Bullets caught in flight 1928 Thompson Submachine Gun
Uploader Comments (johntitsworthjr)
Top Comments
-
badest gun ever made. would love to get my hands on one of those babys. It kicks every guns ass. Nothing like a trench coat, a 1928 thompson with stick mag, and 2 crome 45s at your side
-
Actually, under the right conditions you can see bullets in flight. The best condition is the sun low, behind you. That appears to be the condition in this instance.
It's easy to see even the small, .22 rimfire bullets under this condition. A big ol' .45 bullet gives you plenty to see!
Nice old Thompson! I'd love to have one but an original costs tens of thousands of dollars now. You can still buy the semi-auto Thompson but I'm unsure if they're made in full auto today.
All Comments (31)
-
This is an Thompson 1928 A1 !
-
@Shmerlop Come to the UK, sure their deactivated but hear you can get an origional from the war for £300 roughly $550!
Infact I heared Russian weapons out there are as rare as rocking horse shit, hear their in there 1000s if you know where to go for £200 or $350!
Deactivated or not its nice to have some hardware by your bed!
-
now that's cool!
-
@LolNinja1234 Buy a deactivated ones, then go to a trusty gunsmith and tell 'em to make it activate.
-
Can the .45 ACP fired out of a Thompson 12 inches barrel really penetratable throughout small diameters trees?
-
i would waste all my money just to buy that gun
-
wow, those bullets really look slow, the interval between each bullet is so less than i imagined.
-
and what are you going to do when you drop that $2,000 Thompson on the ground when you go for those twin chrome .45s? Cry, I'll bet. You are right, though, .45ACP FTW!
-
@Jarek4 - Obviously yoou're the idiot since you don't understand that "caught in flight" means that the camera caught the bullets in flight, ever hear of caught on camera?
Sure, Its a Sony HDR-SR1
johntitsworthjr 4 years ago