Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Howa 1500 Mini Action [10] M22 1.5 mm 60° ... [52] The clamping section is 36.5 mm long. ... Flash hider with external threads for a suppressor on a Zastava M76.
The Howa 1500 or Howa M1500 (豊和M1500, hōwa-M1500) is a bolt-action rifle produced in Japan by Howa Machinery. Introduced in 1979, [1] it has been used by hunters as a hunting rifle with various cartridge offerings. It is also utilized by military and law enforcement elements as a sniper rifle.
5.8×42mm DBP87 5.56×45mm NATO: Short-stroke piston (semi-auto) China: 1990s Remington SR-8: Remington Arms.338 Lapua Magnum: Bolt-action United States: Robar RC-50: Robar Companies, Inc .50 BMG: Bolt-action United States: 1985 S&T Motiv K14: S&T Motiv.308 Winchester: Bolt-action South Korea: 2011 Sako TRG: SAKO.260 Remington 6.5mm Creedmoor ...
5.56×45mm NATO (Quadrant with 3.56g standard M193 bullet, dimensions of the rectangular ammunition 35.7×15.8×9.5 mm) Australia: 1986 AS-44: 7.62×39mm Soviet Union: no 1944 AS Val: TsNIITochMash: 9×39mm Soviet Union: yes 1987–present ASM-DT amphibious rifle: Tula Arms Plant: 5.45×39mm Soviet Union: no 1990s AT-44: Fedor Tokarev: 7.62× ...
The VSS Vintorez suppressor and operating systems are exactly the same as the AS Val, but optimised to fire the 9×39mm SP-5 subsonic cartridge with a hardened steel or tungsten tip to defeat body armour. [11] The AS Val uses a 20-round detachable box magazine, while the VSS Vintorez uses a 10-round, though they are interchangeable. [4]
A silencer, also known as a sound suppressor, suppressor, or sound moderator, is a muzzle device that suppresses the blast created when a gun (firearm or airgun) is discharged, thereby reducing the acoustic intensity of the muzzle report (sound of a gunshot) and jump, by modulating the speed and pressure of the propellant gas released from the ...
It was loaded with a 244 gr (15.8 g) round nose bullet and a 62 gr (4.0 g) charge of compressed black powder. This gave the bullet an approximate velocity of 1,750 ft/s (530 m/s) out of the M.88's 30" barrel. Many M.86 rifles were converted to accommodate this new cartridge, creating the M.86/88 and M.86/90. [1]
The amount of rotation required to achieve full closure depends on the number of unthreaded sectors. The minimum balanced arrangement has two sectors of 90°, and requires 1/4 turn to lock. three sectors of 60° requires 1/6 turn to lock, and the typical arrangement on a diving helmet, four sectors of 45°, requires 1/8 turn to lock. [2]