Star Si-35 | |
Type: | Submachine gun |
Origin: | Spain |
Is Ranged: | yes |
Used By: | See Users |
Designer: | Isaac Irusta and Valentin Suenaga |
Design Date: | 1935 |
Manufacturer: | Star Bonifactio Echevierria, S.A. |
Mass: | 3.8kg (08.4lb) |
Length: | 900mm Without Bayonet |
Caliber: | 9mm Largo, .38 Auto |
Action: | delayed (retarded) blowback, Open bolt |
Rate: | 300/700 rounds/min |
Feed: | Magazine 10, 30, and 40 round magazines |
Sights: | Front sight and rear sights adjustable for and to |
The Star Si-35 is a submachine gun introduced in 1935. It was produced by the Spanish company Star Bonifacio Echeverria of the Basque Region, Spain. The Star Si-35 was a classically designed submachinegun with a wooden stock and a cylindrical metal tube which contains the barrel. The weapon features a bayonet lug to allow the mounting of a Mauser rifle type bayonet. A very unique feature of the weapon is a second selector lever located next to the safety lever which allows the user to change from single fire to 300 rounds per minute and 700 rounds per minute.
The Star Si-35 is a 9x23mm Largo submachinegun that fires from the open bolt. It feeds from 10, 30, and 40 round magazines which were milled and not stamped. [1] A series of submachine guns was developed in the 1930s by Echevierra company of Eibar (Brand name "Star") and the Si-35 is the penultimate version of all their models. The weapon was considered reasonably reliable but unnecessarily complicated in its design and proved both difficult and costly to manufacture. The weapon stayed the same essentially until 1942 when the design was abandoned in favor of more simple weapons designs.The weapon features two selector switches with one being a "Safe" and "Fire" selector, and the other choosing between Single shot, 300 rounds per minute and 700 rounds per minute. Additional variations of the weapon would dispense with the different rates of fire and models would simplified and would be select fire but only fire in 300 rounds per minute or 700 rounds per minute. The weapon was marketed to the United States Army in 1940 as the "Atlantic" and was tested by the British Army around the same time. Both nations decided against adoption of the weapon.[2] [3]