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SIG MKPS [17] ~60 Was extremely expensive and complicated to produce, so less was spent on the Swiss Army; Hispano-Suiza MP 43/44 [18] ~22,600 Swiss version of the Finnish Suomi KP/-31; SIG Bergmann M1920 [19] Swiss Version of the german Bergmann MP18/I; Solothurn S1-200 [20] Swiss version of the austrian Steyr MP34
The Schmidt–Rubin rifles were a series of Swiss Army service rifles in use between 1889 and 1958. They are distinguished by the straight-pull bolt action invented by Rudolf Schmidt and use Eduard Rubin 's GP90 7.5×53.5 and GP11 7.5×55 Schmidt–Rubin rifle cartridge.
The Vetterli rifles were a series of Swiss army service rifles in use from 1869 to 1889, [6] when they were replaced with Schmidt–Rubin rifles.
The Karabiner Modell 1931 (officially abbreviated to Kar. 31/Mq. 31; commonly known in civilian circles as the K31) is a magazine-fed, straight-pull bolt-action rifle.It was the standard-issue rifle of the Swiss armed forces from 1933 until 1958 though examples remained in service into the 1970s.
K+W (Swiss design workshops) – Thun) Book Die Panzer der Schweizer Armee von 1920 bis 2008, Urs Heller (2008) Book Fahrzeuge der Schweizer Armee von 1900 bis 2020, Markus Hofmann, Max Martin and Christoph Zimmerli (2020), ISBN 978-3-033-07130-8, . Presented are all military vehicles, which served in the Swiss Army from 1900 until 2020.
Waffenfabrik Bern, 1876. Weapons Factory Bern (German: Waffenfabrik Bern, also known as W+F Bern), was an arms manufacturer in Bern, Switzerland, which was a government-owned corporation producing firearms for the Swiss Armed Forces. [1]
Assault rifles of Switzerland (5 P) S. ... Swiss Mannlicher M1893 carbine; V. Vetterli rifle This page was last edited on 29 March 2013, at 11:43 (UTC). ...
The Infanteriegewehr Modell 1842 (English: Infantry rifle, type 1842) was one of the first standardised service rifles used by the Swiss armed forces.It was introduced in 1842 as a result of a decision by the authorities of the Old Swiss Confederacy to standardise the weapons of the then still separate armies of the Swiss Cantons.