If you have PPSh-41 don’t do this.

  • don
    link
    fedilink
    English
    139 months ago

    Fuck me, hold tight. There’s a PPSh-41 under your ass. What’s a PPSh-41 doing under your ass? Is it protection from zee Germans?

    • @thorcik
      link
      English
      109 months ago

      You obviously likes dags, don’t you?

      • @DaMonsterKnees
        link
        English
        79 months ago

        Yeah, but I’m fairly certain he likes caravans better.

        • Harry
          link
          English
          49 months ago

          Hell yeah, Snatch references! Don’t see those out in the wild all that often.

          • don
            link
            fedilink
            English
            39 months ago

            Listen, you fucking fringe, if I throw a dog a bone, I don’t want to know if it tastes good or not. You stop me again whilst I’m walking, and I’ll cut your fucking Jacobs off.

            • Harry
              link
              English
              59 months ago

              In the quiet words of the Virgin Mary…come again?

              • don
                link
                fedilink
                English
                49 months ago

                You are on thin fucking ice, my pedigree chum, and I shall be under it when it breaks! Now, fuck off.

        • don
          link
          fedilink
          English
          49 months ago

          They’re tip top. It’s just I’m just not sure about the colour.

  • @NAXLAB
    link
    English
    129 months ago

    I don’t know much about guns. Why is this a bad idea? Unless the gun gets damaged by it, which is understandable, it doesn’t seem dangerous.

    • @FireTowerOPM
      link
      English
      399 months ago

      That’s a lot of weight to put onto the magazine/magazine catch in a way engineers certainly didn’t foresee. Slightly bending either can make them non serviceable.

      • SSTFM
        link
        English
        11
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        Actually between 1937 and through the end of WW2, the central approval committee for Red Army small arms conducted a number of tests, including a bodyweight test. Throughout WW2, Lev Andropov, a 205 kilo (450 pound) man who was a disabled veteran of the First World War would sit on all designs while eating his lunch. If the weapon did not break, it was approved for that stage of testing.

        My source is that I made it the fuck up.

  • @ours
    link
    English
    59 months ago

    PPShair-41. Throw in a DP-27 for a nice table and serve diner “al fresco”.