Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Model Image Origin Type Caliber Details Knives and Bayonets; Vz. 58 bayonet Czechoslovakia: Standard bayonet for Vz. 58. [3] M7 bayonet United States: 5000 bayonets bought with 5000 M4 rifles. [4] Handguns; ČZ vz. 82 Czechoslovakia — 9×18mm: Standard service pistol. CZ P-09 Czech Republic: CZ-09 S: 9×19mm Parabellum: 8400 pistols bought in ...
After the dissolution of the Second Czechoslovak Republic, many of these weapons saw combat in World War II: with the Axis Slovak Republic and with Nazi Germany after it occupied Czechoslovakia. [1] [2] These weapons also saw widespread use abroad after being sold off to international buyers. [3] [4] [5] [6]
The tank weighed 16.5 tonnes (16.2 long tons; 18.2 short tons), was armed with a 47 mm Škoda A9 vz. 38 gun, two 7.92 mm machine guns and its maximum armour was extended to 30 mm. Finally, the S-II-c was to have a better 13.8 liters engine giving 250 hp; this increased the maximum speed to roughly 50 km/h.
Air pistol: Model ZVP, 4.5 mm; Gas-fired pistol: The APP Automatic; Air pistol: Tex, Model 3; CO 2 pistol: Model CZ 75D Compact, 4.5 mm; Three shot automatic shotgun: CZ 241, 12, 16 and 20 gauge; Over and under shotguns: 12, 16 and 20 gauge; Over and under ČZ models: 581 and 584 - 586; Hunting rifles: ZKK 600, 601 and 602, calibers ranging ...
CZ-USA, U.S. division; Česká zbrojovka Strakonice (ČZ a.s.), a Czech manufacturer of forklifts and formerly motorcycles and firearms; Crvena Zvezda, a Serbian football club; Cizeta, an Italian car manufacturer named for its founder, Claudio Zampolli (C.Z.) China Southern Airlines (IATA airline code CZ)
It is also known as the Samohybná Kanónová Húfnica vzor 77 (ShKH vz. 77; self-propelled gun howitzer model 77). It was designed by Konštrukta Trenčín and built by ZTS Dubnica nad Váhom in the former Czechoslovakia (now Slovakia ).
T-72M4CZ T-72M4CZ firing.. The main goal of modernization was to achieve combat parameters and utility properties of 3rd - 4th generation tanks. The upgrade increased the firepower by conducting effective fire from place or while moving and increased the effects of under-caliber projectiles with a completely new ammunition for the tank cannon and the possibility of observation by day and night.
The SK-2 was a minimum change fighter derivative of the SK-1 with a normal protruding enclosed cockpit, normal light alloy wing skinning, enlarged fin and rudder, and two 12.7mm BS machine-guns in the top decking of the forward fuselage. Flown in October 1940 by G.M. Shiyanov, but no production was authorised.