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WW2 Germany S1-100(MP 34(ö)) SUBMACHINE GUNS 1:35/1:72

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  • 1-35_mp_34_jp.stl
  • 1-72_mp_34_jp.stl

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Publication date 2024-03-23 at 06:15
Design number 1873842

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Development of the S1-100 began in Germany in 1924, at the firm of Rheinmetall, where Louis Stange produced a set of blueprints. Rheinmetall, however, was blocked from domestically manufacturing the gun under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. In 1928, Rheinmetall acquired large shares in a Swiss munitions company, Waffenfabrik Solothurn AG, and a year later, Stange took the blueprints to Solothurn and oversaw the construction of the first prototype models. The chief designer on the project was Theodor Rakula. Solothurn was essentially used as a proxy under which they could develop the weapon legally outside of Germany's border. However, the company did not have the appropriate facilities in place to mass-produce the S1-100, so Solothurn entered into a merger with the Austrian firm of Waffenfabrik Steyr, which resulted in the establishment of a Zurich-based sales outlet known as Steyr-Solothurn AG.

The S1-100 began full production at Steyr's factories in 1930. The first iteration, known as the Model 1930, was produced until 1935, after which it was replaced by the slightly modified Model 1934. It was offered for export sale in a variety of different chamberings and saw some relatively limited success in South America. In 1934, the Austrian Army adopted the Model 1934 in 9×23mm Steyr and designated it the MP 34. The Austrian Police also adopted the weapon, but in the 9×25mm Mauser cartridge.

When Germany invaded Austria in 1938, the Wehrmacht and SS acquired the majority of the Austrian service S1-100s and issued them to their own troops under the designation MP 34(ö). It saw some limited use by German troops early in World War II, but was quickly phased out of service in favor of the MP 40. Most MP 34(ö)s were instead issued to the Luftwaffe and German police forces. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, the S1-100 was exported in small numbers to both the Chinese and Japanese armies, seeing minor combat use by both sides; the weapon was known as the Type Su (Japanese: ス式機関短銃 Su-shiki kikan tanjū) in Japanese service, with the "Su" being the first phonetic in "Steyr" (Japanese: スタイヤー Sutaiyā). Production of the gun ceased in 1940.

I have set them to a 1:35/1:72 ratio for easy printing, and the size comes from the data provided by the encyclopedia. You can adjust its size to any place by yourself.

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