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The 10.5 cm hrubý kanón vz. 35 (Heavy Gun model 35) was a Czech field gun used in the Second World War. Those weapons captured after the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in March 1939 were taken into Wehrmacht service as the 10.5 cm K 35(t). Former Yugoslav guns were designated as the 10.5 cm Kanone 339(j).
In 1935, a new rifle was designed to replace all the rifles and carbines used in the different units. [2] The Model 1935 combined elements of the Mauser 1889 (breech, magazine and stock) and of the Gewehr 98, but it was shorter. [2] Some Model 35 rifles were modernised Mauser 98. [2]
The Type 35 rifle (三十五年式) was created from the Type 30 rifle for the Imperial Japanese Navy as a replacement for their aging Type 22 Murata rifles and to try to correct the deficiencies of the Type 30. The 35 referred to the adoption date, the Year 35 (1902) in the Meiji period according to the Japanese calendar.
The FÉG 35M was a bolt-action rifle chambered in 8×56mmR.Though superficially still resembling the 95/31M Carbine, it was a new design with a cock-on-close bolt.An easily recognizable distinguishing feature was the placement of the bolt handle, which was further forward than in the 1895 design.
The rifle itself was simple to operate and not much different from a standard issue Mauser rifle, and there was a manual in each crate. [3] After the fall of Poland, the German army captured large numbers of the kb ppanc wz. 35 and gave it a new designation "Panzerbüchse 35 (polnisch)" (abbreviated "PzB 35(p)").
The 30.5 cm Mantel Ring Kanone L/35 was a 30.5 cm 35 caliber long Krupp gun. It was a further development of the earlier 30.5 cm MRK L/22. There were multiple models: The early model was basically a lengthened 30.5 cm MRK L/22. The later model had a heavier barrel and used a heavier charge for a higher muzzle velocity.
The gun was apparently very expensive to manufacture, costing 4000 Reichsmarks, [2] although this was the unit cost for the prototype series. [ 4 ] The cartridge developed also had several variants including 7.75×40.5 mm, 7.75×39.5mm, and possibly a 7.62mm version as well, and had a total length of approximately 55 mm.
A surviving 20/65 Breda. The Breda 20/65 mod.35 ("Breda 20 mm L/65 model 1935"), [2] [3] also simply known as 20 mm Breda [4] or Breda Model 35, [5] among other variations, [3] was an Italian 20 mm (0.787 in) anti-aircraft gun produced by the Società Italiana Ernesto Breda of Brescia company during the 1930s and early 1940s.