Métral submachine gun

Métral submachine gun
Type Submachine gun
Place of origin Switzerland
Production history
Designer Gérard Métral
Designed 1995
Specifications
Weight 2.9kg
Length 600mm (stock extended)
360mm (stock folded)
Barrel length 200mm

Cartridge 9×19mm Parabellum
Caliber 9mm
Action Blowback, open bolt
Rate of fire 600rpm
Muzzle velocity 390m/s
Effective firing range 25m
Feed system 32round Sten type magazine
Sights Aperture rear sight, post-type front sight

The Métral submachine gun is a submachine gun designed by Swiss army reserves officer Gérard Métral intended for clandestine manufacture and distribution during foreign occupation circumstances.[1][2]

It is a blowback, select fire, Uzi type design, open bolt submachine gun, with a side folding stock. The design and function of the parts is based on various existing submachine guns (like Suomi M1931 for the trigger mechanism and Ingram MAC-10 for bolt security etc.), along with some of the authors innovations and solutions, for example the bolt construction and folding stock.

Although the subtitle of the book detailing its design and constructions calls it "homemade", the design is mainly intended for a more professional, almost mass-production kind of manufacture.

Its designer calls for any constructor to be skilled at metalwork, with access to a shop lathe, drill press and milling machine (the last being optional but very helpful). Métral himself says of the main spring, barrel and magazine construction: "Try doing it yourself only if you have no other choice" and calls them "difficult to build".[1] Some parts need hardening, which is usually beyond the means of an amateur, and several parts are intended to be purchased or having them made to order. However care has been taken to keep the appearance of all the separate parts as unsuspicious as possible.

References

  1. 1 2 Métral, Gérard (1995). A Do-it-Yourself Submachine Gun. Boulder, Colorado: Paladin Press. ISBN 978-0-87364-840-0.
  2. "Métral Clandestine SubMachineGun 9x19mm". Securityarms.com. Retrieved 2016-04-10.


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