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Incidentally, after we fired a couple of them, we had a load of ammo spare and it's a shame to hand it all in again so we fired it all off. Not for fun of course - , but in the interests of science and research you understand. One of the young girls on the camera team had a few magazines of automatic fire from the waist and told me that she hadn't had such a good banging for several years. I won't repeat my reply.
This production team also did the death of Bonnie and Clyde documentary and fired a BAR while filming. A BAR......, not quite up to Sten standards.......
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05-21-2010 10:29 AM
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Well, I've just found this post and its 19.30, I hope its in the second half!
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Good spiel by the distinguished gent with the Sten, whoever that was....
I thought the rest of the programme was poorly edited and a bit muddled in its purpose: probably most people on forums like this are already well acquainted with WW2 technological developments, but the mass of Joe TV Viewing Public tend to be entirely ignorant of anything outside of sport and celebrity news.
For example: with the Sten, perhaps they should have shown with it a Lanchester or Thompson - to demonstrate the point about complex, expensive, crafted guns being reduced to the minimalist design brilliance of the Sten.
Likewise with the Mosquito - they could have contrasted with the metal fabrication involved in a conventional aircraft, and they didn't really underline the revolutionary use of laminates, adhesives, mould-formed wood and the split fuselage.
They also went on about Ford influence in Russian
production of the (very crude) T-34, whilst strangely missing out a far better example of mass production engineering - the similar numbers of Shermans rolling out of the US car industry.
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Thunderbox
For example: with the Sten, perhaps they should have shown with it a Lanchester or Thompson - to demonstrate the point about complex, expensive, crafted guns being reduced to the minimalist design brilliance of the Sten.
Not unlike as is demonstrated in this fine DVD then?
Sten Gun and other Sub-Machine Guns
Tommy Atkins Media
I think the distinguished gent may have a cameo or two as well.
Mark
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Thunderbox
Good spiel by the distinguished gent with the Sten, whoever that was....
.
Strange chap !!! (Laidler
I think his name was) but he did appear to have a little knowledge on the subject - maybe he'd read one of those books by that famous author - whats his name, - wrote about No32 scopes as well.
Mine are not the best, but they are not too bad. I can think of lots of Enfields I'd rather have but instead of constantly striving for more, sometimes it's good to be satisfied with what one has...
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The Mk3 Sten gun was Britains first disposable gun. But if you had one that worked with your 10 magazines, then you kept it/them together.
But to be fair, in a ruthless way, to Capt Dickie Davies, I wonder if he tested it before his patrol. After all, the jungle is an unforgiving place and like the desert, anything is liable to jam up there.
We have another saying too, that they omitted to mention in the programme, that I wished thay's kept in. You can have a Thompson gun for £55, a Lanchester for £11 or a Sten gun for £2-7/-. And it doesn't matter which one you have, but you can only kill a man so dead.
And even the much praised Mk5 Sten is only a cheap and cheerful Mk2 under the skin.
Anyway, I hope you all enjoyed the Sten gun bit of it...........
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Legacy Member
We have another saying too, that they omitted to mention in the programme, that I wished thay's kept in. You can have a Thompson gun for £55, a Lanchester for £11 or a Sten gun for £2-7/-. And it doesn't matter which one you have, but you can only kill a man so dead.
Yes - if they'd left that in, it would have perfectly illustrated the point they were presumably trying to make. Maybe they thought mentioning other weapons would be too confusing to a tv mass audience...
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