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This is a list of submachine guns. It includes Submachine guns (SMG), Machine pistols (MP), Personal defense weapon systems (PDW), and "compact submachine gun-like weapons" not easily categorized.
M4 bayonet. M5 bayonet. M6 bayonet. M7 bayonet. M9 bayonet. M14 rifle. M31 HEAT rifle grenade. M49 submachine gun. M56 submachine gun.
A Mini Uzi and a Heckler & Koch MP5K, two common submachine guns. A submachine gun (SMG) is a magazine-fed automatic carbine designed to fire handgun cartridges.The term "submachine gun" was coined by John T. Thompson, the inventor of the Thompson submachine gun, [1] to describe its design concept as an automatic firearm with notably less firepower than a machine gun (hence the prefix "sub-").
T. TKB-506. TT pistol. Categories: Firearms of the Soviet Union. Cold War weapons of the Soviet Union. Infantry weapons of the Cold War.
MAS-49/56 - Introduced in 1936, both the MAS-49 and MAS-49/56 would serve France until 1967 being replaced by the FR F1 sniper. It replaced the MAS-36 in the sniper role. FR F1 sniper rifle - Introduced in 1966, the rifle was in use with the French Armed Forces until 1989. Replaced the MAS-49/56. FR F2 sniper rifle - Replaced FR F1 near the end ...
200 metres (220 yd) Suppressed: 50–100 metres (55–109 yd) Feed system. 34-round box magazine or 32- or 50-round box magazine from the Sten and Lanchester. Sights. Iron sights. The Sterling submachine gun is a British submachine gun (SMG). It was tested by the British Army in 1944–1945, but did not start to replace the Sten until 1953.
FB PM-63. The PM-63 RAK (often incorrectly referred to as Ręczny Automat Komandosów —"commandos' hand-held automatic"; the name itself means cancer or crayfish in Polish) is a Polish 9×18mm submachine gun, designed by Piotr Wilniewczyc in cooperation with Tadeusz Bednarski, Grzegorz Czubak and Marian Wakalski. [1]
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.