Given that the “vintage Airsoft model / replica guns” has
its own sizable cult following, would an Airsoft version of the M1915
Villar-Perosa submachine gun make a good Airsoft gun?
By: Ringo Bones
Photos of this seminal submachine gun may give the impression
that it may be too awkward and too unwieldy to use one in battlefield
conditions, but a recent documentary about old guns has shown that a gun
enthusiast was quite delighted after firing a still working 1915 Villar-Perosa
submachine gun – like the one displayed in the Austrian Army Museum in Vienna
and the Russian Museum of Artillery in St. Petersburg – even assessing that the
gun will be manageable in battlefield use despite being slightly heavier in
comparison of contemporary 9-mm submachine guns. Does this make the 1915
Villar-Perosa a good Airsoft gun for the “vintage gun” enthusiast?
Even though I have yet to see one displayed in our local
Airsoft shop, the Villar-Perosa submachine gun originally has two variants that
was more-or-less fielded near the end of World War I. The twin-barreled M1915
model (actually two submachine guns in a “Siamese-Twin” configuration) was
originally designed in 1914 and was originally intended by the famous Italian
small arms designer Bethel Abiel Revelli for use in World War I era biplanes.
Though it’s 3,000 rounds per minute rate of fire can make a short shrift of any
biplane that comes in front of it, the 9-mm Glisenti ammunition – similar in
size to the modern 9-mm X 19-mm Parabellum cartridge – proved to be low powered
and too limited in range for practical use as an aircraft machine gun. The 9-mm
Glisenti ammunition is even “weaker” than its contemporary – the 9mm X 19-mm
Luger pistol round.
The manufacturing company Officine Villar Perosa (OVP for
short) eventually made a “stripped-down variant of the M1915 Villar-Perosa submachine
gun, the OVP M1918 “automatic carbine” with half the rate of fire of its
predecessor. Its rather rapid rate of fire was primarily caused by lightweight
bolt being paired with a powerful spring. Both guns operate in the open-bolt
configuration with a delayed blowback action. Fed from a 25-round box magazine,
the submachine guns very high rate of fire and rather short range only makes it
suitable for close quarter battle / CQB situations. Though it could look very
kick ass to the unfamiliar, even in its Airsoft version firing 6-mm plastic 0.2-gram
mineral-filled polypropylene pellets travelling at 400 feet per second.