Maschinengewehr des Standschützen Hellriegel: A WW1 Phantom

Published on May 8, 2018
Duration: 7:37

The Hellriegel machine gun, a WWI Austrian experimental firearm, is known only from archival photos and gained modern fame via Battlefield 1. Likely chambered in 9x23mm Steyr, it was a water-cooled, blowback-operated weapon with both stick and a 160-round drum magazine. It was designed as a man-portable heavy machine gun, intended for crew service with specialized backpack magazine carriers.

Quick Summary

The Hellriegel was an experimental WWI Austrian machine gun, likely chambered in 9x23mm Steyr. It was a water-cooled, blowback-operated weapon featuring both stick and a large 160-round drum magazine, designed for crew service.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Introduction: The Hellriegel Machine Gun
  2. 00:31A WWI 'Phantom' Firearm
  3. 01:34Technical Hypotheses: Caliber and Operation
  4. 02:39Feeding Mechanisms: Stick and Drum Magazines
  5. 04:07Design Philosophy: Man-Portable Heavy MG
  6. 05:46Crew Operations and Context

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Hellriegel machine gun?

The Hellriegel was an experimental Austrian machine gun from World War 1, known primarily from archival photographs. It gained modern recognition through the video game Battlefield 1.

What caliber was the Hellriegel machine gun?

It is hypothesized that the Hellriegel was chambered in 9x23mm Steyr, which was the standard pistol cartridge for Austria-Hungary during World War 1.

How was the Hellriegel machine gun fed?

The Hellriegel utilized both stick magazines and a large drum magazine, estimated to hold around 160 rounds. The drum magazine fed via a flexible chute.

Was the Hellriegel a crew-served weapon?

Evidence suggests it was crew-served. Archival photos show an assistant gunner with a specialized backpack designed to carry the large drum magazines.

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