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Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Erma Werke firearms" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This ...
EG 70, an M1 Carbine copy, ERMA manufactured parts for these weapons in the early 1950s and produced a .22 caliber training rifle modeled after the carbine that proved so popular it was commercially marketed as the EM-1 and available in .22 WMR; Various low cost .22 caliber pistols resembling the Luger pistol; KGP 68, .380 (9mm kurz) Luger ...
The final development at Erma is known as the EMP 36. This can be considered an intermediate model between the EMP and the MP38.Although many details of the mechanism were changed from the EMP, it retained Vollmer's telescoping main operating spring basically unchanged.
The ESP 85A is a target pistol produced by the German firearms company Erma. Mainly used as a sporting arm, it is also found in service with security companies. It is available in two calibers, .22 LR (the preferred sporting or target model) and .32 S&W Long (7.65x23mm). There is a difference between models marked ESP85 and ESP85A.
In 1944, Erma, the main MP 40 producer, submitted the EMP 44. The receiver was produced out of welded steel tubing like the Sten . The flash suppressor was formed in the same manner as the Russian machine pistol PPS-43 muzzle brake from stamped steel.
The ERMA logo ERMA ( Electronic Recording Machine, Accounting ) was a computer technology that automated bank bookkeeping and check processing . Developed at the nonprofit research institution SRI International under contract from Bank of America , the project began in 1950 and was publicly revealed in September 1955.
The Albedo Role Playing Game was written by Paul Kidd with Steve Gallacci and first published as a boxed set with four books - three rulebooks (background and characters, technology and equipment, referee's manual) and an introductory scenario - and dice by Furball Publications (Aus.) in 1988, and was then published as a boxed set with four books by Thoughts and Images in 1988.
In the 1960s, after abandoning a project to create an arrowhead price guide, Overstreet turned his attention to comics, which had no definitive guide. [1] Comic back-issue prices had stabilized by the end of the 1960s, [2] and, Jerry Bails, who had recently published the Collector's Guide to the First Heroic Age, was considering creating a ...