The Wehrmacht oil was something like, 'Ballistol' part lube part cleaner. I would use straight ordinary machine oil.
Not sure if this was a problem with the WWII SMGs, but the stripping drill requires that trigger be held before you can separate the upper from the lower. Is there any extra sear "lift" because it is a semiautomatic?
. Neat gun, or it will be when it has the bugs worked out.Here is the receiver scratching below the bakelite stock line. It seems to be from the sear skipping along the receiver when the gun is disassembled and reassembled. It was already like this when I got it. I've stripped the gun twice now and it it getting progressively worse (a little at a time).
Anyone here ever had a real MP38? Was/is this an issue on the originals?
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I had a chance to fire one this weekend. The gun itself was amazing... reliability was not. It was having a lot of failures to fire, and some failures to even release the bolt. However, when the owner did finally get it to cycle, it went FA on me for all 5 rds.. Neat gun, or it will be when it has the bugs worked out.
Wouldn't it be nice if there was a BD-M3 Grease Gun and a BD-Thompson
Machine Gun (M1A1 and 1928), both in .45 ACP, considering that's the other calibre they haven't done yet.
Wow, how did I miss this thread? What a nice-looking piece you have there. Do you have to shoot pretty stout 9mm loads with it to cycle the bolt or will it work well with light target ammo?
I find myself in the unfortunate position of having no 12(x) to collect much of any WWII German military arms that so interest me.
PS - your flag is upsidedown



























