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Barrel length: 652 mm (25.67 in) Cartridge: 7.5×55mm Swiss: Action: Straight-pull bolt action: ... K31 machine rest dispersion with Swiss GP 11 service ammunition [6]
This is as opposed to a traditional bolt action, which requires the user to lift the bolt handle to unlock the action before pulling the bolt back. The rifle is roughly musket length with a free-floating barrel, 12-round magazine, and wood stock that extends almost to the tip of the barrel. The Schmidt–Rubin 1889 was an advanced weapon for ...
K31: 7.5×55mm Swiss: 1931-? Switzerland: Izhmash BO-59 7.62×54mmR: 1959-1961 Soviet Union: Izhmash MBO-1 (ru:МБО-1) 5.6×39mm: 1964-1972 Soviet Union: Izhmash MBO-2 (ru:МБО-2) 5.6×39mm: 1965-1975 Soviet Union: L98A1 Cadet General Purpose Rifle (An L85A1 modified for army cadets by removing gas parts necessary for semiautomatic fire ...
The 7.5×55mm Swiss or 7,5mm GP 11 (or unofficially 7.5×55mm Schmidt–Rubin) is a cartridge developed for the Swiss Army. It originated from the Gewehrpatrone 1890 (7.5×53.5mm) developed in 1889 by mechanical engineer Lt. Col. Eduard Rubin for rifles based on Rudolf Schmidt's action design.
Chambered in 7.5×53.5 Swiss. Schmidt–Rubin - 1896/11 straight-pull bolt-action rifle. Chambered in 7.5×55 Swiss. Schmidt–Rubin - 1911 straight-pull bolt-action rifle. Chambered for the revamped 7.5×53.5 Swiss. The case was lengthened to 55 mm. This new load became the 7.5×55 Swiss. The new load used a modern spitzer bullet and more ...
The Stgw. 57's barrel is relatively thick and rifled along 520 mm (20.5 in) of its 609 mm (24.0 in) length and has a 270 mm (1 in 10.6 in) 4 groove rifling. [1] At the end of the barrel an integral 26 mm (1.0 in) long muzzle brake / flash hider is fitted that reduces recoil by about 25%.
Swiss Luger 06/29 [8] Swiss version of the german Luger P08; SIG P210 [9] Swiss copy of the French M1935A, few prototypes were made during WW2, serial production started after the war ~11 (44/16) W+F Bern Pistol M43 Was supposed to replace the Luger 06/29 but in the end the SIG P210 was chosen
A carbine (/ ˈ k ɑːr b iː n / or / ˈ k ɑːr b aɪ n /), [1] from French carabine, [2] is a long arm firearm but with a shorter barrel than a rifle or musket. [3] Many carbines are shortened versions of full-length rifles, shooting the same ammunition, while others fire lower-powered ammunition, typically ranging from pistol/PDW to intermediate rifle cartridges.