Jump to content
Sign in to follow this  
The_Matrix

Star Wars and WW2 weapons

Recommended Posts

I was watching Star Wars with my son (the first one, A New Hope) and I noticed the stormtroopers all have WW2 weapons. They have Sterlings and MG34. Watch the scene with Obi One and Luke on the landspeeder when they are stopped by the stormtroopers in the city limits.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

A lot of guns in Star wars were based off of WWII guns.

 

The E-11 Blaster rifles that you see most of the stormtroopers carry are props built off of Sterling L2A3 SMGs, as was the Rebel trooper's DH-17 Blaster Pistols (First scene where they're trying to hold off the assault on the Blockade Runner).

 

The long T-21 light repeating blasters (the REALLY long rifles) that the Sandtroopers carried in Mos Eisley were based off of MG34s and WWI Lewis MGs.

 

Han Solo's DL-44 Heavy Blaster pistol is based off of the Mauser C96.

 

The blaster that Princess Leia used on the blockade runner was based off of a Soviet Margolin .22 MT target pistol.

 

The Jawa blasters were Lee-Enfield No. 1 MKIII's with the Grenade launcher cup attached to a cutoff barrel.

 

In ESB some of the guns were based off of STG44s.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

A lot of guns in Star wars were based off of WWII guns.

 

The E-11 Blaster rifles that you see most of the stormtroopers carry are props built off of Sterling L2A3 SMGs, as was the Rebel trooper's DH-17 Blaster Pistols (First scene where they're trying to hold off the assault on the Blockade Runner).

 

...

 

bs13690-83559-albums-random-pics-pic43266-nerds-ogre.jpg

 

NERDS!

 

Err, I mean, impressive display of Star Wars trivia there Krdshrk!

 

:icon_e_biggrin:

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
Sign in to follow this  

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.



  • olight.jpg

    Use Promo Code "NJGF10" for 10% Off Regular Items

  • Supporting Vendors

  • Latest Topics

  • Posts

    • We never let then inside.  Last re-evaluation was 6-7 years ago, wife politely told him that he was welcome to look around the property and he could look in the windows. He saw two white resin chairs in the basement and told her that this constituted a finished basement. And everything in the basement is bare concrete/ cinder block, and mechanical systems. Nothing finished about it. Ultimately he relented and I'm sure that was a ploy to coerce us to allow him in
    • I use an Alien Gear cloak tuck (IWB) with my Shield.  Neoprene back - in the summer it does feel warm but doesn't rub or chafe.   https://aliengearholsters.com/ruger-lcp-iwb-holster.html Could also go with the shapeshift as it has multiple options - OWB/IWB, Appendix... https://aliengearholsters.com/ruger-lcp-shapeshift-modular-holster-system.html
    • The  12-1 compression ratio L88 is long gone. This is GM's updated version. it might be  pump gas 10-1 engine The L88 was a aluminum head  cast iron block engine with a nasty solid lifter cam. the  ZL1 was a all aluminum  12 or 13-1 compression ratio engine with the best forged internal parts at the time and had a even nastier solid lifter cam 
    • I like my regular carry holster.  OWB leather with belt slots.  I've been carrying for over a year and it was comfortable and I hardly even noticed it.  I carry (usually) a Ruger LCP .380 - light, convenient, tiny. But...today I ended up taking it off an leaving it home after a few hours. I cut down a big maple tree a few days ago and I spent 3/4 of today loading and unloading firewood into the back of my truck and a trailer.  It was a warm day, I was dirty, tired, sweaty, and my holster was rubbing against my side.  The leather and exposed metal snap was no longer comfortable. I'm thinking about adding a layer of something to that part of the holster to soften the contact.  Anything insulating will make it worse.  I don't want a sweaty, hotter holster against my skin.  I'm imagining something thin, breathable, that won't absorb sweat, and softer than leather, metal snaps, and rivets.   But I have no idea what would work. I'm hoping somebody else has already figured this out and I can just do what they did. Any suggestions appreciated.
    • Check the primers on the ammo you didn't shoot yet. Are they fully seated? If the primer is not just below flush with the back of the case, the first hit can seat it better then the second hit ignites it. 
×
×
  • Create New...