
Fluffy wrote:What I want to know is how they stamped and bent the receiver. I took a CNC class with then intent of making the PPsH 41. it looked like I needed to mill it. Stupid me didn't think about the internal 90 degree angles it has. But it looks to complex to stamp and mold.
A bit more information has been released by Hexagon Productions about their PPsh-41 replica. Being a relative newcomer, I guess that Hexagon felt the need to make a bit more noise. Well, I think its paying off becuase their’s does look like the more promising of the two so far.
Also constructed of metal and wood, the HP PPsh actually features a blued stamped-steel receiver – just like the real-deal. The rear sight also has two settings – just like the real one – and the functioning fire selector switch is located in front of the trigger – also just like the real one. I haven’t seen any info yet though about whether the bolt-safety catch functions like the real one (it looks like it does from the photos).
The HP PPsh-41 uses an M-14-type gearbox and a G-36 type hop-up unit. The battery (up to an 11.1v Li-Po type) fits in the otherwise solid wood butt-stock.
The gun comes with a manually-wound hi-capacity drum magazine, and an authentic webbing and leather sling is available as an accessory.
The gun is due to be released in January 2010, with a retail price of $295.00 USD (with shipping included!). More details can be found on Hexagon’s website.
Silentdawn wrote:PPSH chair confirmed!
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