A Ukrainian drone has claimed a very old prize: a Russian M1910 machine gun—a type that first appeared in, you guessed it, 1910.

But it wasn’t just any M1910. The machine gun the first-person-view drone blew up seemed to be a Finnish modification of the basic M1910 that made it more reliable in brutal battlefield conditions.

A video that circulated online on Saturday depicts an explosives-laden FPV drone barreling toward a Russian bunker somewhere along the 600-mile front of Russia’s 22-month wider war on Ukraine.

A still-frame from the drone’s video feed clearly shows an M1910 machine gun poking from the bunker.

  • DaDragon@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Just as there’s apparently still thousands of new-in-box lend-lease M1928 submachine-guns in storage. I’d wager a lot of large countries have similar stockpiles, especially places like Russia that can absolutely afford to just dump shit in random places.

    • agent_flounder@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Another example, the US M2 .50 cal machine gun, was designed in 1918 and has been in service from 1933 to present.

      • DaDragon@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The M2 is slightly different in that it’s been actively kept in service (like the mg3 or the m3 Carl Gustav), which the Maxim hasn’t been (that I know of). Plenty of other old weapon systems have been, though.