About lend lease firearms - .......
There was not much of a
lend-lease agreement
between the US and USSR.
......... I have heard about findings of german conversion russian DP 27 to 7.92 mauser caliber .........
^^^^^^
That's an urban legend.
The reality is that the Deghtyarev 27
is very well engineered for (and build around)
the 7.62x54
rimmed Russian cartridge. That is, not only the bolt,
but the magazine, the feeding and extraction mechanism, etc, were
designed for the rimmed cartridge.
I would like to see one with the conversion for the 8 Mauser cartridge
or for any other rimless cartridge (I heard stories about conversions
to 30-06, 308, etc). I am not saying it is impossible, but it is a b!tch,
and very un-likely to be done in an ad-hoc shop by the front line.
That goes to show how the BS rumors and urban legends are made.
and PPSH 41 to 9 mm Para.
That one I believe it,
it is a much easier conversion,
it has been done many times.
However it is much easier to carry and use a real PPSh,
knowing that there was enough ammo around.
M4 Sherman tanks were furnished to the USSR in considerable numbers as war aid.
Another urban legend.
Yes, there were
some, but what exactly was "considerable"?
The Russian T54/T55/T62 tanks came with a Tokarev pistol installed under the driver's seat.
No, they didn't.
(If it was, that's a guaranteed receipe for getting it stolen or missing,
especially in the eastern armies).
I wonder if there was any conversion done to other calibers. One would think that would be documented. Since the digger reports finding ammo there must have been a supply.
Like you, long time ago I was suckered into
chasing evidence of another legend I heard:
the 1911 "Russian" contracts.
Allegedly, there was a contract (or two) of few hundred 1911's.
Apparently there were 2 deliveries in 1917.
Although I could not find one single picture or document to say
this was real, at one moment I believed it.
After that, allegedly, there were subsequent contracts (deliveries)
in 1930(?), 1931 and 1935(?).
Again, I didn't see one single pic, but internet bullsh!ters swear it is true.
They say they were engraved as such
plus some Russian logo (engraved by Colt).
It seems that the value of one of these
is several thousands $'s in the West,
but nobody can produce a pic.
However, on internet I found the pic of at least one 1911
(made by Colt in late 1920's)
with some Russian lettering (apparently not engraved by Colt),
but the area of engraving is so worn, very little can be read.
It was originally in 45 ACP but it was
converted (allegedly by Russians) to 7.62x25.
The quality of the conversion (barrel-fitting) is very good.
The mag was not original, IIRC.
It is part of a collection in US.
Yeah, so much for the availability of the 45 ACP in USSR.
It doesn't matter how much ammo US could pump in USSR, because
the supply chain (and everything else related to logistics
in the conditions of the hell that was in USSR during the war),
made the use of Thompson a very un-likely possibility.
For many German front-liners,
"Tommy" was an acronym for anything SMG in
other armies' hands, including Sten, Suomi, etc.
BTW, I like another BS legend about the stuff supplied by US to USSR:
Some leftover Winchesters (or whatevers) chambered in 7.62x54R
that US tried to give as anti-revolutionary aid to the Imperial White Army
some 25-30 years earlier,
but they couldn't deliver all of them during the Revolution,
and they still had some in the US warehouses
at the beginning of ww2. LMFAO
Sorry for the hi-jack.