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The Valmet Sniper M86 was used as a basis for the Sako TRG sniper rifle line. Even though the TRG-21 obtained its origins from the successful Sako TR-6 target rifle and 1984–1986 development work for the hardly produced Valmet Sniper M86 rifle by the former Finnish state firearms company Valmet which merged with Sako, the 4.7 kg (10 lb 6 oz) TRG-21 was designed as a result of a thorough ...
The Tikka T3 is a series of bolt-action rifles manufactured by Sako under their Tikka brand in Riihimäki, Finland since 2003. [1] The series is available in a wide variety of different sight, calibre and stock configurations as well as several barrel lengths. The rifle series was developed by Sako product development team led by Kari Kuparinen ...
Sako TRG This page was last edited on 9 October 2024, at 15:30 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
Zastava M76 - 7.92×57mm sniper rifle - replaced by Remington and Sako rifles in service within the Croatian Army. M80 "Zolja" RPG - phased out due to dwindling stock. RPG-7 - phased out. BRDM-2 - in the local army museum. BTR-60 - 2 in the local army museum. M60P/M60SAN - Yugoslav-made APCs, two are in the local army museum.
The RK 95 TP (from Finnish Rynnäkkökivääri 95 taittoperä, 'Assault Rifle 95 folding stock'), officially 7.62 RK 95 TP and commercially known as the M95, is a 7.62×39mm Finnish assault rifle adopted in relatively small numbers by the Finnish Defence Forces in the 1990s.
Sako TRG-22 [4] Finland: The TRG-22 sniper rifle is used by the Alpha Group and the "Omega" special forces units of the National Guard. [19] Blaser R93 Tactical 2 Germany: Used by the Alpha group. [6] SIG Sauer SSG 3000: Used by Alpha Group and Guard Special Forces. [6] Desert Tech SRS United States: Introduced by the National Guard in 2016. [20]
The below table gives a list of firearms that can fire the 7.62×39mm cartridge, first developed and used by the Soviet Union in the late 1940s. [1] The cartridge is widely used due to the worldwide proliferation of Russian SKS and AK-47 pattern rifles, as well as RPD and RPK light machine guns.
The L42A1 was a 7.62×51mm NATO conversion of the Second World War era .303 British chambered Lee–Enfield Rifle No. 4 Mk1(T) and No. 4 Mk1*(T), which had remained in service for some time after the 7.62×51mm NATO L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle replaced the Rifle No.4 as the standard service rifle in 1957.