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Of the original 1967-1969 NAWS manufactured China Lake Grenade Launchers, none are known to be under private ownership. [citation needed] The Trident/CSG China Lake Grenade Launchers from the 2009 defense contract are the last nine known legal launchers to be in private hands and are valued over $80,000 USD based on past auctions. The nine CSG ...
Naval Air Weapons Station (NAWS) China Lake [2] is a large military installation in California that supports the research, testing and evaluation programs of the United States Navy. It is part of Navy Region Southwest [ 3 ] under Commander, Navy Installations Command , and was originally known as Naval Ordnance Test Station ( NOTS ).
China Lake grenade launcher; E. EX 41 grenade launcher; H. Hawk MM-1; M. M7 grenade launcher; ... Mk 19 grenade launcher; Mk 20 Mod 0 grenade launcher; Mk 47 Striker; T.
Grenade launchers that use the 40×46mm caliber grenades. Pages in category "40×46mm grenade launchers" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total.
T85 grenade launcher: Combined Logistics Command: 40 mm grenade: Taiwan (Republic of China) 1992 Usable on T65, T86 and T91 assault rifles Type 2 rifle grenade launcher: 40mm Japan 1940s For the Type 38 and Type 99 rifles Type 91 grenade launcher: Norinco (China North Industries Corporation) 35 mm grenade (Non-lethal round) China 1991
This led the Navy to develop the China Lake Grenade Launcher, which was produced for deployed SEAL Teams. For close-in situations, the minimum arming range (the round travels 30 meters to arm itself) and the blast radius meant a grenadier had to use his .45 ACP (11.43 mm) M1911 pistol, or fire and hope that the grenade acted as a giant slow bullet.
China Lake grenade launcher, developed at the military facility; China Lake, a 1992 novel by Anthony Hyde; The China Lake Murders, a 1990 film
The Summer 1995 issue of Fighting Firearms also has an article by one Nick Steadman that details the NOSL EX-41, among other grenade launchers. --Paulwharton 05:04, 11 December 2006 (UTC) There are numerous sites referring to the China Lake Launcher as the EX-41, but the only thing similar I see originating from NOSL is the Mark 20.