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Pages in category "6.5×55mm rifles" ... Swedish Mauser This page was last edited on 30 July 2018, at 16:54 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
The M69 was of very similar appearance to the M58E and retained the refurbished Mauser military action, but with some detail differences amongst which the bolt handle was reshaped to a lower profile, fitting into a Kar98k-style recess in the stock on some examples. It was available chambered in 6.5×55mm Swedish Mauser and 7.62×51mm NATO.
The Kongsberg M67 is a bolt-action sharpshooter rifle made by Kongsberg Våpenfabrikk (currently Kongsberg Small Arms) of Norway, based on actions from Mauser M98k left by German armed forces in 1945. The M67 replaced the M59 in 1967 and was produced until the 1990s. The rifle is sometimes unofficially referred to as Mauser M67. However, both ...
6.5×55mm Swedish, also known simply as 6.5×55mm, 6.5x55 SE, 6.5x55 Swede, or in its native military as 6.5 mm patron m/94 (6.5 mm ptr m/94), meaning "6.5 mm cartridge model 94", referring to 1894, is a first-generation smokeless powder rimless bottlenecked rifle cartridge. The cartridge has most users in the Scandinavian countries, where it ...
While the Ag m/42 fired the 6.5×55mm cartridge, Egypt owned large stockpiles of 8×57mm Mauser ammunition, much of it left behind from World War II. To take advantage of the large stockpile, the Hakim was further re-engineered to accept the larger cartridge, which also necessitated the addition of a permanent, non removable muzzle brake to ...
Alteration of the original 6.5×53mmR caliber chamber by re-chambering the rifle barrel with a 6.5x57R [18] (see:6.5×57mm Mauser) chamber reamer has also been done, but the overall length of the original 6.5×53mmR Dutch or Romanian cartridge has to be maintained by seating the projectile more deeply into the cartridge case to fit the original ...
Used in 6.5×55mm by John Larsen, 1952 Olympic Gold medalist in 100 meter running deer. ca. 1950 Norway: Liegeoise 1888: 7.65x53mm Mauser: 1888 Belgium: Ross rifle.303 British (7.70×56 mm R) 1903-1918 Canada: PAR-1 [19] 7.62×39mm Belgium: General Liu rifle: 7.9x57mm S-Patrone: 1914-1918 Republic of China: MTB 1925 (only prototype) 6.5x52mm ...
The Ag m/42 uses the 6.5×55mm cartridge loaded into a removable 10-round box magazine. [6] In practice, however, the magazine usually remained attached to the rifle while it was loaded from the top with five-round stripper clips. [2] Like the British Lee–Enfield and Soviet SVT-40, the Ag m/42's magazine was intended to be removed only for ...