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AZP S-60 (Russian: Автоматическая зенитная пушка С-60, abbrev.АЗП (AZP); literally: Automatic anti-aircraft gun S-60) is a Soviet towed, road-transportable, short- to medium-range, single-barrel anti-aircraft gun from the 1950s.
List of anti-aircraft weapons. See also anti-aircraft warfare. Canada Air ... Bofors 40 mm L/60 gun (anti-aircraft) ZSU-23-4 self- propelled AA gun; 9K22 Tunguska;
45 mm anti-aircraft gun (21-K) Soviet Union: World War II 50 5 cm FlaK 41 Nazi Germany: World War II 57 Bofors 57 mm L/60 Sweden: Cold War / modern 57 S-60 Soviet Union: Cold War 57 Burileanu: Kingdom of Romania: World War I 57 Type 59 People's Republic of China: Cold War 75 75 mm FRC M27 Belgium: World War II 75 Canon de 75 antiaérien mle ...
23 mm anti-aircraft autocannon: Giant Bow II 23 mm Twin Gun 18 Integrated with Battery Command and Control Vehicle (BCCV) and AS901A 3D searching radar. [211] Bofors L-70 Sweden: 40 mm anti-aircraft autocannon: Bofors 40 mm L/70 30 Integrated with Super Fledermaus fire control radar unit. [212] S-60 Soviet Union: 57 mm anti-aircraft gun AZP S ...
One was subsequently destroyed during a SAAF bombing. [60] Two were repaired to airworthiness and shown taxiing during a propaganda video released by Jaysh al-Islam. [61] Project abandoned upon the airfield's capture by ISIL. [62] MiG-21: Interceptor aircraft: 7 (unknown amount operational, as of 2014) [63] Soviet Union
61-K at IDF/AF Museum, Chatzerim airbase, Israel 61-K of the Soviet 210th Guards Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment PVO in Crimea, May 1944 The 37 mm automatic air defense gun M1939 (61-K) (Russian: 37-мм автоматическая зенитная пушка образца 1939 года (61-К)) is a Soviet 37 mm calibre anti-aircraft gun developed during the late 1930s and used during ...
US Navy fighter jets have fought Houthi drones in a high-tempo operating environment over the Red Sea. A first-of-its-kind battle in early 2024 highlighted another air-defense option for the Navy.
In that form, the "QF 40 mm Mark III" (Mk II was a designation used for a version of the naval "pom-pom" anti-aircraft gun), became the army's standard light anti-aircraft (AA) weapon, operating alongside their 3-inch 20 cwt and 3.7-inch heavy AA guns. British production started slowly and, by September 1939 only 233 equipments had been produced.