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Picked out amongst various other WWI and WWII relics. I initially thought it was for the MG34, but there seem to be various differences. Any idea what it is from? It’s about 32cm long and 4.5cm wide at the rear.
It weighs 863 grams. If I had to guess, I’d say it had been machined from solid rather than stamped.
Last edited by peregrinvs; 02-02-2025 at 12:58 PM.
Nature and nature's laws lay hid in night;
God said "Let Newton be!" and all was light.
I would flatter myself that I am reasonably knowledgeable about WWII German small arms, but I have no recollection of previously hearing of the MG81 before your post. I would guess they are rarer than the MG34 and MG42?
It was purchased purely as a ‘have fun cleaning it up’ project and I am hoping to restore some functionality to the feed mechanism as it seems to be intact and not badly rust damaged. I intend to give it a soak in some Sodium Citrate solution. (The budget Evaporust alternative) Hopefully some of the markings will still be legible.
Nature and nature's laws lay hid in night;
God said "Let Newton be!" and all was light.
Sorry to hear that. It's super cheap here. On another topic, that backyard ballistics guy has another video I saw where he uses a micro stick welder (jewelry welder?) to fill in severe pitting. The kit he used though was I think in the $thous.
I was very surprised in the video at ~11:56, and now I wonder if the UK formulation of evaporust is different than here, perhaps different regulations? I bring it up because I have the same gallon jug, been used for dozens of projects most of which were way worse off than his magazines. I have never seen evaporust turn black, and my jug is still going. I'm almost certain the pH of evaporust is much higher than his solution which is why it was taking longer after after a few test pieces. I didn't see him provide the pH of evaporust, or did I miss it? Nonetheless, the sodium citrate recipe is in my notebook now in case I ever need it.