Suomi m/31 - Finland's Excellent Submachine Gun

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  • čas přidán 16. 08. 2018
  • / forgottenweapons
    Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! shop.bbtv.com/collections/forg...
    Designed by Aimo Lahti, the Suomi m/31 submachine gun is in my opinion one of the standout submachine guns of the World War Two era. Despite its hefty weight (10.4lb / 4.7kg) and lack of a good pistol grip stock, it still manages to be tremendously controllable and accurate, with a very high rate of fire (about 900 rpm).
    For a detailed written description of the history and development of the weapon, I would refer you to the excellent article by Jaeger Platoon: www.jaegerplatoon.net/MACHINEP...
    If you enjoy Forgotten Weapons, check out its sister channel, InRangeTV! / inrangetvshow
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Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @teemuhotari7422
    @teemuhotari7422 Před 5 lety +4182

    It shoots 900 Perkeles per minute.

    • @lulutileguy
      @lulutileguy Před 5 lety +60

      is that perkeles with an r

    • @cinnamonbulla
      @cinnamonbulla Před 5 lety +61

      Sum good perkele patruunas xdd

    • @Mabswer
      @Mabswer Před 5 lety +307

      900 ryssän perkelettä minuutissa (RPM)

    • @oskariylonen3574
      @oskariylonen3574 Před 5 lety +53

      TULTA MUNILLE

    • @bige1106
      @bige1106 Před 5 lety +46

      only takes one Perkele to scare the bear: czcams.com/video/z7_pVrIshxA/video.html
      Pretty much how the red army reacted when they decided to invade their neighbor in the north.

  • @jeremystewert4303
    @jeremystewert4303 Před 5 lety +3595

    Just a fun fact, Tikka means wood pecker in Finnish. 900 rpm, that's one mean woodpecker.

    • @pumppuhaulikkomies
      @pumppuhaulikkomies Před 5 lety +36

      Well said.

    • @JamesIII
      @JamesIII Před 5 lety +221

      After war Tikkakoski made Tikka branded sewing machines, mine still works

    • @TheRogueWolf
      @TheRogueWolf Před 5 lety +141

      Does it sew at 900 stitches per minute?

    • @JamesIII
      @JamesIII Před 5 lety +227

      The Rogue Wolf No, only 694.4 stitches per minute. But keep in mind this is peace time machine, so it could be electronically limited :)

    • @Shermingtan
      @Shermingtan Před 5 lety +12

      That would be a really slow wood pecker since the can to 1200 pecks per minute.

  • @justasnowball
    @justasnowball Před 4 lety +1928

    Everyone else: but it's a smg
    Finnish snipers: GUN IS GUN

    • @sansduhskeleton1914
      @sansduhskeleton1914 Před 3 lety +36

      Underrated comment

    • @conanholmes8620
      @conanholmes8620 Před 3 lety +17

      Sounds legit 😂

    • @patparker4280
      @patparker4280 Před 3 lety +58

      Isnt it true that MANY of "white deaths" (Simo H.) kills were achieved with a Suomi? Rest with a Moisin with irons? THE MAN COULD SHOOT!!!! ;)

    • @skyethegoose
      @skyethegoose Před 3 lety +6

      @@patparker4280 I’m not the most knowledgeable on this but I always thought he had a iron sighted mauser

    • @vesikeitto1006
      @vesikeitto1006 Před 3 lety +81

      @@patparker4280 He has about 500 confirmed kills with the Finnish Mosin, and by his words another 500 with the Suomikp31. And yes, he preferred iron sights because a scope would freeze in winter and the scope could reflect sunlight so being spotted would have been easier.

  • @villLe
    @villLe Před 5 lety +1617

    "Being short of funds as the Finnish Military often is..." lmao, so true.

    • @buckstop
      @buckstop Před 5 lety +16

      Looking at those tanks

    • @jussieronen3707
      @jussieronen3707 Před 5 lety +22

      WolfBlade0001 What's wrong with our Leos?

    • @buckstop
      @buckstop Před 5 lety +91

      I mean Finnish tanks during the war were some things out of Frankenstien's dream

    • @jussieronen3707
      @jussieronen3707 Před 5 lety +105

      WolfBlade0001 Oh ok. Most of Finnish tanks im WW2 were either captured Soviet tanks, or later tanks bought from Germany. At the start of the Winter War Finland had a few old tanks, but those proved to be worthless.

    • @Grubnar
      @Grubnar Před 5 lety +56

      To use, and twist, the famous quote of Sir Winston Churchill: Never before have so many done so much, costing so little!

  • @juhai7048
    @juhai7048 Před 5 lety +1463

    I did my conscript service in the Finnish Defence Forces in 1999 and I received basic handling and shooting training for this gun. So even if it wasn't officially in the inventory anymore, they still trained for it. At the same time, we were trained to shoot the "Military Rifle" as it's called, the Finnish version of the M/91 Mosin-Nagant rifle.
    The gun I disassembled and shot with, had an extremely strong recoil spring, and was in excellent condition. I doubt it was used much or issued to any conscript ever when it was still in the official inventory. Can't remember the serial number anymore, but it was very high, maybe somewhere in the 50000s? I remember the drum it came with, was in comparison very worn, a bad spring and much lower number. I tried to shoot with it, but it had so many malfunctions (the drum that is) that I got to switch mine to a 36-round box at the shooting range.
    The original select-fire version is actually pretty nice on semi-auto as well. Easy to hit targets at a range you wouldn't imagine possible with a pistol cartridge and with the amount of training we had with it (one afternoon basically).
    One thing I also remember, is the lack of "awesomeness" it had. And I mean, with the legend that gun has in Finland, shooting it wasn't hard or had any real "bang" to it. So I was a bit let down by it. I was more impressed with the Mosin. But then again, looking back, it was all about the "balls" of the gun back then, not the fact that it was accurate and well made.
    So I'll just put that to being too young to know any better :D I was 20 and filled with saucy tales of war written by bad authors :D

    • @Hybris51129
      @Hybris51129 Před 5 lety +106

      These are my favorite types of comments to find on Ian's videos.

    • @juhai7048
      @juhai7048 Před 5 lety +31

      My dad also carried the M/31 in guard duty in 1969. So it was "fun" to try that gun out on the range in that perspective :)

    • @HH-tc3wf
      @HH-tc3wf Před 5 lety +10

      2002 they still give some training to it (NCO school), but 2003 no more(at least in our brigade).

    • @TheSuspectOnFoot
      @TheSuspectOnFoot Před 5 lety +12

      It would probably explain a lot if you mentioned which/what branch of unit you were at. Sincerely, Jaeger from Kymi Jaeger Battalion.

    • @ThePopeOfAwesomeness
      @ThePopeOfAwesomeness Před 5 lety +6

      Did someone say awesomeness?

  • @Rauhaas
    @Rauhaas Před 5 lety +856

    You finnish word pronunciation is really, really impressively good for a foreigner.

    • @alexmoore1506
      @alexmoore1506 Před 5 lety +66

      Rauhaas probably because he’s been hanging with a bunch of Finns on and off for like the past year or two lol

    • @FunkyNige
      @FunkyNige Před 5 lety +63

      His pronounciation of non-US words is very good, even down to cities like Birmingham, England pronounced the way Brits would.

    • @samik83
      @samik83 Před 5 lety +47

      Yes it is. Still wondering why "Lahti" is so hard. It always comes out as "Laddie"

    • @XIIIphobos
      @XIIIphobos Před 5 lety +4

      samik83 it's the HT -combo

    • @bentupp3026
      @bentupp3026 Před 5 lety +9

      really? I thought he pronounced our Suomi names poorly. I guess Kooskinen, Koskinen, was a good idea when he first said his name. By saying it several times in so many variations he was bound to get close eventually.
      Tuppurainen.

  • @salokin3087
    @salokin3087 Před 5 lety +3980

    *Stalin sweats furiously*

    • @BMW_MAN
      @BMW_MAN Před 5 lety +135

      USA sweat furiously almost all time because of Russia...
      Even when Russia has nothing to do with it...

    • @juhomaki-petaja
      @juhomaki-petaja Před 5 lety +12

      M30B35
      Bimmerman, thats so true...

    • @derain95
      @derain95 Před 5 lety +20

      I am glad to see Ian's fans are so enlightened, but I am not surprised.

    • @Garganzuul
      @Garganzuul Před 5 lety +9

      THIS MACHINE

    • @devingorney8051
      @devingorney8051 Před 5 lety +65

      M30B35 You've been watching too much CNN. Almost no one believes and most that do don't care. No one's sweating, we're just sick of hearing about it. Our politicians broke laws and needed a scapegoat, hence Russia Russia Russia.

  • @lukaszpokoju
    @lukaszpokoju Před 5 lety +1350

    The KP/31 the "Perkele blaster" when you absolutely positively got to kill every soviet in the wood; accept no substitutes.

    • @MP-Fin
      @MP-Fin Před 5 lety +25

      Łukasz pokoju Second best Tarantino movie.

    • @davidsachs4883
      @davidsachs4883 Před 5 lety +1

      I thought the soviets were the ruling councils. Soviet soldiers or soviet conscripts might be better terms. But I agree with your idea.

    • @charity7006
      @charity7006 Před 5 lety +2

      MP-Fin which Tarantino is that? And which is the best? Pulp?

    • @lukaszpokoju
      @lukaszpokoju Před 5 lety +5

      Jackie Brown ; )

    • @ulfvonweimuller4433
      @ulfvonweimuller4433 Před 5 lety

      czcams.com/video/ncpHXvpma8o/video.html

  • @Suojeluninja
    @Suojeluninja Před 5 lety +174

    Suomi SMG:s were removed from wartime reserves only in the 90:s.
    I bet well have PKM:s in storage still in 2060:s.

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 Před 4 lety +6

      PKM entered the arsenal somewhat backdoor. The army bought tanks from Soviets and Soviets did not sell just tanks, they sold entire arsenals of the troops so there came PKMs. The people in Parola just took them in use and those who were responsible for small arms did not even know they had them.

    • @Suojeluninja
      @Suojeluninja Před 3 lety

      @Led Cactus
      They lack penetration against power armor.

    • @Suojeluninja
      @Suojeluninja Před 3 lety

      @Led Cactus
      Whatever we are going to face in the next 40 years.

    • @Suojeluninja
      @Suojeluninja Před 3 lety +1

      @Led Cactus
      That would be a prototype calibre based on tank rounds but brought into a smaller scale, it doesn't have a official designation yet.

    • @podunkman2709
      @podunkman2709 Před 3 lety +2

      Machine PISTOLS. Do not use some marketing BS "submachine guns".

  • @amanofculture9429
    @amanofculture9429 Před 5 lety +1836

    "They offered it with all extra cool features. I'm sure you can get bayonet mounted to it if you want"
    OwO
    _certain imperial sun rises with interest_

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 Před 5 lety +64

      Reichshund OwO? Oral Without Condom?

    • @dzungnguyen8708
      @dzungnguyen8708 Před 5 lety +13

      Reichshu

    • @dutchbachelor
      @dutchbachelor Před 5 lety +56

      It's the Japanese version of an emoji. Look at the "O" as the eyes and you'll see a kind of a surprised face (for me at least).
      Hence probably too the reference to the imperial sun.

    • @adammorley8906
      @adammorley8906 Před 5 lety +2

      Reichshund s

    • @deanster3435
      @deanster3435 Před 5 lety +49

      Who tf initiates oral with a condom?

  • @karelianguy9917
    @karelianguy9917 Před 5 lety +767

    One brave Finnish soldier called Viljam Pylkäs ambushed and killed a whole 83 man platoon in one battle with his Suomi submachinegun by himself. He had other guy reloading magazines and some soldiers bringed him more ammo and new barrel because original one got too hot during the firefight and it had to be changed. He shot 17 magazines of ammo (680 bullets) during the firefight. He got mannerheim cross and iron cross from german brothers in arms for this hero work
    Later when war was over Väinö Linna wrote a book called "tuntematon sotilas" (eng. uknown soldier) and this battle is in that book. Also three movies is made based to this book and there it is in the movie. You can find that bad ass scene by searching "Antero Rokka slaughters a russian platoon" here in CZcams

    • @evgenyreshetnikov3483
      @evgenyreshetnikov3483 Před 4 lety +11

      that's a great book.

    • @henriktamminen7438
      @henriktamminen7438 Před 4 lety +30

      PERKELE!

    • @janfiedler5584
      @janfiedler5584 Před 4 lety +8

      No mention Simo

    • @brandondegraaf
      @brandondegraaf Před 4 lety +88

      680 round / 83 bodies = 8 round per kill. That is a stupidly good round per kill rate, especially while under fire from a whole platoon. I can see why Russia gave up on Finland. For context, the WW2 average rate was somewhere around 25,000 rounds per kill, and the current average rate is around 300,000 rounds per kill.

    • @michael001437
      @michael001437 Před 4 lety +4

      @Michael Srite Still they didn't achieve their goal..

  • @thoriated
    @thoriated Před 5 lety +50

    One thing you didn't mention was the rate reducer in the receiver end cap. At 18:48 you can see a spring through the vent holes. This spring holds a disk against the holes on the inside of the cap. When the bolt comes back, air pushes the disk back and goes out the vent holes. When the bolt moves forward, the disk blocks air flow, so the bolt has a vacuum behind it. This slows it just enough to keep the firing rate manageable.

  • @jywert
    @jywert Před 4 lety +71

    When I was talking with my grandfather in his late years about the war. He was part of the far-scouts or "kaukopartiomiehet"
    In one of his stories, the farthest trip had seen the Murmansk railroad.
    One of my friends had real m/31 but the barrel was decommissioned. We asked if wanted to see it. He said yes. My grandfather still could take it apart at the age of 93 while half-blind. Handled with one arm like it was nothing. He Had m/31 as his personal weapon as was a good shot. He said that his gun needed to change 3 barrels for his weapon. So quite a few bullets were needed to be shot to damage the barrel.
    Something interesting was that when he opened fire he needed to take cover and switch positions many times as Russian knew the sound and knew that they need to silence the one shooting. So you got a good gun but was target painted too on you.

  • @MKnife
    @MKnife Před 5 lety +198

    I did my 11 months in the finnish army in 1987-88. We got to shoot that (and some other WW2 era finnish guns) during a training day on the range, more than 40 years after the wars ended. I remember it being quite heavy, but the accuracy was spot on at 50 and 100 meters, and the barrell didn't rise too much even during longer bursts (I seem to recall I had the version with the muzzle brake). The round mag was however not much fun to reload in november coldness and with numb fingers. Thanks for a great video, and for taking me back on memory lane :-)

  • @chrisovergaard4287
    @chrisovergaard4287 Před 2 měsíci +2

    We used this submachine gun as our main weapon in the service at the frogman units (SEAL) in Norway late 1960 early 1970 while I was a part of this unit.

  • @OlaviSalko
    @OlaviSalko Před 5 lety +75

    wow, you actually can pronounce the word "suomi" and some other finnish words too. That is cool! Greetings from Finland. :)

  • @tuomopoika
    @tuomopoika Před 4 lety +22

    Fire selector easy memorization in Finnish: "edestä antaa, takaa pihtaa".

  • @morteparla6926
    @morteparla6926 Před 5 lety +107

    That stock is absolutely gorgeous. That's $5,000, rich-mans showoff gun level of wood grain, and it's on a military issues gun!

    • @enalb5085
      @enalb5085 Před 2 lety +6

      if you can find a full auto one of these that costs less than a 5 bedroom house let me know

    • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat
      @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat Před 2 lety

      Someone cut up a real nice coffee table to make that bad boy

    • @f15strikeeagle10
      @f15strikeeagle10 Před 2 lety +3

      finnish birch is pretty, but the waviness/fiddleback/tiger-striping is coming from a turpentine treatment that was done. Not much demand for it anymore, but you can do it yourself quite easily. The ferric acid treatments in early America are also beautiful.

    • @Ass_of_Amalek
      @Ass_of_Amalek Před 2 lety +5

      yeah I have heard of prices like that, and as a violin maker with an interest in guitar making (both of which use expensive woods, especially guitars), it seems to me that gun people are getting ripped off BIG TIME with wood prices. nicely coloured walnut is one of the most expensive temperate climate woods, but it is NOT one of the most expensive woods, and even the most expensive woods (maybe nonsense crazy stuff like pink ivory, australian buloke, mauritius ebony, exceptionally large trunks of african blackwood, snakewood) has no reason to cost $5000 for a rifle stock blank. a reasonable price for a straight-grown flawless dark rifle stock of walnut should be in the $50-200 range. even that are specialty wood prices for individual sale, not how a factory would buy wood. curly grain is not that rare and not universally more desirable, it should not cost more than a 100-200% premium. truly exceptional pieces that combine straight or clean curly growth for structural strength in the relevant parts with burl figure or such at the base of the stock might in principle be reasonable to sell for $1000, but really only when those are also seasoned for 10 years to make them ready to use despite their inherently higher tendency to warp and crack. $5000 makes no sense, walnut is just nowhere near rare enough for that due to its extremely widespread commercial cultivation (as opposed to many more expensive tropical hardwoods that have no use other than timber and are a finite resource coming only from primary forests). walnut is a popular wood for many applications due to its colours, and perhaps the best choice for guns due to its favourable combination of extremely low shrinkage/warpage, moderate density, and high toughness, but there is a really strong supply of it that's certainly keeping prices much lower than that outside of gun circles. walnut is somewhat common on guitars, and I know that it's a low to mid price wood on those.

    • @kapu4369
      @kapu4369 Před rokem +1

      @@f15strikeeagle10 Actually there was plenty of flame/curly birch around tikkakoski, so the stocks were made of material as possible to obtain fast. Lot of these stocks have gorgeus looking because of this.

  • @lakewooded4929
    @lakewooded4929 Před 5 lety +94

    Elegance in simplicity.

  • @Cleaverbomb
    @Cleaverbomb Před 5 lety +2

    That ejector guard is such an eyesore.

  • @ReijoRitari
    @ReijoRitari Před 5 lety +62

    Man, that being 4 digit gun is insane. My deactivated is over 50 000 on serial number.

    • @cbtillery135
      @cbtillery135 Před 2 lety +1

      You gonna reactivate it?

    • @ReijoRitari
      @ReijoRitari Před 2 lety +3

      @@cbtillery135 Made nearly impossible in finland as I'd need real special permits (even more special than FFL in the US), find gunsmith that will reactivate it, register it to police database etc. Easily going over 10k € in cost.

    • @cbtillery135
      @cbtillery135 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ReijoRitari since it's deactivated just move to the US and reactivate it, it'd be more expensive but worth it just for the above-water whale watching you could do.

    • @ReijoRitari
      @ReijoRitari Před 2 lety

      @@cbtillery135 Ah yes, I'm spending over 100k just to be able to reactivate it again? Please grow some brains and thinking ability.

    • @cbtillery135
      @cbtillery135 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ReijoRitari I was joking didn't you read my full comment? I said it's a lot more expensive but you get to do above-water whale watching.

  • @ricoblaser7231
    @ricoblaser7231 Před 5 lety +71

    Switzerland introduced about 5200 Suomi in 1942. Later, over 22,000 Mp.43 / 44 were built under license at Hispano-Suiza. Standard magazine was with 50 shots. The last soldiers who were still trained at the Suomi were the paramedics in the 80s. The Waffenpabrik Bern produced the Mp41 / 44. but of this weapon only 9800 pieces were built. It was built like the LMG 25, it was expensive, complicated and vulnerable to protection, so the Suomi also asserts itself with us.

  • @piiter77
    @piiter77 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you for a great video. I am finnish, havent shoot by that but now I really want! I was in army 1998-1999, I served in military police forces. I had in my personal locker three different guns; FN 9mm pistol, Remington Shotgun and Sako 7.62(1962 model). And in camp we used many many more, like RPG, heavy machinegun, Sniper rifle and many more. You should watch the film named "Tuntematon sotilas" (Unknown soldier). In Finland, we have made them three. First(B&W) 1955, second one 1985 and last one 2017.

  • @blackore64
    @blackore64 Před 5 lety +28

    Actually, USSR ended up copying the Suomi M/31, but it was actually just small-scale production in leningrad. Karelo-finskij 42 was what they called it.

    • @user-yf9ky3ji5b
      @user-yf9ky3ji5b Před 3 lety

      Wee have ours PPD 31/38.Wee didnt need copy Suomi.7kg and very expensive.2 men to carry one.

    • @sadetta9312
      @sadetta9312 Před 3 lety +6

      @@user-yf9ky3ji5b the suomi kp beats the russian copies easily

    • @rantanen1
      @rantanen1 Před 3 měsíci

      @@user-yf9ky3ji5b you must be very weak

  • @schinderiapraemeturus6239

    it would really cool Ian if you could find and do video on a KP-26, Lahti's initial design submitted for trials and rejected for being too complicated. The receiver I.D. and bolt were airtight fit like the 31, but the KP-26's receiver end cap had integrated vents that could be adjusted for changing cyclic rate, also accommodating various types of ammo. this vent alignment system changed how fast air would be permitted to escape when the bolt cycled, thus creating an adjustable compression buffer. Lahti was freaking brilliant

  • @simohenrik1860
    @simohenrik1860 Před 3 lety +3

    a short Finnish language lesson: tikka = woodpecker, koski = rapids/white water, lahti = bay of water, KP = konepistooli = SMG(=lit. machine pistol), m = malli = model.

  • @juhomaki-petaja
    @juhomaki-petaja Před 5 lety +226

    In 60's when these were still in military service, soldiers left barrels to barracks when they went to long marches. Of course this was forbidden, but ~1kg lighter gun was worth risk...

    • @foleymaj
      @foleymaj Před 5 lety +88

      Still used somewhat today. In 2014 when I did my service, people tried to get away with not packing all their gear for outdoor exercises (usually lasting 5 days), obviously some of them were useless but orders are orders. When the NCOs and COs checked the equipment in the last day and found out that people didn't have all the gear (some lost, some they didn't bring with them) they took a number of the missing items. The next march (or yomp if you're british) the ammount of missing items within the platoon equaled the number of landmines the platoon had to carry with them (each being 10kg or something over 20 pounds). It was almost one landmine for every conscript (around 40 guys).
      They didn't need to repeat this practice, in the next exercise everyone had the gear that was orderd.

    • @chumccurry1765
      @chumccurry1765 Před 5 lety

      foleymaj And may I ask, is finish soldier still Bring Back their issue knife?

    • @basillicus3959
      @basillicus3959 Před 5 lety +46

      Finnish Defence Force does not really issue any knife. People bring their own and also reserve officer and NCO school courses (and maybe some other specialized training courses too) typically order a knife (with their own money) for the whole course with a special engraving. AFAIK FDF did issue Rk 62 bayonet (which is remotely puukko style) in the past but they got stolen so often by the conscripts that they haven't done that for a long time. I served in -03/-04 and we were issued with bayonet only for a one day (independence day parade) and they were collected back immediately to prevent any sudden loss. :)

    • @chumccurry1765
      @chumccurry1765 Před 5 lety +9

      Basillicus 😹thank you, that Rk62 bayonet must be good knife, caused everybody want to LOSE one. (I mean stolen)

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL Před 5 lety +6

      Chu McCurry It's not. The blade is thin, but at least it's pointy.

  • @valtteri1520
    @valtteri1520 Před 5 lety +119

    A fun story from my history teatcher: Finns brought some guns home after the war as souvenirs. My history teatcher's neighbour was a vet and had one. Decided to show it off in the backyard while a bit tipsy. Next day police came to his front door due to some jealous/scared neighbours.

    • @MrNicoJac
      @MrNicoJac Před 4 lety +12

      "neighbors" in Finland....:
      'yeah, I heard some shooting coming from the next house over, only a couple hundred yards down the road!'

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 4 lety +14

      'Souvenirs' - they were more like an insurance, in case of an attack.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 3 lety +2

      @@dimapez Which is why I said 'more like insurance' - the weapons cache operation was the more common way civilians had them than souvenirs (bringbacks). You could have just added that info straight to Valtteri's comment, no need to address it to me. It didn't change what I said, didn't give me new info - whereas my comment corrected that they were mostly weapons cache guns not bringbacks, the Suomi smgs in civilian possession.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 3 lety

      @@dimapez Oh so you read minds? I said 'more like': so as in more likely they are usually cache weapons - not that they are definitely. OK?
      The other option included, so less possible. Though it of course says also I see. Don't continue this anymore, tired of someone putting words in my mouth - don't read between the lines. f you keep coming to this, I'll just refer to this comment

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 3 lety

      @@dimapez He said X - I said more likely Y... which doesn't exclude X. Just emphasizes Y. And that's why... Maybe this is, enough. Let's meet at another video, with new topics :)

  • @djdrack4681
    @djdrack4681 Před 4 lety +30

    An interesting breakdown considering Simo Hayha (most confirmed sniper kills) used this as his second gun and is credited with >200-250 kills with it.

    • @jushtrap5186
      @jushtrap5186 Před 2 lety

      No Its 400-500

    • @piiro64
      @piiro64 Před 2 lety +3

      @@jushtrap5186 He didn’t kill 500 people with the smg lmao, the 505 is his overall kill count.

    • @thezig2078
      @thezig2078 Před rokem

      @@piiro64 505 is the Mosin alone actually

    • @SLIM-SH8Y
      @SLIM-SH8Y Před 5 měsíci

      ​​@@thezig2078 so 750 kills...

  • @FlubbersQuid
    @FlubbersQuid Před 5 lety +9

    Brings me back to my military training in Sweden, aka Lumpen.
    Got to handle these old machine guns quite a bit, never with the drum mag unfortunately.

  • @Nevernotalone
    @Nevernotalone Před 5 lety +1

    I’m in love with this piece of history. If only I could afford one. Great video as usual sir. If you’ve ever made a bad video, I haven’t seen it. Thank you.

  • @vk3139
    @vk3139 Před 5 lety +16

    There was also a experimental underbarrel flamethrower attachment, but it never went into production.
    IIRC one example is in a museum somewhere.

  • @toolthoughts
    @toolthoughts Před 5 lety +12

    11:06 you can see the swedish origin of the 50 rounder coffin in that patent drawing. it's angled forward to back to stack the semi-rims of the 9x20 browning long cartridges in front of each other.

    • @toolthoughts
      @toolthoughts Před 5 lety +5

      Tikkakoski separately patented their 9mm para version in Finland (no. 19529)

  • @paavobergmann4920
    @paavobergmann4920 Před 4 lety +75

    "kosKInen..sorry: KOskinen..." Yes! Yesyesyes! Finally someone!

  • @RokasKundrotas
    @RokasKundrotas Před 11 měsíci

    Ian, thanks for another great, and educational video. Please do not stop. We want to see more.

  • @sessiontelemetric5618
    @sessiontelemetric5618 Před 5 lety

    What a beautiful piece of kit. Great review. Thank you FW!

  • @hurri7720
    @hurri7720 Před 4 lety +4

    My uncle who spent his four years in the army and was good enough for one of those guns used to have some (limited) amount of whisky at Christmas time used to tell us guys a story or two from the war. One story went like this - "remember guys, when you move in close combat you keep the gun tilted 90 degrees above your waist and just let it play". An other story I remember and dear to repeat is this - "it's amazing how flat towards the ground you are able to become when somebody is shooting at you".
    As a kid, up to about 17, I adored guns, and we had a lot of them, but I resent this topic because war is not fun unless it's a movie. And as I am here I am apparently not fully recovered.

  • @janihalttunen5501
    @janihalttunen5501 Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you for titled this clip in Finnish! Great video.

  • @vraisa2
    @vraisa2 Před 4 lety +1

    Had a chance to shoot with one during conscript service. Army still had those in storage at 1990's. When they got more than enough assault rifles later, these were phased out. It was a one-off, our training was with the Sako assault rifle, we only had some short courses on m/27 rifle and m/31 submachinegun.

  • @yesthecrumbs5806
    @yesthecrumbs5806 Před 5 lety +3

    Finally! I love the way it sounds

  • @geirleirvik1478
    @geirleirvik1478 Před 2 lety +3

    I was trained on the Suomi with the "coffin" 50 box mag, it was quite reliable and there was no need to use special tools to load it up, you just had to be careful and the last few cartridges needed some force. The recoil is very modes and compared to the H&K G3 super easy - aiming full auto from the hip is like aiming a garden hose. The charging handle was different on the version the Norwegian Navy used until replaced by the H&K MP5 and eventually the H&K 416. it was more like a finger hook.

  • @ArcturusOTE
    @ArcturusOTE Před 5 lety +232

    Finnish gun designers, the John Browning of -the Scandinavians- Northeastern Europe

    • @taistelusammakko5088
      @taistelusammakko5088 Před 5 lety +48

      Finns are nordic tho no scandinavian

    • @Eternalnight198
      @Eternalnight198 Před 5 lety +35

      And not Northeast, just North

    • @lavrentivs9891
      @lavrentivs9891 Před 5 lety +16

      @Hena pena Or "Fenno-Scandinavian" if we want to be precise ;)

    • @jussieronen3707
      @jussieronen3707 Před 5 lety +5

      Yayo' Ariowibowo North-Eastern Europe: The Baltics
      North Europe: Well, the Nordics obviously.

    • @smygskytt1712
      @smygskytt1712 Před 5 lety +6

      "Culturally scandinavian" to be exact.

  • @noone-75
    @noone-75 Před 5 lety +1

    Nice, informative vid, really good work on digging the history, and even pronouncing those finnish names nicely =) cheers from finland.

  • @Goatboysminion
    @Goatboysminion Před 5 lety +1

    Love the control on that!

  • @nopnopnopnopnopnopnop
    @nopnopnopnopnopnopnop Před 4 lety +142

    "I can't imaging being combat-effective with 900RPM and a 20 round box magazine"
    *sweats profusely before unlocking 50-round mags in Battlefield V*

  • @DEATH-THE-GOAT
    @DEATH-THE-GOAT Před 2 lety +6

    The Swedish mag was loaded with a tool called a "rasp" and you could load 36 cartridges in about 3 seconds.
    The Swedes used the Suomi until the 80th.

  • @razorsneck6379
    @razorsneck6379 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for making this video. Kiitos!

  • @hejustleft
    @hejustleft Před 3 lety

    Your well learned, measured posts are so viewable. Thanks.

  • @tuomaskoivurinne
    @tuomaskoivurinne Před 5 lety +6

    I visit the same shooting range in Iittala occasionally. Great channel, I've been a fan for a couple of years now. Although a Finn, I like the variety of nations featured and expecially the more "weird" weapons you explore. Keep it up and thanks for keeping Finland on the map. We still exist.

  • @battalion151R
    @battalion151R Před 3 lety +3

    I bought one of the torch cut parts kits. I haven't done anything with it. But, the barrel is new, and the machining that went into this, is phenomenal. It's sad that it was demilled. Stock looks about the same. Sn.19133. With the compensator. Great to see what one in working condition would be like.

  • @rickbowen6929
    @rickbowen6929 Před 5 lety

    Another well done vid Ian, thx.

  • @privateNukem
    @privateNukem Před 5 lety

    That's a beautiful piece of work.

  • @zymelin21
    @zymelin21 Před 5 lety +26

    When I joined the danish army reserves I was issued this sub. very accurate, but with a coffin mag. 50 rounds. easy to use, and clean! good weapon.

    • @vertie2090
      @vertie2090 Před 5 lety +3

      lol I hope it wasn't just last year

    • @zymelin21
      @zymelin21 Před 5 lety +6

      1980 or something

  • @terraflow__bryanburdo4547
    @terraflow__bryanburdo4547 Před 5 lety +31

    This weapon is one of the stars of "The Unknown Soldier"(2017). Devastating in the right hands, which many of the Finns seemed to possess.

    • @Redmanticore
      @Redmanticore Před 4 lety +7

      the classic finnish 1955 version of the unknown soldier is surprisingly funny. has a lot of dark humor, but also sentimental realism, for a war movie about a war that just ended 15 years ago. you can also hear all sorts of different finnish dialects. foreigners should really watch it with english subtitles and enjoy it. its about continuation war, from beginning to the end. 181 minutes and a budget of 46 million finnish marks at the time it was made. 8.0 on imdb out of 6900 voters. ( i think its a good movie, but also a bit of finnish bias voters ) To this day, this is still the most successful Finnish film ever made, and Finnish TV has been airing it every Independence day for decades, kind of a historical monument.

    • @desmondmccallum2916
      @desmondmccallum2916 Před 2 lety +1

      It was so easy to fire for its heaviness, loved it, I imagined few Russians at the receiving end and let it rip

  • @pumppuhaulikkomies
    @pumppuhaulikkomies Před 5 lety +1

    Great video. The information you have is always on point. Also, what a coincidence, I was just searching for "suomi konepistooli m31 forgotten weapons" and you guys added this video 3 hours ago. I think it's time for me to subscribe to your channel.

  • @interman7715
    @interman7715 Před 4 lety +1

    Love your videos, very informative.

  • @ADRay1999
    @ADRay1999 Před 5 lety +300

    Didn’t Simo Hayha “The white Death” used one? (And yes I know he used a Finnish type mosin nagant)

    • @MrBonjoboy
      @MrBonjoboy Před 5 lety +78

      Yes he used one, but mainly he used m/39 rifle.

    • @Eternalnight198
      @Eternalnight198 Před 5 lety +128

      Simo Häyhä primarily used a rifle although he is also credited with large number of kills with a submachinegun too.

    • @Guro512
      @Guro512 Před 5 lety +51

      He used M28-30.

    • @Makedeth
      @Makedeth Před 5 lety +51

      yes, over 200 kills with this SMG. well, the m28 model.

    • @jessekaartinen
      @jessekaartinen Před 5 lety +27

      Andrew Dalton Ray Simo Häyhä used the M/28-30 "Pystykorva" (the Spitz)

  • @m4ssee
    @m4ssee Před 4 lety +24

    3:30 Now that's a banana magazine if I've ever seen one. :D

  • @attesukki390
    @attesukki390 Před 5 lety +1

    An excellent video, thanks for creating it.

  • @Sociologist66
    @Sociologist66 Před 4 lety

    Good job Ian... Congratulations !!!

  • @lotusdev
    @lotusdev Před 4 lety +4

    Re. the holes in the receiver end cap (as may have been pointed out): Compressed air gets very hot. I would think that without venting the receiver would get quite warm. Try it with an old-fashioned bicycle pump and you'll feel what I mean.

  • @66Flux
    @66Flux Před 4 lety +94

    Btw, "Suomi" is the name of the country in Finnish language whereas "Finland" is the name in Swedish language. For historical reasons, the Swedish version of the name of our country is used in international contexts. In some official contexts the name is said also in the form "Suomi-Finland". I have met tourists here in Finland who asked me what on earth the word "Suomi" means!

    • @jussiturpeinen2509
      @jussiturpeinen2509 Před 3 lety +6

      suomi-> suo maa -> swamp land :) my theory on the name

    • @66Flux
      @66Flux Před 3 lety

      @@jussiturpeinen2509 I'd bet you're right, but those tourists had no idea that the word "suomi" is the name of the country!

    • @jierdansix8356
      @jierdansix8356 Před 3 lety +15

      Suomi -> suo maa theory is complete fabrication. The suomi-word comes from an much more archaic (older) word from the age when Finnish language was developing. For the life of me, I can not remember that word or it's correct linguistic spelling. I know this because I got throughly scolded by my wife (MA in the Finnish language) when I uttered that theory out loud few years back.
      A very good lesson about linguistical etymology is that you simply don't and never should intreprent the words etymology on how the word looks (spelled/vocalized) today. Words are very often older or have changed meaning or have had doublemeanings even in resent (1800-1930 history). For example the word "pohtia" which today mainly means the act of thinking or pondering was used to discribe the act of separating grains from trash (literally jyvät akanoista) with a special tool called pohdin. The word pohtia is much older than we think.
      - scolded hubby and a (not yet published) historian

    • @tomi_9212
      @tomi_9212 Před 3 lety

      And also SF means -Suomi-Filmi Oy- a Film corporation, that was founded 1920`s controlled film industy/ publishing. records are now controlled by National Audiovisual Institute.

    • @Aurinkohirvi
      @Aurinkohirvi Před 2 lety +10

      The most probable origin for the words Suomi (Finland), Saame/Sabme (Lapland) and Häme (Tavastia province) is Proto-Baltic loan word *zeme, which means land, people. It's pretty much concensus that's the origin for the word. In the Novgorod chronicles the Russians call southern coast Finns as "Sum" and the Tavastians as "Jem." The name "Finn" and "Finland" has a Gemanic origin. Its root is with the meaning of "wanderer," which Germans used the peoples living east of them (now known as Slavs, Balts and Finnic peoples), as these people practised still slash-and-burn agricuture and hunter-gathering and were more mobile than Germans and Norse who were field agriculture practising. Tacitus, the Roman historian used the name "Fenni" in 98AD of people in North-Eastern Europe that by description could have been saamelaiset (in English Laplanders, the Sami) people. One Viking Age (about 800AD - 1050AD) runestone in Sweden has the word "Finlont" and one in Gothland has "Finlandi," both different forms of Finland. In Old High German language (spoken 750 - 1050AD) by the continental Germans the word for the wanderer is "fendo" and "vende," and the eastern people were called Wenden/Winden (in English Wends) and their homeland as Wendland/Windland. The Romans called these people as Veneti and Venedi. In Finnish Russia is called "Venäjä" which is a loan word for the Germanic word, Proto-Germanic possibly.
      Editing to be sure the comment actually was acceoted by YT. So many comments today disappear right after you post them.

  • @finntastique3891
    @finntastique3891 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for the great content Man!

  • @orrand6941
    @orrand6941 Před 4 lety

    Nicest gun yet, love this channel and never had any interest in guns but you have to respect and admire the knowledge and mechanical beauty that went into these things.
    keep them coming plz. Very interesting!

  • @djnorth2020
    @djnorth2020 Před 4 lety +8

    I've had the opportunity to reload the drum magazine and shoot this weapon. It almost literally has no recoil on full auto. I would have this over the modern standard issue 7.62 RK 62.

  • @mossena
    @mossena Před 5 lety +8

    During WW2 and for a couple of decades afterwards, the Vatican City's Swiss Guard used Swiss-made versions of this SMG!

  • @DanielLopez-up6os
    @DanielLopez-up6os Před 5 lety

    Awesome video man, keep them coming. :)

  • @hansmueller3029
    @hansmueller3029 Před 4 lety +1

    I really like Ian's style. He just loads, takes the safety off and gets it on.

  • @midimusicforever
    @midimusicforever Před 4 lety +6

    The "Tikka Koski Iron and Wood Company Limited" must be one of few statements ever that is longer in English than in Finnish. When buying home electronics where I live, the manual usually come in all Nordic languages. The Finnish part is always substantially thicker than the Swedish, Danish or Norwegian parts.

  • @anthonyonan93
    @anthonyonan93 Před 5 lety +593

    1 Soviet disliked this video

    • @cyberfish4016
      @cyberfish4016 Před 5 lety +65

      I think lots of Soviets disliked this weapon.

    • @duachim
      @duachim Před 5 lety +10

      anthonyonan93 its up to 9 now lol them Ruskies

    • @michaelbritt7609
      @michaelbritt7609 Před 5 lety +28

      The rest were killed by this

    • @AussieLiam93
      @AussieLiam93 Před 5 lety +16

      Despite the fact that the PPSH 40/41 was practically a ripoff of this..

    • @Itapirkanmaa2
      @Itapirkanmaa2 Před 5 lety +15

      No it was not. The PPsh is a TOTALLY different gun!

  • @StPaul76
    @StPaul76 Před 5 lety +1

    For what I've read from Arma Fennica Lahti designed the chamber of the weapon a bit oversized to ensure reliable feeding and timed the cycle as such that it would actually fire the round slightly before it was completely in battery thus sealing the chamber almost "hermetically" as the case sort of fireformed itself in the chamber. Also not known outside FDF is that the M31 was designed to fire a specific 9mm cartridge that was only to be used in handguns (Lahti pistol, Luger..) in emergency. Nowadays it would be rated as +P+. 124gr ball at about 1350fps @the muzzle out of an M31. The extra punch was to cycle the massive bolt properly and fas enough and as a bonus it gave the weapon a bit more reach and penetration on the field.

  • @colerape
    @colerape Před 4 lety

    Love the built in deflector!

  • @brittongolfwang
    @brittongolfwang Před 5 lety +122

    Thank you for this blessing father

  • @teppokuusisto144
    @teppokuusisto144 Před 5 lety +11

    You cannot use 36rnd stick-mag with original m/31.
    It wont fit unless the magwel is opened up - a job which was done in armories during the 50`s.

  • @karleino
    @karleino Před 3 lety

    Just love that sound...

  • @jacobriddle7230
    @jacobriddle7230 Před 5 lety +1

    I have a Tikka T3 Lite in 30-06 and yes has a bit of recoil for the caliber and it is one the best guns I have ever had

  • @MilsurpMikeChannel
    @MilsurpMikeChannel Před 5 lety +33

    I have a semiauto build, but waiting until there is snow on the ground before I film a review. Do you have any good leads on coffin mags (I have a stick and two drums... Would like a coffin mag that I don't have to pay to have shipped from Germany which is the only thing I ever see on GunBroker).

    • @mattb.2359
      @mattb.2359 Před 5 lety +4

      I have one, and don’t have the “speed” loader for it. I bought my coffin mag at a gun show for too much money.

    • @MilsurpMikeChannel
      @MilsurpMikeChannel Před 5 lety

      I have a speed loader.... I hope it works.

    • @ihateleftards
      @ihateleftards Před 5 lety +1

      The 36 round mags work best with mine. Didn't have much luck with the drum even after increasing the spring tension.

  • @deanster3435
    @deanster3435 Před 5 lety +27

    I've been thinking of moving from the US to Finland for a while now, and I've been interested in their culture for years. I'm learning more and more everyday about finnish culture, and I think this definitely helped. Thank you Ian for the info on these amazing classics 😊

    • @AshleyPomeroy
      @AshleyPomeroy Před 2 lety +3

      This deserves some kind of follow-up.

    • @deanster3435
      @deanster3435 Před 2 lety +4

      @@AshleyPomeroy Welp, all I can say is that I didn't move, and that I was pretty dumb then to say the least lol. Ngl I forgot this comment even existed and I'm lowkey embarrassed

    • @krebgurfson5732
      @krebgurfson5732 Před rokem +1

      @@deanster3435 the best part is look how many people upvoted it, dumb people everywhere no need to be embarassed

    • @deanster3435
      @deanster3435 Před rokem +1

      @@krebgurfson5732 True but still. I was a dumb young adult at the time and wasn't grateful for what I have here tbh.

    • @Kaarna5
      @Kaarna5 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@deanster3435Why "lowkey"? Why not just say you're embarrassed?

  • @hamletthaus3046
    @hamletthaus3046 Před 3 lety +2

    I have a select fire John Stemple STG-76W (KP-31 copy) and is one of my favorite sub guns in my collection. I attest to its superb build quality and reliability.

  • @megapet777
    @megapet777 Před 2 lety

    I love how much finnish stuff you have on the channel :D

  • @johanneskrv
    @johanneskrv Před 5 lety +3

    I believe the reason why Lahti made a quickly changeable barrel was that during long fire fights the barrel could often get overly heated making the gun less accurate.
    One way of recognizing a true hard boiled war veteran was the burn scar he had in his palm from changing barrels 😎

  • @janiperttila8049
    @janiperttila8049 Před 5 lety +4

    The Finnish snipers didn't utilize the Suomi MP in sniping. They may have used one when fighting as an infantryman during enemy assaults. Simo Häyhä is famous for this and is probably what the author of the video meant.

  • @ajaakola2
    @ajaakola2 Před 5 lety +1

    Saw that curvy clip one in museom here in finland sometime ago and I have to say it looks intresting

  • @shawnr771
    @shawnr771 Před 5 lety

    Very cool. Interesting SMG and historical content.

  • @dongilleo9743
    @dongilleo9743 Před 4 lety +21

    I lived in Finland for two years decades ago, and since then have had a great interest in Finnish firearms. When the semi auto guns became available, there was a large gun distributor about a two hour drive away that was selling them. They even had both drum and stick magazines available as well. I actually made the trip three times, determined to buy one, but each time talked myself out of it. Along with my basic concerns about how the gun would function having been altered to semi auto, it just did not look or feel "right". It felt muzzle heavy and unbalanced, although I don't know if that was actually true or just a psychological reaction to the extra length barrel. I think I just felt like I wouldn't be getting a "real" suomi gun, but some pieced together Frankenstein version. I made a fourth trip back, and by that time they were sold out.
    Having now watched this video, and having my concerns about the semi auto versions built up from parts confirmed by an expert, I'm glad I didn't buy one.

  • @LagogaL
    @LagogaL Před 4 lety +7

    I've shot 2000-4000 rounds with Suomi, and it's beast.

  • @dtogo4286
    @dtogo4286 Před 3 lety

    love this channel

  • @asianinvasian9022
    @asianinvasian9022 Před 4 lety

    I recently had the pleasure of firing a full auto one of these (and a rather ornery suppressed sten) and I can say without a doubt. It lives up to the hype

  • @JackOSUrulz
    @JackOSUrulz Před 5 lety +183

    9mm subbie? Used in WW2? Finnish design?
    This is gun porn at its finest...
    What’s crazy is I was reloading D166 rounds for my M39 this morning and this video popped up....had to stop and drink some coffee and have a peek...

    • @jurajokasa834
      @jurajokasa834 Před 4 lety

      yeah man D166 for M39 is the best ammo :) or if you want cheap commercial loadings buy 203grain softpoint Brown Bear steel cased ammo :) works too

    • @hansmueller3029
      @hansmueller3029 Před 4 lety

      Does that ammo have a 53 mm case ?

    • @RoyalMela
      @RoyalMela Před 3 lety

      Perfect weapon for trench warfare. Small, agile, rapid fire, big magazine, very easy to maintain operational.

  • @RockerFinland
    @RockerFinland Před 3 lety +4

    I've heard those guns killed many Soviets back then (Suomi M/31). If I just remember right Simo Häyhä (the sniper legend) killed 200 soviets with on of those.

  • @Targetpopper
    @Targetpopper Před 5 lety +1

    Super fun gun. My buddy has a post sample. Very accurate and magdumps can be controlled like a laser pointer.

  • @maximvolodkin6809
    @maximvolodkin6809 Před 5 lety

    hey man you are so great and professional please keep on

  • @dagreynolds8013
    @dagreynolds8013 Před 2 lety +4

    I was issued this gun in The Norwegian version of BUDS in the 80's. However, we had a 45 round box mag. Just like most well trained units, we fired single shots quickly rather than full auto. Accuracy for an open bolt gun, is amazing. Well ahead of its time!

  • @juhomaki-petaja
    @juhomaki-petaja Před 5 lety +7

    Just heard that my uncle (continuation war veteran) said that they taped two box mags together. Drum was too slow to reload. And Suomi was used mainly in semi auto, because no one could carry ammo that it ate in full auto.

  • @tigermanmccool4037
    @tigermanmccool4037 Před 3 lety

    The wood look amazing , love the tiger like pattern

  • @kenhelmers2603
    @kenhelmers2603 Před 5 lety

    I see why you like it, me too! :) Thanks for showing it to us!

  • @benjaminjohnson628
    @benjaminjohnson628 Před 5 lety +10

    And so it was that again they gathered around to hear Gun Jesus speak
    seriously though great Video keep up the amazing work

  • @okaro6595
    @okaro6595 Před 5 lety +9

    Actually Aimo did not leave, he had his day job in at VKT. The submachine gun was his private side project. Lahti made scrap like LS-26 and the M/27 rifle for his employer and the good thing as a side project. He ended up making close to a million euros in today's money as royalties.
    The SMGs had to be modified to accept the Swedish 36 round magazine. Same was done to M/44. Btw the 50 round magazine is also a Swedish one. The major innovation in the bolt was to make it narrow in the front. This was to reduce the chances that the cartridge turns sideways while feeding.
    "Lukko ja piippu irroita!"
    The idea that a 12 year old kid buys a rifle the army had surplussed just ten years earlier would be unthinkable today. Back then only magazine rifles were under license.

    • @mottee
      @mottee Před 5 lety +6

      It is not fully justified to blame Lahti for the defects of the LS-26. He wanted to design a gas-operated gun but the old farts in the Army insisted the gun to be recoil-operated. The "S" in the LS-26, Major Saloranta, fiddled with the blueprints without negotiating with Lahti. And because of the incompetence of the production facility, it took a long time and a personal intervention by Lahti before they could churn out functional guns. Later Lahti designed an excellent gas-operated "Sampo" general purpose MG but the war ended before any significant quantity of them was produced. And after the war the Army had some 9000 captured DP-27 LMGs in their hands, so the Sampo never went into large scale production.

  • @skogen5357
    @skogen5357 Před 2 lety

    Nice shades Ian!

  • @thomashaigh6635
    @thomashaigh6635 Před 3 lety +1

    Holy Jesus, thats one fast firing gun and surprised that it didn't kick more.