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IZh-94 is an over and under hammerless shotgun, with one barrel above the other. The barrels are detachable. The weapon based on the design of IZh-27M shotgun [2] [1]. It has a walnut or beech stock and fore-end.
In January 2004, a contract was signed between the Remington Arms company and the plant; Baikal firearms was bought by Remington and sold in USA (IZh-18MN were sold as Remington SPR 18, IZh-94 were sold as the Remington SPR94, IZh-18 were sold as the Remington Spartan 100, IZh-43-1S were sold as the Remington Spartan 210, IZh-43 were sold as ...
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The Saiga semi-automatic rifles (/ˈsaɪɡə/, Saiga) (Russian: сайга, romanized: Sayga) are a family of Russian semi-automatic rifles manufactured by Kalashnikov Concern (formerly Izhmash), which also manufactures the original AK-47 and its variants, Saiga-12 shotguns and Dragunov sniper rifle.
It is a variant of a classical Russian IZh-18 shotgun manufactured by Izhevsk Mechanical Plant for export under trademark "Baikal", in Izhevsk, Russia. [2] It was marketed and distributed by Remington. [3] The Spartan 100 accepts 2 + 3 / 4 -inch or 3-inch shotgun shells. It utilizes a cross bolt safety and a selectable ejector or extractor.
In 1970, IZh designed a prototype five-door hatchback and a delivery on the 412 platform. [4] The delivery in 1972 became the IZh 2715 ; it was powered by a 1,478 cc (90.2 cu in) inline four , had twin rear doors and a box-like cargo area (akin to a cube van [ 7 ] ) and could carry a 350 kg (770 lb) load. [ 4 ]
The IZh-43 is a side-by-side smoothbore shotgun, with barrels that feature chokes at the muzzle end. [2] [3] [1]It has a stock and fore-end made of walnut, birch, or beech wood, [2] [3] although custom aftermarket variants are known, it features chrome-plated bores made of AR50 steel.
IZh-27 was designed in early 1970s as a successor to the IZh-12. [3] The first standard serial shotguns were made in 1972 [4] and mass production began since 1973 [7]. In 1985, IZh-27 and TOZ-34 were the most common hunting shotguns in the Soviet Union. [8]