- MG30
Infobox Weapon
name= MG30
caption= The MG-30 on display in Austria (Festung Hohensalzburg).
origin=flag|Austria,flag|Switzerland
type=machine gun
is_ranged=yes
service= 1930s–1940s
used_by=See Users
wars=
designer=Louis Schmeisser
design_date=
manufacturer=Steyr-Daimler-Puch
production_date=
number=
variants= MG15, MG17 both used in aircraft
weight= 12 kg (27 lb)
length=
part_length=
crew=
cartridge=7.92x57mm Mauser , 8x56mmR 31.M,7x57mm (47 ordered in this caliber by el salvador)
caliber=
action= recoil
rate= 600–800 rpm
velocity= 2,650 ft/s (807.92 m/s)
range=
max_range=
feed= 30-round magazine, 25 round magazine 8x56R
sights=The Maschinengewehr 30, or MG30 was a German-designed
machine gun that saw some service with variousarmed forces in the1930s . It was also modified to become the standard Germanaircraft gun as the MG15 and MG17. It is most notable as the design pattern that led to theMG34 andMG42 , and thus is one of the major ancestors of many of the weapons in service which would later find widespread use even into the present day.History
Development of the MG30 took place under the direction of
Louis Stange atRheinmetall 'sSömmerda office. However actual production of machine guns was prohibited in Germany under theVersailles Treaty , and the design was rejected by theReichswehr . Rheinmetall then turned to other companies and licensed the design to Solothurn inSwitzerland andSteyr-Daimler-Puch inAustria . Production soon followed, entering the armed forces of both countries as the Solothurn S2-100 and Maschinengewehr Solothurn 1930, or MG30, respectively. 2000-3000 were also purchased by Hungary, where it was known as the Solothurn 31.M Golyoszoro.Design
The gun fired standard
7.92x57mm Mauser ammunition, fed from a slightly curved 30-round magazine inserted in the left side of the weapon. The machine gun was fired both in semi-automatic and full automatic mode depending on how far the trigger is pulled, with a rate of fire between 600 and 800rounds per minute in full-auto. It included a foldingbipod attached two thirds down the barrel.Variants
Rheinmetall's Borsig office modified the MG30 design for use as an aircraft gun, producing the Flugzeugmaschinengewehr 15, or MG15. The primary changes were the use of a double-drum magazine holding 75 rounds, and the addition of a removal of the stock for use inside the cramped quarters of a
bomber .Further modification in
1936 led to the MG17, which included provisions for belt-fed ammo in addition to the drums, increased the rate of fire to about 1,200 rpm, and was suitable for use with aninterrupter gear for shooting through the aircraft's own propellor.In 1942 aircraft guns had increased dramatically in size, and the 7.92 mm weapons were no longer considered useful by the
Luftwaffe . Many were then sent to the army, who started a program to modify them into ground-based weapons by adding a bipod and simple metal stock.tatistics
*Caliber: 7.92 mm
*Load: 50 round beltless saddle drum
*Action: select fire,air-cooled
*Rate of Fire: 600 to 800 rpm
*Weight: 27 lb (12 kg)Users
*flag|Austria
*flag|Germany
*flag|Hungaryee also
*
MG34 , direct successor of MG30.
*Kg/1940 Light machine gun , used by the Germans before theMG34
*MG42 , successor of MG34 still largely based on original MG30.
*MG 81 machine gun
*MG3 , successor of MG42.
*MG 710 , Also known as MG55.
*Rheinmetall
*Steyr-Daimler-Puch
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