List of 7.62×39mm firearms

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.

This table is sortable for every column.

Name Type Country Image Years of service Notes
Type 38 rifle Bolt-action rifle  China 1950s–1960s Rechambered from the original 6.5×50mmSR Arisaka.[2]
Type 56 carbine Semi-automatic rifle  China 1956–present Licensed variant of SKS.
Norinco SKS-M Semi-automatic rifle  China 1980s–present Commercial variant of the Type 56 carbine.
Norinco Type 86S Bullpup semi-automatic rifle  China 1986–present Based on the Type 56 assault rifle.
Type 56 assault rifle Assault rifle  China 1956–present Variant of the AK-47 and AKM.
Type 63 assault rifle Assault rifle  China 1963–present Based on the Type 56 carbine and Type 56 assault rifle.
Type 81 assault rifle Assault rifle  China 1983–present
vz. 52/57 Semi-automatic rifle  Czechoslovakia 1957–1959 7.62×39mm variant of vz. 52 rifle.
vz. 58 Assault rifle  Czechoslovakia 1959–present
CZ BREN 2 Assault rifle  Czech Republic 2011–present 7.62×39mm variant of CZ. BREN 2 rifle.
MPi-KM Assault rifle  East Germany 1964–present Licensed variant of AKM.
Rasheed Carbine Semi-automatic rifle  Egypt 1960–present Derived from Hakim Rifle.
RK 62 Assault rifle  Finland 1965–present Based on the Polish licensed variant of AK-47.
RK 95 TP Assault rifle  Finland 1990–present
KK 62 Light machine gun  Finland 1962–present
AMD-65 Assault rifle  Hungary 1967–present Licensed variant of AKM.
AMP-69 Assault rifle  Hungary 1974–present Licensed variant of AKM.
AK-63 Assault rifle  Hungary 1977–present Licensed variant of AKM.
Tabuk Sniper Rifle Designated marksman rifle  Iraq 1978–present Modified version of Zastava M70.
IWI Galil ACE Assault rifle  Israel 2008–present 7.62×39mm variant of IWI Galil ACE.
Type 58 assault rifle Assault rifle  North Korea 1958–present Variant of the AK-47.
Kbkg wz. 1960 Assault rifle  Poland 1960–present Variant of the AK-47.
Beryl M762 Assault rifle  Poland 1995–present
PM md. 63 Assault rifle  Romania 1963–present Licensed variant of AKM.
OTs-14-1A Groza-1 Bullpup assault rifle  Russia 1994–1999 Based on the AKS-74U.
AK-103 Assault rifle  Russia 2001–present
AK-104 Carbine assault rifle  Russia 2001–present
AK-15 Assault rifle  Russia 2016–present 7.62×39mm variant of AK-12.
KORD 6P68 Assault rifle  Russia 2018–present
AK-203 Assault rifle  Russia 2022–present Upgraded version of the AK-103.
SKS Semi-automatic rifle  Soviet Union 1945–present
AS-44 Assault rifle  Soviet Union 1944–1945
AK-47 Assault rifle  Soviet Union 1949–present
Dlugov assault rifle Assault rifle  Soviet Union 1953 Prototype only.
AKM Assault rifle  Soviet Union 1959–present Improved variant of the AK-47.
RPD Light machine gun  Soviet Union 1944–present
RPK Light machine gun  Soviet Union 1961–present
Malyuk Bullpup Assault rifle  Ukraine 2015–present
M4-WAC-47 Assault rifle  Ukraine 2018–present
Ruger Mini Thirty Semi-automatic rifle  United States 1987–present 7.62×39mm variant of Ruger Mini-14.
WASR-10 Semi-automatic rifle  Romania
 United States
1996–present Semi-automatic variant of PM md. 63 for United States civilian market.
CMMG Mk47 Mutant Semi-automatic rifle  United States 2014–present Derivative of ArmaLite AR-10.
SR-47 Assault rifle  United States 2001 7.62×39mm variant of the AR15.
STV rifle Assault rifle  Vietnam 2019–present Licensed variant of IWI Galil ACE.
Zastava M59/66 Semi-automatic rifle  Yugoslavia 1964–present Licensed variant of SKS.
Zastava M70 Assault rifle  Yugoslavia 1970–present Unlicensed derivative of AK-47.
Zastava M92 Carbine assault rifle  Yugoslavia
 Serbia
1992–present Variant of Zastava M70.

See also

References

  1. Monetchikov, Sergei (2005). История русского автомата [The History of Russian Assault Rifle] (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Military Historical Museum of Artillery, Engineers and Signal Corps. pp. 24–25. ISBN 978-5-98655-006-0.
  2. "Chinese Arisakas in 7.62x39mm". March 28, 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.