Man if i was yukari

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Jules of Nature
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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Not today Justin
Three Goblin Art
almost home
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JBB: An Artblog!
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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Claire Keane

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

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One Nice Bug Per Day
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@based-don
Man if i was yukari
Last month I was pretty busy. Through bizarre circumstances I landed the chance to visit Korea, and there was no way I was turning it down. Of many interesting locations, two places of interest stu…
The Fabrique Nationale d’Herstal FAL (Fusil Automatique Léger) was the backbone of the Rhodesian Army during the Bush Wars. Highly regarded by troops for its ease of use, accuracy, quality, a…
Anti-government violence in Venezuela.
KulspruteGevär m/1921
In 1920 the Swedish Army purchased 700 Browning Automatic Rifles from Colt, before Fabrique Nationale acquired the European manufacturing rights. These weapons differed from the original M1918 pattern as they chambered Sweden’s 6.5x55 m/94 cartridge. They also had a detachable pistol grip and a bipod - something the original M1918 was not issued with.
The light machine gun was officially adopted in 1921 as the Kulsprutegevär m/1921. Indigenous production at Carl Gustafs Stads Gevärsfaktori began in 1923. The m/21 retained BAR’s 20-round magazine capacity but because of the 6.5mm cartridge case’s shape the straight box magazine was abandoned for a curved one (see image #2). The m/21 had checkering on both the foregrip and the butt and unlike the BAR had a front sight hood and rear sights were marked in metres rather than yards. The m/21 weighed approximately the same as a later M1918A2 at 8.9kg / 19.6lbs.
While the m/21 was a well made, reliable weapon which was very controllable in fully automatic fire it suffered the same drawbacks as the M1918. It’s fixed, relatively thin profiled barrel prevented it from prolonged sustained fire. In the mid 1930s Carl Gustaf began developing an improved version of the m/21 with a quick change barrel system. The m/37 removed the m/21’s large foregrip and added a folding carrying handle. This brought Sweden’s BARs in line with contemporary designs and the m/37 became the Swedish Army’s primary support weapon until the late 1950s.
The Kg m/37, a later evolution of the m/21 (source)
Photograph evidence suggests that the m/21, at least in limited numbers, saw action during the Soviet-Finnish Continuation War (1941-44). Sources suggest Finland, desperate for small arms, purchased 130 m/21s from Sweden in early 1940. The first photograph above shows a Finnish light machine gun team, part of Finland’s coastal infantry, on an exercise in the Turku islands in July 1941. The m/21 is unloaded and the gunner seems to have his eye very close to the rear sight. The second photograph shows a platoon of men from a Swedish volunteer battalion that fought for Finland during the Continuation War. Some of the volunteers are armed with captured Soviet PPD submachine guns and two men have Swedish m/21 light machine guns.
Carl Gustav produced approximately 7,500 m/21s and production of the m/37 continued until 1949 with 15,400 manufactured. The m/21 and m/37 remained in frontline service until the 1950s when the Swedish Army adopted the FN MAG as the Ksp 58. The m/21 and m/37 remained in limited service with artillery and reserve units until the early 1970s.
Sources:
Images: 1 2 3 4
The Light Machine Guns of Sweden, gotavapen.se, O. Janson (source)
Small Arms of the World, W.H.B Smith (1969)
6.5 mm light machinegun m/21, jaegerplatoon.net, (source)
Kg m/1921 and Kg m/1937 light machine guns, Modern Firearms, (source)
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A friend and I bought a bunch of surplus Russian plum and bakelite AK magazines last week to split since it was cheaper to buy in bulk from Legion USA (also, I had a coupon). The mags came today, and I now have what is possibly the single most cursed item I have ever owned.
This magazine was likely carried either by a Russian vehicle driver or possibly even Spetsnaz during the Chechen Wars of the 1990s, as the Tula star indicates it was issued with an AKS-74U carbine, which usually got sent to one of those two groups. I had a Russian acquaintance translate the trench art. The first inscription reads “death to the circumcised,” a reference to the predominantly-Muslim Chechens. The other reads “For Dima!!!”, who was presumably a friend of the soldier who carried this mag and was KIA.
This mag has seen some serious shit.
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Milky Way | cXs
Something good has come out the land of Trudeau, a milsurp shop focusing on old school gear that fits the Current Year. Founded in July 2016 by three serving members of the Canadian Armed Fo…
Wings of Fortune by Leadmill
Cowboy Cat ♥ Ocelot by mago Photo by @littlelovelyfuck ♥
Aesthetic: Boer operator
South-African SWAT team intervening in attempted armed robbery. Their motto: “You have never lived until you have almost died.”
This is one of the only videos I consistently rewatch every time it comes up
I so wish it didn’t have that stupid music
>implying the shitty rave pop isn’t half the aesthetic
it’s die antwoord too