa6691
      @subconscious.com_usa6691 4 года назад +7

      _Suburban_
      Most of those sketchy looking welds are from the deactivation process, Someone has cut slits into the side of the gun and welded it to stop the bolt from moving, there's other deactivation welds on there too at the front and at the back.
      A decent one of those that has not been deactivate, would most probably have o.k workmanship

  • @TheInflicted
    @TheInflicted 8 лет назад +770

    Calling the gun the MP 3008 was a desperate German attempt to convince the allies that they had invented a time machine.

    • @tehgreatvak
      @tehgreatvak 8 лет назад +250

      +TheInflicted
      -"Here Hans, this is a MP3008, a superior weapon brought back from the glorious future of the Reich"
      -"Uh Gunther, if the 1000 years Reich can only make very ugly Sten copies even a millenium in the future, is this all really worth fighting for?"
      -"Shut up before we're shot for defeatism, Hans"

    • @triasn5039
      @triasn5039 8 лет назад +19

      +tehgreatvak this comment is pure gold.great job,sir.

    • @habernack2932
      @habernack2932 8 лет назад +5

      +TheInflicted They actually inventet a time machine.

    • @amperzand9162
      @amperzand9162 8 лет назад +80

      +Schnitzelschale It moved you into the future at the dazzling rate of one second per second.

    • @darthjadodge
      @darthjadodge 7 лет назад +8

      Dei Glocke

  • @Corristo89
    @Corristo89 7 лет назад +286

    The irony would've come full circle if the British had captured the MP 3008 and used it to improve on their own Sten ;-)

    • @raptorcell6633
      @raptorcell6633 5 лет назад +25

      How'd you simplify this fucking thing? Remove the damn stock?

    • @calanon534
      @calanon534 5 лет назад +36

      @@raptorcell6633 No sights, no trigger, slam-fire only.

    • @bamboozlednoodle6513
      @bamboozlednoodle6513 4 года назад +10

      Throw a 9x19mm bullet at the enemy and yell “BANG”

    • @kellerplayz1570
      @kellerplayz1570 2 года назад +2

      @@bamboozlednoodle6513 just the boolet not even the cartridge

    • @Momo_Kawashima
      @Momo_Kawashima 2 года назад +13

      @@raptorcell6633 shorter barrel, no stock, no charging bolt, no sights, no trigger guard. The quintessential angry tube

  • @jasondoe2596
    @jasondoe2596 8 лет назад +120

    Probably as "last-ditch" as you can get - what a contrast to the serialized screws (!) of the German gun in the recent video!

    • @leonardotavaresdardenne9955
      @leonardotavaresdardenne9955 8 лет назад +37

      Did you know the steel that made up the last german gun had serialized atoms?

    • @crobulari2328
      @crobulari2328 8 лет назад +2

      +Jason “cyberspace entity” Doe Almost. Check the Expedient Luty design.

  • @ronaldcolman6211
    @ronaldcolman6211 8 лет назад +289

    It's nice to see that someone actually made a Sten with the magazine pointed in the right direction.

    • @EASY7356
      @EASY7356 7 лет назад +62

      For Brits it was the right direction back then, because Shooting from the prone Position is easier
      Aussies even had SMGs with the Magazin on top (like the Villar Perosa or Bren MG) which makes even less sense

    • @alecblunden8615
      @alecblunden8615 5 лет назад +28

      @@EASY7356 The top mount mags make perfect sense. They aid the feed with gravity and allow prone firing- both weaknesses in the bottom feed guns. The only advantage of the latter is that you can see what you are shooting at, but that was never a disadvantage with the Bren or the Owen, both highly effective and, particularly in the case of the Bren, probably the most accurate and reliable LMG ever used.

    • @onionsoup6813
      @onionsoup6813 4 года назад +65

      @Lars Isaac: Australia is in the southern hemisphere, so they HAVE to put the magazines on top in order for the guns to work properly.

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 4 года назад +5

      @@EASY7356 The Owen was far more reliable than the Sten - gravity helps but not jamming when stuffed with mud was good too... The Owen was still in use by Australian forces in Vietnam in the 1960's.

    • @xaquko9718
      @xaquko9718 3 года назад

      @@alecblunden8615 lindybeige?

  • @thesturm8686
    @thesturm8686 4 года назад +90

    "A masterpiece of insane optimism" sums up the entire german efforts in 1945

    • @Mcfunface
      @Mcfunface 8 месяцев назад +1

      It was just a stalling effort at that point lol

  • @tSp289
    @tSp289 8 лет назад +34

    I hear the later models were just a steel pipe and a pin hammer.
    The deluxe version included a leaflet with some choice swear words to shout at the enemy.

  • @535tony
    @535tony 5 лет назад +28

    The British actually made a simplified version of the Sten. They called it the Sten MKIII. It turned out to be not as good as the MKII and production ceased. As the War progressed the British actually made the Sten more complicated with the Sten MKV. But they were winning the War by then.

  • @simone.Lmo.639-2
    @simone.Lmo.639-2 5 лет назад +15

    1 hour of 1 man work... that's the simpliest magazine fed select fire weapon I ever heard of

  • @dsxz
    @dsxz 8 лет назад +56

    germans making mechanicals less complicated?? is this the twilight zone?

    • @waswolltihr1526
      @waswolltihr1526 8 лет назад +3

      +LARGEFARVA It's from the mirror universe. ;-)

  • @benclifford9414
    @benclifford9414 6 лет назад +40

    It's funny. Just as we the British were beginning to make improved better stens like the mk5. The Germans make this thing

  • @iamAwesomo1994
    @iamAwesomo1994 3 года назад +9

    this is one of my favorite german guns actually. i like the vertical mag well and the single man-hour of production time. never seen one shot on the internet though.

  • @davidbeattie4294
    @davidbeattie4294 4 года назад +5

    Thank Ian. The MP 3008 is a fascinating bit of history I truly needed to understand.

  • @Jesses001
    @Jesses001 8 лет назад +7

    With welds like that, it looks like something I would make on a Sunday afternoon while bored in the shop, ha.

  • @millwaterpublishing1387
    @millwaterpublishing1387 8 лет назад +93

    The gun is ugly as a mud fence. I love it!
    Kinda' surprised they bothered with a single shot (semiauto?) feature though.

    • @vguyver2
      @vguyver2 8 лет назад +37

      +Millwater Publishing possible ammo conservation, which considering the way the war was going, and the dogmatic resistance to the last city they had planned,

    • @thesturm8686
      @thesturm8686 4 года назад +4

      If they left it out it'll be too simple to be german

  • @thewiezman
    @thewiezman 7 лет назад +89

    This is what I would make if I was a post apocalyptic arms manufacturer

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 6 лет назад +7

      nah, most likely you would end up with stick in one hand and rock in other. :P

    • @lucasward9506
      @lucasward9506 4 года назад +3

      real gamers use luty smg's

    • @jack_copperz
      @jack_copperz 4 года назад +7

      It's basically a metal pipe with a spring, a plate, a needle, a bullet, a lever and a few holes in it.
      If you simplified it enough, you could make one at home.

    • @30cal23
      @30cal23 3 года назад

      more likely you'd be making sten guns, uzis, bolt action rifles, semi auto rifles because thats about all you can do with simplified tooling

    • @wurzel9671
      @wurzel9671 2 года назад +1

      @@30cal23 Semi auto rifles would already be pretty difficult I think because of the higher chamber pressure of rifle cartridges

  • @dylanwight5764
    @dylanwight5764 3 года назад +5

    Worth mentioning, and this is also true of the original Mk.II, the sight picture is pretty decent on this type of subgun. The front post is usable, the sight radius is a decent length, and the rear sight is close enough to the eye to provide a wide field of view without being so close as to eliminate any hope of precise aiming.

  • @M04R92
    @M04R92 8 лет назад +41

    Hi Ian, The "eu" in Neumünster is pronounced like "oy" in boy
    Greetings from Germany

    • @M04R92
      @M04R92 8 лет назад +7

      +M04R92 In Dauerfeuer as well

  • @jonathanhak95
    @jonathanhak95 8 лет назад

    I literally have nothing with guns but video games but your videos are so informative that every now and then i like watching and learning some stuff, keep it up man!

  • @theblackprince1346
    @theblackprince1346 8 лет назад

    Been waiting for a forgotten weapons video on the sten gun for ages. My life's complete.

  • @martyb999
    @martyb999 7 лет назад +4

    You know you’re in trouble if you have to SIMPLIFY the Sten!

  • @donaldasayers
    @donaldasayers 8 лет назад +8

    one has to ask why the STEN had the magazine on the side. The answer is that the sear is actually on the bolt, so in the british version the sear machining (ie almost none at all.) was on the bottom of the bolt and all the machining to clear the magazine lips was on the side.
    Move the magazine to the bottom and the the trigger group has to work on a bolt that has been cut away to clear the magazine and machined to strip fresh rounds.
    So not quite a trivial piece of redesign.
    The main fault with the STEN was the use of mp-38 magazine. A two position feed double stack would have reduced the tendency of the magazine to jam.

    • @grahamlopez6202
      @grahamlopez6202 5 лет назад +1

      Makes it easy to shoot prone too

    • @klausbrinck2137
      @klausbrinck2137 2 года назад

      "Move the magazine to the bottom and the the trigger group has to work on a bolt that has been cut away to clear the magazine and machined to strip fresh rounds" I don´t quite grasp the difference. Is that better, because in the 3008 the shear-interface drags along a *shorter* part of the bolt (cause a big bolt-piece on this side is machined away to clear the magazine), and so, wears down *slower* ?

  • @curseofa5r5a
    @curseofa5r5a 4 года назад +6

    There is one of these in JoJo rabbit being used by a German girl in a final stand against Americans, nice detail

  • @alexm566
    @alexm566 2 года назад

    I always heard about German engineering, but this channel is how I truly saw examples and learned how legit great they were.

  • @zeroxception
    @zeroxception Год назад +1

    " Ludwig Vorgrimmler was simplifying the Sten design even farther"
    Sometimes people dont know when to stop

  • @GermanSwordMaster
    @GermanSwordMaster 8 лет назад +69

    "Given up the ghost" ? This saying exists in english ? :D
    How funny. It exists in german aswell.

    • @GermanSwordMaster
      @GermanSwordMaster 8 лет назад +13

      Jason Ross The one i know is pretty much the same. "Den Geist aufgeben" = "Giving up the ghost" for stuff which breaks.
      In german "Geist" is not only "ghost" but also "spirit" like the "soul" of something. Thats why i feel, the german one makes a bit more sense ^^ anyhow. I like it in both languages.

    • @gyalpoirgyud4759
      @gyalpoirgyud4759 8 лет назад +8

      +Blank- blade That's the original meaning of "ghost" in English, too. See "the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost".

    • @GermanSwordMaster
      @GermanSwordMaster 8 лет назад +5

      kmaj gpt Oh, true. Well then it works the same for both :)

    • @genghiskhan6809
      @genghiskhan6809 6 лет назад +11

      You Germans SEEM to always forget that english is at heart a germanic language.

    • @MultiArrie
      @MultiArrie 5 лет назад +2

      It exist in Dutch as well c"de geest geven"

  • @kanth66
    @kanth66 2 года назад +1

    "Copying is the sincerest form of flattery".

    • @kanth66
      @kanth66 2 года назад

      "Imitation".

  • @gewamser
    @gewamser 8 лет назад +1

    That was really interesting. Thanks!

  • @drmaudio
    @drmaudio 8 лет назад +1

    I always loved the Sten. It looks like they understood the real value of the design. An expedient firearm that any machine shop can manufacture.

  • @jamesbodnarchuk6245
    @jamesbodnarchuk6245 7 лет назад

    Very interesting! Thank you for sharing !

  • @lamonstra1464
    @lamonstra1464 8 лет назад

    Ian, buddy, audio is just fine. Thanks for another cool video.

  • @Warforce1488
    @Warforce1488 8 лет назад +1

    Damn what a rare gun. Thanks RIA.

  • @Regolith86
    @Regolith86 8 лет назад +51

    3:29 so they removed the shoulder thing that goes up? But I'm informed that makes the gun 10x deadlier!

    • @jyjaxon
      @jyjaxon 8 лет назад +9

      It also seems this gun doesn't take those deadly large capacity clips... or any kind of clip for that matter.

    • @sergeantbigmac
      @sergeantbigmac 8 лет назад +4

      +Regolith It does have one of those high capacity 30 clip thingy, so its just as deadly

    • @drmachinewerke1
      @drmachinewerke1 5 лет назад +4

      Back in my class 3 days. I had a post sample . I cut the bolt and rotated it while at the same time removing some mass . I then machined a t/stock to accept a AR grip. It sure was fun to shoot. I will say as fast as a mini uzi.
      Damn I hate the nfa

  • @HunterRodrigez
    @HunterRodrigez 8 лет назад +11

    this thing just screams desperation out of every bit

  • @herrfriedrich6563
    @herrfriedrich6563 8 лет назад +22

    greetings from germany ! first of all i want to say that i absolutly love your videos keep up the great work they are very informativ and interesting :) but i have one question ... could you take a look on other totaly minimalistic and simple guns ? i m absolutly fascinated about the fact how simple and improvised a gun can be :D
    have a nice day and thank you for your answer (if you give one ^^)

  • @donjones4719
    @donjones4719 2 года назад +2

    MP 3008 being issued to the Wehrmacht makes sense. Germany expected more and more urban warfare in German cities at this point, and equipping more and more soldiers with SMGs made sense. MP 40s certainly couldn't be cranked out fast enough for this.

  • @HRHooChicken
    @HRHooChicken 2 года назад +4

    Last ditch weapons are easily the most interesting war guns. Not just the Axis ones but the Allied ones. The Sten definitely falls into that category.

  • @keithad6485
    @keithad6485 16 дней назад

    A study I did some years ago of the STEN - I was surprised to learn the main tube is made from standard car exhaust tube - 1.5" dia with a 1/16th inch thick wall - mild steel. With the single difference was that an extra process was added forcing a mandrel through the tube to flatten the inside weld seem, so the bolt was not impeded in its movements.

  • @Spearfisher1970
    @Spearfisher1970 8 лет назад +9

    Ten thumbs up! Great educational video

  • @AnimalStomper
    @AnimalStomper 8 лет назад

    Such an eerie fire arm.

  • @fbisurveillancevan6939
    @fbisurveillancevan6939 10 месяцев назад

    I like your videos, Ian. You present everything in a calm voice and have interesting details about the weapons. "Heer" meaning German Army spells like the english word "hair".

  • @nicholasmaugeri759
    @nicholasmaugeri759 5 лет назад +1

    Never even knew this existed! wow very informative

  • @mikeh.753
    @mikeh.753 2 года назад +1

    It's mind boggling to think that the Germans actually simplified the British Sten. Damn that's like simplifieing the M3 grease gun.

  • @HatcheDWheeL
    @HatcheDWheeL 8 лет назад +76

    "Feuer" is pronounced "foyer"

    • @HatcheDWheeL
      @HatcheDWheeL 8 лет назад +8

      or just "fire"

    • @gun_nerds
      @gun_nerds 8 лет назад +28

      +HatcheDWheeL
      No! Dauerführer is the perfectly fine lol.

    • @HellYeahCorp
      @HellYeahCorp 8 лет назад +10

      +net split Ist Merkel nicht die Dauerführerin?
      EDIT: Eigentlich war Kohl der Dauerführer.

    • @LWKEsq
      @LWKEsq 4 года назад

      @@HellYeahCorp : 4 years later he/she/it is well on the way. The Tavistock made het, the Tavistock keeps her. Nothing new under the sun. Replacing trained agents tends to cost a bomb (or two, or three - installing manufactured democracy isn't cheap).

    • @Kyanzes
      @Kyanzes 4 года назад

      And everyone runs to the lobby.

  • @dat42960
    @dat42960 7 лет назад +2

    Man when i heard Mauser and Improved i expected a little better looking workmanship or just simplified but that thing looks like something out of Royal Nonesuch's workshop and they wanted a million ! Truly a monument to mans determination to kill one another.

  • @ricklindert5649
    @ricklindert5649 5 дней назад

    I remember being trained on both the MP 40 and the STEN many years ago. I was able to fire each of these as well as the Thompson, Swedish K , our own grease gun,and some others. I liked the feel of the MP 40 much more than the STEN. There seemed to be less recoil impulse, or anyway better dampened, and it seemed easier to hit with repeated shots. The MP 40 was also more reliable. The STEN gave a lot of stoppages, mostly due to poor magazine quality. Interestingly, the magazines looked a lot alike, but were not interchangeable.

  • @davidlambert6171
    @davidlambert6171 Год назад +1

    I did not know the words "simplify" and "sten" can exist in one sentence!

  • @99smite
    @99smite 8 лет назад

    Simply the best place to cometo to get to know something about "forgotten weapons". Ian is able to give tons of facts and information about very exotic guns in an entertaining way. It's awesome, and by the way, Dauerfeuer and Einzelfeuer, Feuer is pronounced foire... I understand that it is difficult for an American to pronounce these strange sounding German words...

  • @jmantime
    @jmantime 8 лет назад +24

    there was second prettiyer version called the " MP-3008 Blohm & Voss ' - i161.photobucket.com/albums/t206/poppapolar/MP3008.jpg

    • @thewiezman
      @thewiezman 7 лет назад +1

      jmantime hey I'm subbed to you haha

    • @rogerjohnson8707
      @rogerjohnson8707 4 года назад

      Today B&V builds some of the worlds largest yachts.

  • @pedrotome9119
    @pedrotome9119 13 дней назад

    I did not know anything about this before!!! 😮 What a "romance"!!

  • @Mildcat743
    @Mildcat743 7 лет назад +2

    You know you need to cut corners when you need to simplify the Sten

  • @danhulson8703
    @danhulson8703 7 лет назад +17

    my granddad was a royal engineer and faught in Korea,he told me that Sten guns were death traps he said if they were knocked about or dropped they would discharge and often empty there full magazine,he never had a good word to say about the sten and said they were one of the worst guns in the army at the time

    • @Wakey585
      @Wakey585 7 лет назад +6

      fantastic weapons to disassemble though: unscrew the bottom plate and bolt and give it a good shake, everything should fall out as long as you wern't knocked out by the spring.

    • @jakublulek3261
      @jakublulek3261 4 года назад

      Polish troopes in British army often discarted Sten for MP40.

    • @danhulson8703
      @danhulson8703 4 года назад +2

      @@jakublulek3261 who could blame them the MP 40 was superior to the sten in nearly every way,But the Sten was a product of it's time built for numbers and cheapness

  • @mikeh.753
    @mikeh.753 2 года назад +1

    I don't see why they didn't spend a couple extra pennies and a couple minutes forming a pistol grip into the stock. I couldn't have taken more than 4 or 5 bends in the stocks overall manufacturing. The Sten had to have cost less than a m3 grease gun and that was I believe less then 10 dollars per copy. I know that the Liberator 45acp single shot that America dropped into Europe for the resistance was extremely inexpensive to manufacture. Heck the m3 grease gun actually got easier and cheaper to make when they did away with the weak charging lever and just put a hole in the bolt to cock the gun. So basically the grease gun evolved on its own pretty much. And GM's guide lamp division tooled up and produced the m3 grease gun in a matter of weeks not months. And a relative of mine used a grease gun in Vietnam and he said it was extremely reliable and quite surprisingly accurate for what it was intended to be used for. A spring, a wire , and a prayer is what I've heard how the soldiers Described the m3 grease gun. Not as effectivein combat as a m1 carbine but a lot more firepower than a Colt 45acp pistol. And when the conversion parts were handed out to make the m1 carbine a select fire weapon the little m1 became the m2 and a squad could have weapons that ranged from m60 , BAR , S&W m76, m1 and m2 carbines and of course they had tim3 grease guns. Quite a variety of ammunition but that was before the military got really serious about interchangeability of ammunition like almost all modern militaries have been doing for a long time now. Oh and don't forget the m14 and I'm sure they were still using some m1 Garands also.

  • @Rasgonras
    @Rasgonras 8 лет назад

    Love the new beard style! Suits you very well.
    Sometimes less is more :)

  • @renoir4964
    @renoir4964 10 дней назад +1

    Building the V2 and a sten gun copy at the same time…

  • @luigiaqua2263
    @luigiaqua2263 3 года назад

    Also came a suppressor with it, very rare.

  • @williamcattr267
    @williamcattr267 3 года назад +2

    Would like to see this thing demonstrated at the range by you guys.

  • @AnimalStomper
    @AnimalStomper 8 лет назад +42

    Wasn't the vertical magazine on the MP40 a nightmare for shooting when prone. Seems like the horizontal one would be more practical in combat.

    • @AnimalStomper
      @AnimalStomper 8 лет назад +3

      +Edward Kiel Good point. Also I suppose, either way the mag is going to be a nuisance at some point. Being that on the horizontal model you would have issues shooting around the left hand corner of a building.

    • @27dcx
      @27dcx 8 лет назад +13

      +AnimalStomper I wonder if any shops made a compromise model with the mag on a 45 degree angle

    • @sergeantbigmac
      @sergeantbigmac 8 лет назад +16

      +AnimalStomper
      Thats the usually cited reason by historians, but I dont think its that big of a deal in practice, otherwise everyone wouldve made their SMGs with side magazines. Just compare the number of guns with vertical vs horizontal mags. In real world use its obvious.

    • @farmerboy916
      @farmerboy916 8 лет назад +18

      +sergeantbigmac Well let's be honest, how often will a soldier be firing a subgun prone? You can just tilt the gun when you are. Whereas he'll be carrying it all the time, and I've heard side magazines make that impractical and uncomfortable as all hell. It turns a mostly flat object into something not at all so.

    • @sergeantbigmac
      @sergeantbigmac 8 лет назад

      farmerboy916 Yes yes and yes. Thats exactly my point. Thanks ;)

  • @kevkfz5226
    @kevkfz5226 8 лет назад

    very interesting

  • @keithad6485
    @keithad6485 16 дней назад

    There is a chapter devoted to German copies of the STEN in Peter Laidler's book, The STEN Machine Carbine, published by Collector Grade Publications. No longer in business and the book is out of print.

  • @rejmons1
    @rejmons1 4 года назад

    I think, the source of some solutions in this weapon (vertical magazine of MP40) was in MP "Blyskawica" (Lightning) developed by the Home Army (resistence movement) in Poland in 1943. Conspiracy factory made 700 of those MP until the August of 1944 when this weappon were used in the Warsaw Uprising. The Germans get the specimens of this weapon in mid-1944, so it is very likely that they used this solution in their own MP 3008.

  • @pimpmoney909
    @pimpmoney909 8 лет назад

    Great video as always, thanks for uploading! Just a very minor correction: The "E" is for "Einzelfeuer", not "Einfeuer".

  • @janwitts2688
    @janwitts2688 Месяц назад

    Landwehr units were used to having sten guns and other captured equipment which explains the markings

  • @PhobosTK
    @PhobosTK 2 года назад +1

    they put the mag well in the right place!

  • @rcbif101
    @rcbif101 8 лет назад

    How was the barrel held in? Pinned? And does the front sight come off, or is it welded to the trunnion?

  • @Ghost_Of_SAS
    @Ghost_Of_SAS 8 лет назад +12

    By German logic this would have come out in the year 3008. Shouldn't it fire plasma or something?

    • @Swampy0110
      @Swampy0110 6 лет назад +2

      Only after its been Pack-a-Punched

  • @dand8538
    @dand8538 5 лет назад +1

    This gun sounds like it was named after Gary numan. The guy that made that song called cars. " Here in my car, Iv'e got a machine gun and i do it for fun been shooting my gun, in cars"

  • @_Wiseguy7
    @_Wiseguy7 7 лет назад +3

    huh, always wondered how a STEN gun would look like with a vertical mag well.

    • @jacekzielinski5164
      @jacekzielinski5164 5 лет назад

      Check on "błyskawica", gun done by Polish Home Army..

  • @unknown0soldier
    @unknown0soldier 4 месяца назад

    0:42 the first thing that came to my mind was "how on earth could they simplify the Sten any further?!" lol

  • @zackFanatic
    @zackFanatic 8 лет назад +3

    Ian, I am curious about something. You've run into a lot of rare weapons from all eras, but this video really piqued my interest. I never knew the Germans used the Sten at all! So, I would like to know, have you ever run into a MP41(r), or the MP717(r)? Other than a few pictures, and a few articles, i've yet to find much information on German-used PPsH 41s. Thank you for all of your videos, they've led me to learn a lot more about the history of firearms-and the situations that led to their development-that I may never of heard about. Greetings from Canada!

  • @microplate4358
    @microplate4358 4 года назад +3

    When mom said we have Sten at home

  • @Purpmaster
    @Purpmaster 4 года назад

    Wow this sure sold cheap for such a rare and unusual last ditch German weapon, especially being a papered mg. Even as a dewat. I’d buy that in a heartbeat!

  • @DanielaRChamps
    @DanielaRChamps 8 лет назад +4

    First of all I love your Videos. As a German, german weapons are always of big interrest for me. Seeing some of the weaponery I read about in books on that level is just amazing. One Thing i noticed waching your Videos is that you refere to the E on the selecter switches as Einfeuer, thats unfortunatly not completly true, the right term would be Einzelfeuer. But actually thats just a minor sidenote. Thanks a lot for the great work.

  • @Treblaine
    @Treblaine 8 лет назад +1

    Simplified Sten? Single man-hour of production time? I didn't think such a thing was possible.

  • @Greg41982
    @Greg41982 8 лет назад

    Now we know where Sig gets the trigger shoes for their XFIVE Supermatch.

  • @zyklon94
    @zyklon94 8 лет назад +1

    Hi Ian, I read an article about the nomenclature of WW2 German weapon factories in a Hungarian weapon themed magazine. According to that, there is a German book which contains all codes of the factories which produced any kind of military products even in the collaborating counties. I'm going to put the link of the book under this comment as soon as I find the ISBN code of the book

    • @ForgottenWeapons
      @ForgottenWeapons  8 лет назад +1

      +Máté Tóth Yes, I have an excellent book like that. But some of the small shops like the one that made this gun are simply not documented.

    • @huszardaniel4927
      @huszardaniel4927 8 лет назад

      Jó itt hazánk fiát látni :-D

  • @Sheerwater909
    @Sheerwater909 8 лет назад +2

    I wonder what the finished cost of one of these was against the 7/6 (37.5p) ($3.00) of the Sten. Simplification aside, transportation of parts must have pushed the final price up somewhat.

  • @JerryMetal
    @JerryMetal 7 лет назад

    Beautiful German engineering

  • @rdjhardy
    @rdjhardy 8 лет назад

    At least they went with the Canadian pattern stock.

  • @tb7771
    @tb7771 5 лет назад

    Wow, pretty rare weapon there.

  • @ShawarmaFarmer
    @ShawarmaFarmer 8 лет назад +1

    Do you think it will be possible to do a video on the Claridge Hi Tec S9s of the 90s?

  • @brucelee6415
    @brucelee6415 Год назад

    I've heard reports from people who have used sten guns saying that they were feared by the people who operated them because they would go off when bumped or dropped. Some guy I heard saying "if you want to clear a room with a sten gun, throw it inside on the floor then slam the door shut"

  • @Wykletypl
    @Wykletypl 7 лет назад +1

    I have a suggestion for the weapon to be featured in this channel - Błyskawica. or Lightning smg, the only smg mass produced in underground factories of the resistance, used by Polish Home Army especially during the Warsaw Uprising.
    I saw a couple of people saying it was inferior to MP-40, but none bothered to tell what they based their opinions on. Would be nice if You talked about Błyskawica and even field tested it, to say how it actually performed.

  • @christian.irvine
    @christian.irvine 3 года назад

    My friend owns one like this with no knowledge of what it is. His father took it as a cash trade situation for a Carmen ghia. Now he has a gem and it fires

  • @Nomogizmo111200
    @Nomogizmo111200 8 лет назад

    Hey Ian I really like all videos Great info!! any chance you can review a French Mas 38 SMG

  • @petesampson4273
    @petesampson4273 7 лет назад

    Two points.
    1. I recall reading a story that the Germans captured a truckload of Stens, the first they got their hands on, and after sending them back to Germany the powers that be took one look at them and melted them down for scrap. The story may be apocryphal but, if true, it would show how the Germans abandoned their penchant for quality over quantity as they became more desperate.
    2. I get gun collecting. I have a very small collection myself and, for example, paid a premium for a 1970's Colt-Sauer .30-06, bolt action that had been "shot out" and, rather than hanging it on a wall, I had a gunsmith friend of mine convert it to "8mmX06" which merely uses 8mm Mauser bullets in a .30X06 case. Since I haven't bought any factory ammo other than .22 rimfire in about 40 years; the need to load my own wildcat cartridges is actually a plus and that rifle is far, far, more accurate than I ever was. I also have a 1951 Winchester 94 that I wouldn't trade for love or money. In fact; I was only half joking when I told the person I have bequeathed it to that he should load my ashes into 30-30 rounds and fire them out of the old Winchester in some of my favorite places!
    All that being said; It is a bit shocking to see that someone probably paid more than it cost to build all the "3008's" for a single, deactivated, example.

  • @bradenpetty3828
    @bradenpetty3828 8 лет назад +3

    Very interesting. I think I prefer this one over the British one.

  • @the-quintessenz
    @the-quintessenz 3 года назад

    That's a gun everyone looking to survive the apocalypse should acquire. Such a minimized design can be built under almost all circumstances.

  • @Jorvard
    @Jorvard 8 лет назад +3

    I'm from Neumünster.

  • @dshrecksBW
    @dshrecksBW 8 лет назад +3

    The stock actually looks relatively comfortable for its cost. Did it shoulder well? Better than a wire stock?

  • @anantavideogohain9905
    @anantavideogohain9905 7 лет назад

    I like your videos bro.

  • @the.sketch.projekt8851
    @the.sketch.projekt8851 2 года назад

    I’m pretty sure this is the gun that’s used by the armed gunmen at the beginning of the first Incredibles movie.

  • @spottydog4477
    @spottydog4477 4 года назад +1

    Dear Krauts, it doesn't matter how fast and cheaply you can make guns when you don't have anyone left to use them

  • @TheMCD1989
    @TheMCD1989 6 лет назад +4

    I know this is an old video, but I'm curious does anyone know what kind of welding they used for these guns back in the day? Did MIG welding exist? Or was it all done with stick welds, because if so that's impressive.

    • @mark4lev
      @mark4lev 11 месяцев назад

      Gas welding I think, with oxy- acetylene torch.

  • @toosneaky6607
    @toosneaky6607 8 лет назад

    i just like how the mag is not on the side

  • @rickautry2759
    @rickautry2759 8 лет назад +1

    It looks like the Germans made a significant upgrade - that stock actually looks like the most comfortable that was ever put on those sub gun abortions. A painful wire stock doesn't get used, 'accuracy' (Ha!) falls off, rounds are wasted, all at a time when these things matter the most.

    • @kevinoliver3083
      @kevinoliver3083 Год назад

      The stock is a copy of one of the types used on the Sten Mk.II and Mk.III.