Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Romanian Minifootball Federation: Confederation: EMF (Europe) Head coach: Dan Ștefan Cojocaru: Top scorer: Radu Burcia (19) First international; Romania 3–1 Czech Republic (Bratislava, Slovakia; 2010) Biggest win; Romania 3–1 India (Illinois, United States; 21 March 2015) Biggest defeat Mexico 7–3 Romania (Illinois, United States; 22 ...
This may be due to low quality magazines, or their followers. The WASR-3 was originally supplied with surplus 5.45×39mm AK-74 magazines, which do not reliably feed the 5.56/.223 cartridge. People have used Wieger magazines with some success. Century Arms eventually began including Romanian copies of the reliable Wieger magazine with these rifles.
1975 in Romanian sport (4 C, 1 P) This page was last edited on 14 June 2023, at 22:49 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4 ...
Felix PC was a Romanian IBM-PC compatible produced at ICE Felix in 1985–1990. Felix C was a family of Romanian computers produced by ICE Felix from 1970 to 1978. They were similar to IBM/360; their operating system was SIRIS. Felix M was a family of Romanian mini and microcomputers in 1975–1984.
The WMF World Cup, is an international minifootball competition among the senior men's national teams of the members of the World Minifootball Federation (WMF), the sport's global governing body. [1]
Mini Uzi used by military police. [18] Assault rifles and carbines PA md. 86: Assault rifle: 5.45×39mm Romania: Standard service rifle. PM md. 63/65/90: Assault rifle: 7.62×39mm Romania: Romanian Navy and Army reserve. HK416: Assault rifle: 5.56×45mm NATO Germany: Standardized assault rifle used by special forces. HK G36: Assault rifle: 5.56 ...
The Pușcă Automată model 1986 (automatic rifle model 1986, abbreviated PA md. 86 or simply md. 86) is the standard assault rifle used by the Romanian Military Forces. It is manufactured in Cugir, Romania by the ROMARM firm, located in Bucharest. The export name for this variant is the AIMS-74. [2]
In March 1994, the Romanian General Staff initiated the modernization program of the TR-85 tanks by order no. 1429. On 14 April 1994, the upgrade program was approved by the Supreme Council of National Defense and development of the new tank, officially designated TR-85M1 Bizonul ( The Bison ), began in 1996 when two prototypes were built. [ 9 ]