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Nigeria: Produced as OBJ-006. [14] [15] AKM [16] Assault rifle Soviet Union: SIG SG 540 [2] Assault rifle Switzerland: FN FAL: Battle rifle Belgium Nigeria: Local variant designated NR-1. [17] [18] [19] Beretta BM 59: Battle rifle Italy Nigeria: Produced locally under licence by DICON. Machine guns; M2 Browning [2] Heavy machine gun United ...
T numbers were given to development models. M16 and M8 rockets T-30 Rocket launcher. T1 rocket launcher, 2.36 inch, solid tube shoulder mount. M1 bazooka; T3 rocket launcher, 4.5 inch, 1-tube on M4 carriage, (37 mm Gun M3)
The FAL M5 modernized variant was intended to be widely fielded, though the project stalled; some of the delivered units are in use. [54] The modernization program was restarted and three new variants were designed, all based on components manufactured by american gunmaker DSArms. [ 64 ]
Nigeria: Between 50 and 100 T-55s were ordered in 1979 from the Soviet Union and delivered in 1981 (the vehicles were probably previously in Soviet service). [7] Around 200 T-55s and Vickers Mk. IIIs were in service in early 2001 and around 250 in early 2003. [61] [62] 100 T-55s were in service in 2004 and 2006.
With BMW introducing a new M5, here's one of the best of the past models. There are quicker M5 variants, but not many that are this engaging to drive. This example has a Euro-spec 3.8-liter inline ...
The BCL-M5 is an armored personnel carrier manufactured in Algeria by the Central Logistics Base (BCL) of Béni Mered, which is a public industrial and commercial establishment (EPIC) under the Algerian Ministry of Defense. [1] Designed in 1991 and entering service in 1993, it is named after the Central Logistics Base (BCL). [2]
The STK 40 AGL, formerly the CIS 40 AGL [a] is a 40 mm automatic grenade launcher, developed in the late 1980s and produced by the Singaporean defence firm Chartered Industries of Singapore (CIS, now ST Kinetics). The launcher is employed primarily by the Singapore Armed Forces and the police and security forces of several other countries. [1]
Ogbunigwe, also called Ojukwu Bucket, was a series of weapons systems including command detonation mines, improvised explosive devices, and rocket-propelled missiles, mass-produced by the Republic of Biafra and used against Nigeria between 1967 and 1970 in the Nigerian Civil War.