Sunday, 16 October 2011

SKS RIFLE, SIMONOV TYPE 56, Plus 500 free US military manuals and US Army field manuals when you sample this book (Kindle Edition)

SKS RIFLE, SIMONOV TYPE 56, Plus 500 free US military manuals and US Army field manuals when you sample this book
SKS RIFLE, SIMONOV TYPE 56, Plus 500 free US military manuals and US Army field manuals when you sample this book (Kindle Edition)
By US Army

Review & Description

SKS RIFLE, SIMONOV TYPE 56, Plus 500 free US military manuals and US Army field manuals when you sample this book


Take a look at the sample for this book and for details about downloading 500 free US military manuals as a thank you for taking the time to look at our book.


General
The Soviet-designed Simonov semiautomatic carbine, a gas-operated, integral box magazine-fed weapon equipped with a folding blade bayonet, is now obsolete in the Soviet Army, but is used by most of the other Eurasian Communist countries. This weapon has been manufactured in East Germany as the Karabiner-S, in the People’s Republic of China as the Type 56 semiautomatic carbine, in North Korea as the Type 63 carbine, and in Yugoslavia as the M59/66 rifle. The country of origin can be determined by the markings. The Soviet and East German weapons usually carry the year of manufacture and the serial number on the front left of the receiver.


SKS RIFLE, SIMONOV TYPE 56, Plus 500 free US military manuals and US Army field manuals when you sample this book


Take a look at the sample for this book and for details about downloading 500 free US military manuals as a thank you for taking the time to look at our book.


General
The Soviet-designed Simonov semiautomatic carbine, a gas-operated, integral box magazine-fed weapon equipped with a folding blade bayonet, is now obsolete in the Soviet Army, but is used by most of the other Eurasian Communist countries. This weapon has been manufactured in East Germany as the Karabiner-S, in the People’s Republic of China as the Type 56 semiautomatic carbine, in North Korea as the Type 63 carbine, and in Yugoslavia as the M59/66 rifle. The country of origin can be determined by the markings. The Soviet and East German weapons usually carry the year of manufacture and the serial number on the front left of the receiver.


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