Airsoft Type 100 Smg

Airsoft Type 100 Smg Average ratng: 3,6/5 2543 reviews

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The Type 100 submachine gun (一〇〇式機関短銃, Hyaku-shiki kikan-tanjū) was a Japanese submachine gun used during World War II, and the only submachine gun produced by Japan in any quantity.

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Contents • • • • • • • Design [ ] Designed and built by the under a low-priority military contract, the Type 100 was a submachine gun that was first delivered to the in 1942. Japan was surprisingly late to introduce the sub-machine gun to its armed forces — a few models of the SIG Bergmann 1920 (a licensed version of the German ) were purchased from Switzerland in the 1920s. These were examined and copied, with was first delivered for service, used by Japanese marines during the invasion of Southern China. Type 100 on display at Battery Randolf US Army Museum, Honolulu.

The Type 100 was typical of the class of simple, inexpensive, wartime submachine guns produced by all military powers—designed for maximum ease of production. It is based on a simplified Bergmann MP18, modified for the 8mm Nambu round. It was an automatic-only, air-cooled, weapon firing from an open bolt and feeding from a side-mounted, 30-round detachable box magazine. The barrel was given six-groove, right-hand-twist rifling. Unusually for a submachine gun (but typical of Japanese weapons of the era), a lug was fixed under the, in this case with a heavy bar and lug. Some of these models featured a, and others featured a complicated. The Type 100 had a bore to help fight corrosion in Asian jungle conditions.

Its complex ammunition feed included a feature whereby the firing pin would not operate until the round was fully chambered; frequent stoppages in firing were experienced in the field. The round was the underpowered and relatively ineffective 8x22mm Nambu pistol round. The curved box magazine extending from the left side made for poor weapon balance when full.

The were canted to the left. Versions [ ] Two basic performance variants of the Type 100 were produced during the course of the war: the Type 100/40 was an early version with bipod and heavy bayonet lug, judged unsatisfactory because of frequent jamming of the feed mechanism, and the Type 100/44 was a simplified 1944 version that had a higher rate of fire and much greater reliability. A third variant was a lightened version of the early Type 100/40 design which was delivered with a folding for navy paratroopers. The Type 100/40 was complex, designed with little consideration for mass production.