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M1 Garand. M14 rifle. M16 rifle. M24 sniper weapon system. M1903 Springfield. Madsen LAR. MAS-36 rifle. MAS-49 rifle. Mosin–Nagant.
TKB-506. TT pistol. Categories: Firearms of the Soviet Union. Cold War weapons of the Soviet Union. Infantry weapons of the Cold War.
Battle rifles are full-length, semi-automatic or select fire rifles that are chambered for a full-power rifle cartridge, and have been adopted by a nation's military.The difference between a battle rifle and a designated marksman rifle is often only one of terminology with modifications to the trigger and accuracy enhancements; many of the weapons below are currently still in use and have been ...
Rifles. Lee–Enfield [1] – Main service rifle until the 1950s and afterwards adapted for a variety of specialist roles. EM-2 rifle [2] – Experimental rifle adopted very briefly in 1951. L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle [3] – Main Cold War service rifle from 1954 to 1994. SA80 L85 rifle [4] – Adopted right at the end of the Cold War in 1987.
M2 Browning. Beretta M9. M14 rifle. M16 rifle. M24 sniper weapon system. M45 Quadmount. M50 Reising. M73 machine gun. M85 machine gun.
M4 bayonet. M5 bayonet. M6 bayonet. M7 bayonet. M9 bayonet. M14 rifle. M31 HEAT rifle grenade. M49 submachine gun. M56 submachine gun.
A battle rifle is a service rifle chambered to fire a fully powered cartridge. [1]The term "battle rifle" is a retronym created largely out of a need to differentiate automatic rifles chambered for fully powered cartridges from automatic rifles chambered for intermediate cartridges, which were later categorized as assault rifles. [2]
Pages in category "Cold War military equipment of the United States". The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.