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− | The '''PPD''' (Russian: Пистолет-пулемёт Дегтярёва; Pistolet-Pulemyot Degtyaryova, English: Degtyaryov machine pistol) is a Soviet submachine gun developed by Vasily Degtyarev. The first prototype was created in 1929, based on the [[DP-27]], using a similar feeding system with top-mounted disk magazines. Further improvements led to the appearance of the PPD Model 1931, which externally resembled the [[Tokarev M1927]]. In 1933, it was decided to go back to the barrel with the cooling jacket.
| + | #REDIRECT [[Degtyaryov_PPD#Degtyaryov_PPD-34]] |
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− | In 1934, limited production of the PPD-34 was started, and in 1935 it was officially accepted into service. It was the second notable submachine gun in service in the USSR, after the [[Thompson]]. In 1938, a small update was carried out, with the designation of the new model as PPD-34/38. However, the SMG continued to be considered a weapon only for certain units and most of which were in the police service. Until 1939, about 5,000 PPD-34s and PPD-34/38s were produced, after which it was decided to suspend prodcution.
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− | However, the Winter War turned everything upside down. The PPD's production was resumed in an emergency speed. In 1940, a number of design changes were made, for easier and less costly production. Further improvements led to the appearance of the PPD-40, in particular with a new type of magazine. Although it was replaced by the [[PPSh-41]], the PPD-40 continued to be produced until 1943 due to the war.
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− | In 1942, a modernized version with a pistol grip and a folding buttstock in the style of the [[MP40]] fed from 30-round box magazines was presented for trials, but it lost the competition to the [[PPS-43|PPS]].
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− | =PPD-34=
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− | [[File:Ppd-34.jpg|right|thumb|none|451px|PPD-34 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev]]
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− | [[File:PPD-34 Left.jpg|right|thumb|none|451px|PPD-34 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev]]
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− | [[File:Ppd-34 drum.jpg|right|thumb|none|451px|Early PPD-34/38 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev. Magazine for 73 rounds. It is perfectly vertical. Model 1938.]]
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− | [[File:PPD-34-38 SMG.JPG|right|thumb|none|451px|Late PPD-34/38 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev. This is a late version, produced in 1939 before the introduction of the PPD-40. Magazine for 71 rounds. It is tilted forward. Model 1939/1940.]]
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− | ==Specifications==
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− | (1934 – 1940)
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− | * '''Type:''' Submachine gun
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− | * '''Place of origin:''' Soviet Union
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− | * '''In service:''' 1935–45
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− | * '''Designed:''' 1934
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− | * '''No. built:''' Approx. 90,000
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− | * '''Mass:''' 3.2 kg (7.1 lb) empty
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− | * '''Length:''' 788 mm (31.0 in)
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− | * '''Barrel length:''' 273 mm (10.7 in)
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− | * '''Cartridge:''' 7.62×25mm Tokarev
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− | * '''Action:''' Blowback, open bolt
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− | * '''Rate of fire:''' 800–1000 rounds/min
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− | * '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto/Full-Auto
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− | * '''Muzzle velocity:''' 490 m/s (1,600 ft/s)
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− | * '''Effective firing range:''' 200 m (219 yd)
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− | * '''Feed system:''' 25-round box magazine (PPD-34), 73-round drum magazine (PPD-34/38 early model), 71-round drum magazine (PPD-34/38 late model),
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− | -----
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− | {{Gun Title|PPD-34 & PPD-34/38}}
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− | ==Film==
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− | {| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
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− | |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Title'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="170"|'''Actor'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Character'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Note'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="80"|'''Date'''
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− | | ''[[Fighting Film Collection No. 3 (Boyevoy kinosbornik No. 3)]]'' || [[Pyotr Sobolevsky]] || German paratrooper || PPD-34/38 || 1941
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− | | ''[[Fighting Film Collection No. 8 (Boyevoy kinosbornik No. 8)]]'' || || A Soviet soldier || PPD-34/38; In documentary footage || 1942
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− | | ''[[Two Soldiers (Dva boytsa)]]'' || || A Red Army soldier || PPD-34 with stick magazine || 1943
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− | | rowspan=2|''[[Native Shores (Rodnye berega)]]'' || [[Ivan Pereverzev]] || The battalion commander || rowspan=2|PPD-34/38 || rowspan=2|1943
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− | | || Soviet soldiers and officers
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− | |''[[Philosophy of a Knife]]''||||||archive footage, PPD-34/38||2008
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− | |}
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− | ==Video Games==
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− | {| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
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− | |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Game Title'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Mods'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Notations'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|''' Release Date'''
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− | | ''[[FinnWars]]'' || || PPD-34 || 2006
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− | | rowspan=2|''[[Forgotten Hope 2]]'' || 25 and 73-round magazines (PPD-34) || PPD-34: Added in v2.56 (2020) || rowspan=2|2007
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− | | 73-round magazine (PPD-34/38) || PPD-34/38: Added in v2.6 (2022)
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− | | ''[[Deadfall Adventures]]'' || || || 2013
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− | | ''[[World of Guns: Gun Disassembly]]'' || || || 2014
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− | | rowspan=3|''[[Enlisted]]'' || 25 round mag||PPD-34|| rowspan=3| 2021
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− | | 25 round mag||PPD-34/38
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− | | 71 round mag||PPD-34/38
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− | |-
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− | |}
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− | <br clear=all>
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− | =PPD-40=
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− | [[File:PPD40.jpg|right|thumb|none|451px|PPD-40 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev]]
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− | [[File:PPD-40 Left.jpg|right|thumb|none|451px|PPD-40 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev]]
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− | [[File:PPD-40 Brake.jpg|thumb|right|450px|PPD-40 produced by Vladistovok Shipyard #202 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev. Note the bayonet lug and muzzle brake.]]
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− | [[File:PPD-40 Bramit.jpg|thumb|right|450px|'''Photoshop''' PPD-40 with Bramit suppressor - 7.62x25mm Tokarev]]
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− | ==Specifications==
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− | (1940 – 1943)
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− | * '''Type:''' Submachine Gun
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− | * '''Caliber:''' 7.62x25mm Tokarev
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− | * '''Weight:''' {{convert|kg|3.2}}
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− | * '''Length:''' {{convert|mm|788}}
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− | * '''Barrel length:''' {{convert|mm|273}}
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− | * '''Capacity:''' 71-round drum magazine
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− | * '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto/Full-Auto
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− | -----
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− | {{Gun Title|PPD-40}}
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− | ==Film==
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− | {| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
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− | |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Title'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="170"|'''Actor'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Character'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Note'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="80"|'''Date'''
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− | | ''[[Fighting Film Collection No. 9 (Boyevoy kinosbornik No. 9)]]'' || || Red Army soldiers || || 1942
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[Fighting Film Collection No. 12 (Boyevoy kinosbornik No. 12)]]'' || [[Evgeniy Nemchenko]] || Lt. Krotov || || 1942
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− | |-
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− | | rowspan=2|''[[Young Partisans (Yunye partizani)]]'' || [[Viktor Bubnov]] || Andrey Stepanovich || rowspan=2| || rowspan=2|1942
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− | |-
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− | | || Soviet partisans
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− | | ''[[Bridge (Most), The (1942)|The Bridge (Most)]]'' || || Soviet soldiers || || 1942
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− | |-
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− | |''[[Two Soldiers (Dva boytsa)]]'' || || Soviet soldiers || || 1943
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− | | rowspan=3|''[[Invincible (Nepobedimye)]]'' || [[Boris Babochkin]] || Nikolai Radionov ||rowspan=3| || rowspan=3|1943
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− | |-
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− | | [[Boris Blinov]] || Bondaretz
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− | | || Soviet soldiers
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− | |-
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− | | rowspan=3|''[[Native Shores (Rodnye berega)]]'' || [[Valentin Shcheglov]] || Lt. Sergey Lazarev ||rowspan=3| || rowspan=3|1943
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− | |-
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− | |[[Ivan Bobrov]] || Soviet Navy ''Starshina''
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− | | || Soviet seamen and soldiers
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− | | ''[[T-9 Submarine (Podvodnaya lodka T-9)]]'' || || A German soldier || || 1943
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− | |-
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− | | rowspan=3|''[[Marine Battalion (Morskoy batalion), The|The Marine Battalion (Morskoy batalion)]]'' || [[Andrei Abrikosov]] || Sergei Markin ||rowspan=3| || rowspan=3|1944
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− | |-
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− | | [[Pyotr Alejnikov]] || Pyotr Yakovlev
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− | |-
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− | | [[Nikolai Dorokhin]] || Kurskiy
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− | | ''[[The Last Hill (Malakhov kurgan)]]'' || || Soviet sailors || || 1944
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− | | ''[[The Turning Point (Velikiy perelom)]]'' || || || Seen in Soviet headquarters || 1945
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− | | ''[[Torn Curtain]]'' || || East German soldiers || || 1966
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− | | ''[[Fit for Non-Combatant Duty (Goden k nestroevoy)]]'' || || Soviet soldiers || Seen in documentary footage || 1968
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− | | ''[[Poem of Kovpak: Alarm (Duma o Kovpake: Nabat)]]'' || || A Soviet partisan || Documentary Footage || 1973
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− | | rowspan=2|''[[Long Miles of War (Dolgie vyorsty voyny)]]'' || [[Vadim Yakovlev]] || Lt. Ananyev ||rowspan=2| || rowspan=2|1975
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− | | [[Yuri Duvanov]] || Pvt. Klimchuk
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− | | ''[[Tali-Ihantala 1944]]'' || || Soviet soldiers || || 2007
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− | | ''[[Dnieper Line: Love and War]]'' || [[Viktor Molchyan]] || Colonel Shadrin || || 2009
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− | |''[[The Brest Fortress (Brestskaya Krepost)]]'' || [[Andrey Merzlikin]] || Lieutenant Kizhevatov || || 2010
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− | | ''[[Stalingrad (2013)|Stalingrad]]''|| || Russian soldiers|| || 2013
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− | |-
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− | | rowspan=4|''[[Panfilov's 28 (28 panfilovtsev)]]'' || [[Yakov Kucherevskiy]] || Sgt. Ivan Dobrobabin || rowspan=4| || rowspan=4|2016
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− | |-
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− | | [[Anton Paderin]] || Pyotr Yemtzov
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− | | [[Aleksandr Ustyugov]] || Ivan Moskalenko
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− | | [[Dmitriy Girev]] || Yakov Bondarenko
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− | | rowspan=2|''[[The Unknown Soldier (2017)|The Unknown Soldier]]'' || [[Eero Aho]] || Antero Rokka ||rowspan=2| || rowspan=2| 2017
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− | |-
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− | | || Soviet soldiers
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− | |-
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− | |}
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− | ==Television==
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− | {| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
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− | |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Show Title / Episode'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="170"|'''Actor'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="200"|'''Character'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Note'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="80"|'''Air Date'''
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− | |-
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− | | rowspan=2|''[[Columbo]]'' || [[Peter Falk]] || Lt. Columbo || rowspan=2|"Dead Weight" (S01E03) || rowspan=2|1971
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− | |-
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− | | [[Eddie Albert]] || Maj. Gen. Martin J. Hollister
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− | | ''[[Omega Option (Variant "Omega")]]'' || || Soviet sailors || Seen in documentary footage || 1975
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− | |-
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− | | rowspan=2|''[[State Border: Film 5, The|The State Border: Film 5]]'' || [[Dmitry Matveev]] || Lt. Il'ya Sushencov || rowspan=2| || rowspan=2|1986
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− | | [[Semyon Morozov]] || Petty officer Pavlo Levada
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[Black Pea Coats (Chyornye bushlaty)]]'' || [[Vyacheslav Krikunov]] || ''Starshina'' / Jr.Lt. Levontiy Leontyev || || 2018
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[Spy City]]'' || || East German police and militia || || 2020
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− | |-
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− | |}
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− | ==Video Games==
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− | {| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
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− | |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Game Title'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Mods'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Notations'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|''' Release Date'''
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[Red Orchestra: Ostfront 41-45]]'' || || || 2006
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[Forgotten Hope 2]]'' || || Added in v2.56 (2020) || 2007
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[World of Guns: Gun Disassembly]]'' || PPD-40 || || 2014
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[Heroes & Generals]]'' || || || 2016
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− | |-
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− | | rowspan=3|''[[Enlisted]]'' || ||PPD-40|| rowspan=3| 2021
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− | |-
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− | | || PPD-40 DSZ
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− | | integral suppressor|| PPD-40 BraMit
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[Call to Arms - Gates of Hell: Ostfront]]'' || || || 2021
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− | |-
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− | |}
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− | =PPD-42=
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− | [[File:Degtyarev PDM-42.jpg|right|thumb|none|450px|Degtyarev PPD-42- 7.62x25mm Tokarev]]
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− | Degtyarov PPD-42 submachine gun (factory designation KB-P-135) was developed during early 1942 by team, led by famous Soviet gun designer Vasily Degtyarov (designer of the PPD-34/38/40 line of submachine guns, among other weapons). PPD-42 was designed upon requirements for a compact, simple and easily manufactured submachine gun, drawn late in 1941 by GAU (General Artillery Department of the Red Army General staff). PPD-42 submachine gun was extensively tested during 1942, and in the end it was rejected in favor of the Sudaev PPS-42 submachine gun. Only few experimental PPD-42 submachine guns were made in Kovrov.
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− | The PPD-42 submachine gun is a simple blowback operated weapon, firing from an open bolt, in full automatic only. Feed is from double stack detachable box magazines. Iron sights feature flip-up rear sight blade with settings for 150 and 300 meters. Bottom-folding shoulder stock is made from stamped steel, like most other parts of the gun.
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− | The submachine gun can sometimes be seen under the name.:
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− | * '''PPDM-42''' (Rus.: Пистолет Пулемёт Дегтярёва Модернизированный 1942 / '''P'''istolet '''P'''ulemot '''D'''egtyarova '''M'''odernizirovannyy 19'''42''') - Degtyarov submachine gun Modernized.
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− | * '''PDM-42''' (Rus.:Пулемёт Дегтярёва Модернизированный 1942 / '''P'''ulemot '''D'''egtyarova '''M'''odernizirovannyy 19'''42''') - Degtyarov submachine gun Modernized.
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− | ==Specifications==
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− | (1942)M
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− | * '''Type:''' Submachine Gun
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− | * '''Caliber:''' 7.62x25mm Tokarev
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− | * '''Weight:''' {{convert|kg|3.1}} (less magazine)
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− | * '''Length:''' {{convert|mm|768}}
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− | * '''Barrel length:''' {{convert|mm|270}}
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− | * '''Capacity:''' 30
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− | * '''Rate of fire:''' 600RPM
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− | * '''Fire Modes:''' Semi-Auto/Full-Auto
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− | -----
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− | {{Gun Title|PPD-42}}
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− | ==Video Games==
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− | {| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;" border="1" style="border: 1px solid #D0E7FF; background-color:#ffffff; text-align:left; font-size: 95%"
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− | |-bgcolor=#D0E7FF
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Game Title'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="300"|'''Mods'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="250"|'''Notations'''
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− | !align=center bgcolor=#D0E7FF width="100"|''' Release Date'''
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− | |-
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− | | ''[[Enlisted]]'' || || || 2021
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− | |-
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− | |}
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− | =See Also=
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− | *[[PPK-41|PPK-41 Korovin]]
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− | *[[PPK-42|PPK-42 Kalashnikov]]
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− | *[[PPS-42]]
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− | *[[PPBV-42|PPBV-42 Bezruchko-Vysotsky]]
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− | *[[PPSh-2]]
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− | [[Category:Gun]]
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− | [[Category:Submachine Gun]]
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