Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Hellriegel's submachine gun may have fired the 9×23mm Steyr cartridge, which was the service pistol ammunition for most branches of the Austro-Hungarian military during World War I. Alternatively it may have been chambered for .32 ACP, which was used in the Hungarian Frommer Stop pistol. [2]
Handguns, submachine guns, assault rifles and light machine guns: G9HSP, G9SMG, G224AR, G224LMG, G308BR [80] Unknown: In 2019, Gestamen R&D Zrt. was asked to create a family of small arms developed entirely in Hungary. [80] Several examples of the weapons are currently undergoing team trials. [81] Unmanned ground vehicles; Mission Master United ...
40 mm gun, 2 × 8 mm Gebauer MGs 41M Turán II: Medium tank: 139-195 75 mm howitzer, 2 × 8 mm Gebauer MGs 43M Turán III: Medium tank: 1-2 75 mm gun, 2 × 8 mm Gebauer MGs 43M Zrínyi II: Assault gun: 72 105 mm howitzer 44M Zrínyi I: Tank destroyer: 1 75 mm gun, 6 × Nebelwerfer 41 rockets were also mounted during testing 44M Tas: Heavy tank
This is a list of World War II weapons of Hungary. Hungary mainly fought in World War II as part of the Axis forces on the Eastern Front but also took part in the Axis Invasion of Yugoslavia. In March 1944 Germany occupied Hungary and put in a puppet government after Hungary had been secretly negotiating a peace settlement with the United ...
The Maschinengewehr (Schwarzlose) M. 7, also known as the Schwarzlose MG, is a medium machine-gun, used as a standard issue firearm in the Austro-Hungarian Army throughout World War I. It was utilized by the Dutch , Greek and Hungarian armies during World War II .
Semi-automatic pistols of Hungary (6 P) Submachine guns of Hungary (3 P) ... List of World War II weapons of Hungary; S. Shepherd's axe
In addition to World War II, SG-43 saw service in the Korean War with the Communist North Korean and Chinese forces. [9] In Soviet service, the Goryunov, together with the RP-46, was replaced in the 1960s by the PK machine gun due to the switch in Soviet tactical doctrine to the general-purpose machine gun concept, rendering the gun effectively ...
The 9×25mm Danuvia submachine gun was designed by Hungarian engineer Pál Király in the late 1930s, and was produced by the titular Danuvia company. The guns were issued to Hungarian army troops in 1939 and remained in service throughout World War II and until the early 1950s. A total of roughly 8,000 were made between 1939 and 1945.