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The DA-88 was a digital multitrack recording device introduced by the TASCAM division of the TEAC Corporation in 1993. This modular, digital multitrack device uses tape as the recording medium and could record up to eight tracks simultaneously. It also allowed multiple DA-88 devices to be combined to record 16 or more tracks. [1]
The Gewehr 88 (commonly called the Model 1888 commission rifle) was a late 19th-century German bolt-action rifle, adopted in 1888.. The invention of smokeless powder in the late 19th century immediately rendered all of the large-bore black powder rifles then in use obsolete.
The Patrone 88 (cartridge 88) or M/88 is a rimless bottlenecked rifle cartridge.It was a first-generation smokeless propellant cartridge designed by the German Gewehr-Prüfungskommission (G.P.K.) (Rifle Testing Commission) as the then new smokeless propellant introduced as Poudre B in the 1886 pattern 8×50mmR Lebel started a military rifle ammunition revolution.
The Type 88, sometimes known as "Hanyang 88" or Hanyang Type 88 (Chinese: 漢陽八八式步槍) and Hanyang Zao (Which means Made in Hanyang), [3] is a Chinese-made bolt-action rifle, based on the German Gewehr 88. [4]
Type 88, a Chinese version of the Gewehr 88 bolt-action rifle; QBU-88 a Chinese sniper rifle also known as the Type 88; QJY-88, a Chinese machine gun also known as the Type 88; Type 88, the Chinese semi-automatic version of the AK-74 assault rifle; Type-88, a North Korean version of the AK-74 assault rifle
While the US and Italian 90 mm were also used as anti-tank guns—the American gun being in use on their M36 tank destroyer and M26 Pershing heavy tank, the 85mm Soviet gun being fitted to the SU-85, later models of the T-34 and the stopgap KV-85 and IS-1 heavy tanks — their use was considerably more limited than the German 88 due to German ...
DA, DAC, or DAQ Dominion Arsenal Co. – Quebec City (1882–1958) – Quebec City, Quebec; Canada. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] Dominion Arsenal used the DAQ headstamp from 1914 to 1918, the DAC headstamp from 1919(?) until 1945, the DCA headstamp in 1935, the DA headstamp from 1945 to 1958, and the CIL headstamp from 1955 to 1976.
The Springfield Model 1888 was one of several models of rifles produced by Springfield Armory for the United States military in the late 19th century. It was the final design in a long line of rifles which used the trapdoor breechblock design developed by Erskine S. Allin in the 1860s and the last single-shot rifle to see American military service.