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KRISS Vector CRB 18.6 inch barrel (Canadian version) The Vector CRB (carbine) is a semi-automatic carbine with a permanently affixed barrel shroud to the standard 5.5-inch barrel, extending it to 16-inch (410 mm), intended for states with short-barrel rifle bans, with an 18.6-inch (470 mm) version produced for the Canadian market. The standard ...
Renaud Kerbrat is a French gun designer and inventor. He is the owner or co-owner of various patents related to armament and precision technology. Born in Brittany, France, Renaud Kerbrat worked for various companies manufacturing ammunition and weapons in France and Belgium before establishing a company in Switzerland and creating weapons using his patented designs.
The KRISS KARD (KRISS Automatic, Research & Development) is a prototype of a semi-automatic pistol developed by KRISS USA (formerly Transformational Defense Industries (TDI)). It is chambered in .45 ACP , and utilizes the same Super V System as the KRISS Vector , but in a much smaller package to minimize recoil and muzzle rise.
Opponents of congestion pricing mocked Gov. Kathy Hochul Monday as two-faced for opposing Canadian tariffs but imposing her own $9 "tariff" or toll to enter Manhattan.
KRISS KARD (US – semi-automatic pistol – .45 ACP) KRISS Vector CRB (US – carbine – .45 ACP) KRISS Vector K10 (US – compact submachine gun – .45 ACP) KRISS Vector SBR (US – compact carbine – .45 ACP) KRISS Vector SDP (US – semi-automatic pistol – .45 ACP) Kropatschek (Kingdom of Portugal – bolt-action rifle – 8×60mmR)
A KRISS Vector, seen here with a suppressor. In 2004, Izhmash introduced the Vityaz-SN a 9mm Parabellum, closed bolt straight blowback operated submachine gun. It is based on the AK-74 rifle and offers a high degree of parts commonality with the AK-74. [46] It is the standard submachine gun for all branches of Russian military and police forces ...
In firearms, a blowback system is generally defined as an operating system in which energy to operate the firearm's various mechanisms, and automate the loading of another cartridge, is derived from the inertia of the spent cartridge case being pushed out the rear of the chamber by rapidly expanding gases produced by a burning propellant, typically gunpowder. [3]
The term arquebus was applied to many different types of guns. In their earliest form they were defensive weapon mounts on German city walls in the 15th Century. The addition of a shoulder stock, priming pan and matchlock mechanism in the late 15th century turned the arquebus into a handheld firearm, and also first firearm equipped with a trigger.