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  2. E-Arsenal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-Arsenal

    Aleksander Silberg became the head of Arsenal until 1925. [2] In 1926, the Arsenal Submachine gun was designed and produced by Arsenal. [3] The Arsenal Crossley (M 27/28) armored car was produced from 1926 to 1928, the engines being produced by Crossley Motors, and 13 being assembled in the Arsenal factory and used in the Estonian Army.

  3. Arsenal Shipka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsenal_Shipka

    The Shipka is a 9mm Bulgarian submachine gun produced in 1996 by the Bulgarian arms company Arsenal.The name is a reference to the famous Shipka Pass, near Arsenal's Kazanlak headquarters, in the Balkans where Bulgarian volunteers and Russian troops defeated the Ottoman Empire during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877, thereby liberating Bulgaria.

  4. Man charged with double homicide in Santa Fe claims ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/man-charged-double-homicide...

    Oct. 2—The suspect in Monday night's double homicide in Santa Fe told police he shot both people in self-defense. Manuel Martinez, 23, of Santa Fe is charged with two open counts of murder and ...

  5. Tank gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tank_gun

    L30 gun on a Royal Scots Dragoon Guards Challenger 2 tank. A tank gun is the main armament of a tank. Modern tank guns are high-velocity, large-caliber artilleries capable of firing kinetic energy penetrators, high-explosive anti-tank, and cannon-launched guided projectiles. Anti-aircraft guns can also be mounted to tanks.

  6. XM291 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XM291

    The XM291 Advanced Tank Cannon (ATAC) is an American experimental 120 or 140 mm smoothbore tank cannon.It started development in 1991 as a way to substantially increase the performance of tank cannons against the perceived threat of future Soviet main battle tanks.

  7. Field emission gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_emission_gun

    Schottky-emitter electron source of an Electron microscope. A field emission gun (FEG) is a type of electron gun in which a sharply pointed Müller-type [clarification needed] emitter [1]: 87–128 is held at several kilovolts negative potential relative to a nearby electrode, so that there is sufficient potential gradient at the emitter surface to cause field electron emission.