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Type 63 hatchlings are released into the sea. There they will grow to maturity before returning to land.
via Reddit
Chinese soldiers with type 63 rifles
Chinese Type 81
In the mid 1960s the Chinese military began to seek a replacement for their assortment of Soviet-licensed small arms including the Type 56 semi-automatic rifle (SKS), the Type 56 assault rifle (AK-47) and the Type 56 light machine gun (RPD). The result was the Type 63, first issued in 1968, which combined characteristics of both the SKS and AK-47. The Type 63, however, failed to meet accuracy expectations and the Chinese military found it unsatisfactory.
In 1979, the Chinese People’s Liberation Army came up against the Vietnamese Army during the First Sino-Vietnamese War and found themselves at a distinct disadvantage. The PLA was predominantly still armed with the semi-automatic Type 56 carbine. Only officers, NCOs and specialist troops carried the Type 56 assault rifle. The Vietnamese, in contrast, were almost entirely armed with AK-pattern weapons. The Chinese resumed their search for a replacement rifle, appointing small arms designer Wang Zi Jun to develop a more reliable infantry rifle and light machine gun.
China’s earlier Type 63 (source)
The Chinese military wanted the new rifle to have an improved service life, use existing AK and SKS pattern tooling to speed up production and have improved reliability and accuracy comparable to the AK. The result was the Type 81 which used a short stroke gas operated action with a two-lug rotating bolt. The rifle chambered 7.62×39mm and fed from 20 or 30 round box magazines. The rifle initially had a wooden buttstock, however, this was replaced with a folding stock similar to that used in the Type 56. The Type 81 beat a rival rifle during trials and the Chinese military adopted the rifle in 1982, with early production models tested in combat during the Second Sino-Vietnamese War, full production began in 1986.
The Type 81 Squad Automatic Weapon variant features a heavier profile barrel, bipod, additional carrying handle and a fixed butt stock with a profile similar to the Soviet RPD. It was designed to fulfil a role similar to the Soviet RPK and fires from a closed bolt (see image #5). The Type 81 light machine gun can feed from either standard Type 81 rifle magazines or a 75 round drum magazine.
The Type 81′s longer receiver improves the weapon's recoil characteristics, accuracy and controllability when compared to the AK-pattern Type 56. The Type 81 also abandoned the AK’s large safety/selector lever for a small selector switch on the left side of the rifle. The Type 81 has a detachable rather than integral bayonet and is also able to fire rifle grenades.
Bangladeshi soldier with a BD 08 (source)
The Type 81 entered production at the Heilongjiang Province state arsenal while the arsenal in Yunnan Province built the light machine gun variant. Bangladesh’s Ordnance Factory began production a licensed copy of the Type 81, designated the BD-08, in 2008. It is also in service with the Sri Lanka military and elements of the Pakistani Army. The Type 81 remains in Chinese service but has been largely replaced by the more modern bullpup QBZ-95 and QBZ-03 - a modernised traditional configuration rifle that uses a derivative of the Type 81′s action, both rifles chamber China’s 5.8x42mm cartridge.
Sources:
Image Sources: 1 2 3 4 5
The Chinese Type 81, Guns & Ammo, T. Yan, (2007) [source]
Indigenous Machine Guns of China, Small Arms Defense Journal, M. Popenker, (source)
Type 81 Assault Rifle, World Guns, (source)
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World of Tanks gameplay on the new Japanese tier 8 premium heavy tank Type 63.
A Chinese Type 63 APC entering Cao Bằng, Vietnam, February 22nd, 1973.
The Type 63 APC is a Chinese APC, one of China's first armored vehicles ever built fully by itself. It entered service in the 1960s with the People's Liberation Army, and saw export sales to 14 countries, notably Iraq, North Korea, and Vietnam. Vietnamese Type 63s, designated K-63 in Vietnamese service, entered service in December 1971. Less than 8 years after this, Type 63s were part of an invading Chinese force into northern Vietnam, where they were a part of heavy fighting and suffered in the rugged environment.
The Norinco Type 63 (Chinese: 63式; pinyin: Liùsān shì) is a Chinese amphibious light tank. First fielded in 1963, it is in many ways similar to the earlier Soviet PT-76
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