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The Zastava M77 B1 is a battle rifle developed and manufactured by Zastava Arms in Serbia (formerly Yugoslavia). [3] It was introduced in 1977. [4] It is a derivative of the Zastava M70 [4] and modified copy of the Soviet AKM [1] chambered in 7.62×51mm with an enlarged receiver, [4] and a Western-style flash suppressor. It is gas-operated, air ...
The production of air rifles and sporting rifles on the basis of the M48 rifle started in 1953. In 1954, Zastava started the production of shotguns and small bore rifles, as well as the 7.9 mm M53 ¨Sarac¨ machine gun.
The Zastava M70 (Serbian Cyrillic: Застава М70) is a 7.62×39mm assault rifle developed in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia by Zastava Arms.The M70 was an unlicensed derivative of the Soviet AK-47 (specifically the Type 3 variant). [4]
Zastava M07: Zastava Arms: 7.62×51mm NATO: Bolt-action Serbia: 2006 Zastava M12 Black Spear: Zastava Arms: 12.7×108mm.50 BMG: Bolt-action Serbia: 2012 Zastava M76: Zastava Arms: 7.92×57mm Mauser: Long-stroke piston (semi-auto) Yugoslavia: 1975 Zastava M91: Zastava Arms: 7.62×54mmR: Long-stroke piston (semi-auto) Serbia and Montenegro: 1991 ...
Assault rifles; Tara TM4 Montenegro: 5.56×45mm NATO: Used by special forces (soon in the all branches) Zastava M59/66 Yugoslavia: 7.62×39mm: Ceremonial rifle Zastava M70/M70A Yugoslavia: 7.62×39mm: In limited use Steyr AUG Austria: 5.56×45mm NATO: Used by Special Forces Heckler & Koch G36 Germany: 5.56×45mm NATO: Standard rifle of ...
Assault rifle: Used by the 72nd Brigade for Special Operations. Zastava M70 Yugoslavia: Assault rifle: In process of being replaced by Zastava M21 as the standard service rifle; to be stored as reserve. [citation needed] Sniper rifles Zastava M91 Serbia: Sniper rifle: Standard sniper rifle. [7] Zastava M07 Serbia: Sniper rifle: Future standard ...
The Zastava M77 is a 7.62x51mm battle rifle and light machine gun developed and manufactured by Zastava Arms. [2] It is a Kalashnikov pattern rifle based on the Zastava M70 . While early versions of the M77 had a milled receiver, later variants would be built with the standard Yugoslavian 1.5mm stamped RPK receivers.
Zastava Arms currently offers a civilian variant in .308 Winchester called the LKP M76, which they designate as a semi-automatic sporting rifle. [10] Assault Weapons of Ohio builds M76 variants chambered in .30-06 Springfield and 8mm. [11] North Korea Manufactures a gun locally known as the Jeogyeok-Bochong. [12]