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The G13 carbine was a proposed Georgian military firearm which was supposed to be an analogue to the American M4 carbine and German HK416 carbine. [1] [2] It has been developed in 2012 by the Georgian military Scientific-Technical Center "Delta" [3] in order to construct an alternative to the M4 carbine, which is in service of the Georgian Armed Forces.
The Mk 13 MOD 0 was formerly used by the US Navy SEALs. Little is known of its usage or technical data, and pictures are rarely available. The pictures that have been released show a Remington 700 Long-Action receiver mated to a McMillan A2 stock. The rifle was chambered in .300 Winchester Magnum. The rifle was the most prolific sniper weapon ...
The 13-inch Mark 1, gun Nos. 1–12, was a built-up gun constructed in a length of 35 caliber, Mod 0 and Mod 1. The Mod 0 had a tube, jacket, and nine hoops while the Mod 1 had a nickel-steel liner and only eight hoops. The Mark 2, gun Nos. 13–34, was of similar construction as the Mark 1 Mod 0 but had only seven hoops and two locking ring.
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Gate 13, a group of supporters of the Greek football club Panathinaikos; HMS G13, a Royal Navy G-class submarine; Logitech G13, a computer keyboard; Suzuki G13, an automobile engine; G-13, a Swiss postwar version of the Jagdpanzer 38 Hetzer tank destroyer; G13, a type of bi-pin lamp base
The Smith & Wesson Model 13 (Military & Police Magnum) is a .357 Magnum revolver designed for military and police use. It is based on Smith & Wesson's K-frame—specifically, it is a .357 Magnum version of the heavy-barrel variant of the .38 Special Model 10 (originally called the Military & Police).
The rifle was built to be 48.82 inches (124.0 cm) long, with the barrel making up 29.13 inches (740 mm) of that, to weigh 9.4 pounds (4.3 kg). It was designed to be a bolt-action rifle with a 5-round box magazine, and have a tangent leaf rear sight that was graduated to 2,000 metres (6,600 ft).
Mark 13 torpedo, US Navy's most common air-dropped torpedo in World War II; Mk XIII railway gun, a variant of the British BL 9.2-inch railway gun; Supermarine Spitfire PR Mk XIII, lightly armed low-altitude Rolls-Royce Merlin-powered reconnaissance aircraft, first tested March 1943