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AK-47

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The "Avtomat Kalashnikova model 1947 g." or AK-47 is a rifle designed in 1947 by Mikhail Kalashnikov after his design of the SKS and produced by IZH; it was widely used by the USSR armed forces from the 1950s through the 1980s. It is classified as an assault rifle, a mid-caliber rifle (7.62 mm, which is approximately equal to .30 caliber) that can be fired semi-automatically, or in fully-automatic bursts. It is intentionally smaller and shorter-ranged than WWII battle rifles.

The AK47 is cheap, light to carry, and easy to clean and repair in the field. It can fire even after being submerged in water, or covered in dirt. It is mostly reliable though the ejector pin tends to break. Derivative designs replaced the AK-47 during the 1980s.

AK-47 and derivatives are favoured by non-Western powers because of their ease of use, robustness, and simplicity to manufacture. Copies were made by many factories in other countries including Finland, Hungary, China, Poland, Romania, Egypt and Pakistan, where they remain in production today. Derivative designs were made in Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Finland, Hungary, Israel, North Korea, South Africa, and Yugoslavia. Estimates of total number of units produced vary from 55 million to 100 million.

The AK-47 is also manufactured in Dara Adamkhel in tribal areas of Pakistan. It became so popular in Pakistan that it has become a social symbol for the tribal people who live there. Owning an AK-47 is considered to be proof of being a real man.

The AK-47 is included in Mozambique coat of arms (formerly also in Burkina Faso coat of arms), as a homage to its use in liberation movements against imperialist countries. Kalash, a derivative from "Kalashnikov" is used as a boy name in some African countries.

Operation

File:AK-components.jpg
A diagram showing the design of AKM. Includes instructions for disassembly of the gun for maintenance

To fire, insert a loaded magazine, move the right selector lever on the right to the bottom position, and pull back and release the cocking lever on the right top. Aim and pull the trigger.

Notable features

The selector lever is a large lever on the right side, easy to manipulate with mittens under arctic conditions.

The highest position of the selector lever is safe. Safe prevents trigger movement and cocking. In many models, this position is unmarked. International weapons may place a "0" in this position.

The bottom position is single-shot. On Russian weapons this is marked "ОД" in Cyrillic, from ОДин (one). International weapons may have a "1" or a single dot.

The middle position is full automatic. On Russian weapons this is marked with "АВ" in Cyrillic, from АВтомат (automatic). International weapons have an infinity-sign or multiple dots in this position.

Classic AK-series have a cycle rate of 600RPM. Newer versions have delayed automatic sears that cycle at 300RPM.

The standard flip-up iron sight is calibrated with each numeral indicating in hundreds of meters. It is released by squeezing the two buttons on the back end. The standard calibration of the flipped-down sight is 50 meters, the normal minimal distance for aimed fire. Distances below this range are usually handled with instinctive fire. For night fighting, Russian models have a flip-up luminous dot, also calibrated at 50m. The sights are one of the most heavily-criticized feature of the rifle, being both farther from the eye than many common rifle sights, and less accurate than peep-sights, such as those found on the M16 rifles.

The magazine release is in front of the trigger guard. The trigger guard is very large, to permit gloved fingers.

A sling is provided for accurate aimed fire. It should wrap around the left forearm.

Models for paratroopers, horse troops and mechanized troops have folding stocks. Most fold sideways, but a few fold forward over the pistol grip to make submachine guns.

Bullpup models exist, in which a shoulder pad is bolted onto the back of the receiver, and the trigger is moved up to the front of the barrel. These weigh less because they have no stock, yet they still have full-length barrels.

Some models include an integral folding bayonet. Some makes have a removable bayonet; some of these can attach to their scabbards to form a scissors-style barbed-wire cutter.

Some models include a gas valve on the forward gas port (above the barrel) to permit firing grenades. Sometimes the valve is controlled by flipping a special "grenade sight" up into position.

The barrel and chamber are chromium-plated, to resist corrosion, but cleaning after every firing is recommended. Most military ammunition uses corrosive primers.

Under the barrel is a cleaning rod. It bends slightly for removal. In standard AKs, cleaning patches and a metal bottle of oil and solvent are in compartments in the shoulder-pad of the stock.

To field strip, release the magazine catch, remove the magazine, and cock the rifle, holding the left hand ready over the receiver to catch any ejected cartridge. Release the catch on the right side of the rear sight. Push the piston assembly cover forward, detaching it from the rear receiver. Lift it and then pull it backwards. Remove the piston assembly and bolt. Clean as needed, with special attention to the barrel, gas hole and gas piston. Oil slightly and reassemble. Before inserting the magazine, press the trigger to release the spring tension.

Ballistics

The standard AK-47 or AKM fires a 7.62x39mm round with a muzzle velocity of 710 m/s. Muzzle energy is 2,970 joules. Cartridge length is 38.6mm, weight is 18.21g. Projectile weight is 7.91g.

The new model AK-74 fires a 5.45x39mm round with a muzzle velocity of 900 m/s. Muzzle energy is 1,385 joules. The cartridge weight is 10.75g. Projectile weight is 3.42g.

Both bullets are full metal jacket designs. The outer plating is copper and zinc. The shell is steel. There's an inner layer of soft lead, with a core that's a steel penetrator. There is a bubble in the nose.

When shot into 10% ballistic gelatin at 4C, the bullets always tumble. X-ray examinations of ten bullets showed that the lead invariably shifts into the bubble in the nose, possibly unbalancing the bullet.

With the 5.45mm bullet, the tumbling produced a maximum wound expansion twice, at 10 and 40cm of depth. With the 7.62mm bullet, the maximum wound expansion occurred twice, at about 30 and 40 cm. 40cm is the average thickness of a human trunk.

Some people have said that the Russians were concerned about the lower energies of the assault-rifle bullets and designed them to cause more damage than might otherwise occur.

The rate of fire is between 300 and 600 rounds per minute. Later models have modifications to the trigger assembly and bolt to fire more slowly. This helps make the weapon more controllable and waste less ammunition. This can help reduce logistic requirements.

History

The AK-47 was not the first assault rifle but was derived from earlier German and Italian designs.

Wounded in the battle of Brausk, tank sergeant Mikhail Timofeyevich Kalashnikov began imagining his weapon while still in hospital. He had been informed that Elisarov and Semin had developed in 1943 a 7,62 x 39 cartridge, so a weapon was needed for it. Sudayev's PPS43 was preferred to Kalashnikov's first attempt, but having examined a STG 44, in 1946 Kalashnikov found the design for rifle (and the similarities remain evident). There were many difficulties during the first phase of production, as the Soviets were not able to use stamped sheet metal to build it. Instead, they preferred machining the components. Even though it was famous as the "AK 47" (where AK stands for Avtomat Kalashnikova, or Kalashnikov's Machine gun), the Soviets were not able to distribute it to soldiers until 1956. The first transfer-stamped sheet metal version appeared in 1959 and is named AKM. The last Soviet version is AK 74, and is scheduled for replacement by the AN-94 Nikonov rifle.

Versions

AK47 and AKM have been extensively modified and improved upon since their first designs.

Standard Kalashnikovs include:

  • AK-47 1948-51, 7.62x39mm. The very earliest models had a stamped sheet metal receiver. Now rare.
  • AK-47 1952, 7.62x39mm: has a milled receiver and wooden buttstock and hand-guard. Barrel and chamber are chrome-plated to resist corrosion. Rifle weight 4.2Kg.
  • AKM 7.62x39mm: a revised, lower-cost version of the AK-47; receiver is precision-stamped sheet-metal. Rifle weight 3.61Kg.
  • AKS-74 5.45x39mm (AK-74); note the new, much smaller ammunition.
  • AK-74M 5.45x39mm folding stock (for motorised infantry)
  • AKSU 5.45x39mm, tanker's self-defense weapon, folding stock, short barrel, altered sight and gas mechanism.

Later designations:

  • AK-101 5.56x45 mm round (NATO round)
  • AK-102 short stock 101
  • AK-103 7.62x39mm round
  • AK-104 short stock 103
  • AK-105 5.45x39mm round (short stock)

Derivative designs included these:

  • SVD Dragunov 7.62x54mm 10 shot sniper rifle. This is semiautomatic, with a skeletal laminated "outline" stock. The standard optical sight is the PSO-1. Uses a unique, short-stroke piston system because a standard piston for the larger cartridge was so heavy that it upset the point of aim. The piston moves a bolt-carrier. Developed in 1958 by Yevgeniy Feodorovich Dragunov, a gunsmith at the Izhevsk Machine Factory, where he originally designed sporting rifles.
  • MedVed Sporting Rifle, 9x54mm. Very similar to the SVD.
  • RPK 74 squad automatic weapon,
  • AKR (Russians evolution),
  • Type 56 (China),
  • Yugoslavia: M64, M64A, M70, M70A, M79B, M79A1B, M77, M82, The M77B1 takes a NATO 7.62x51mm rifle round, and is Yugoslavia's squad automatic weapon.
  • Finland: Assault rifle model Rk 62 has been offered in 13 variants, with 7.62x39mm, 5.56x45, and 7.62x51 cartridges and metal, folding and plastic stocks, Valmet M60, M62, M76, M82. The M82 is a bullpup design, with the action and magazine moved into the stock, and the trigger far forward on the barrel.
  • Galil (Israel),
  • Mod.58 (Czechoslovakia),
  • PGM-DGM-60 (Poland), which can shoot grenades
  • East Germany:MPiK, cal.22LR KKMPi69, STG940 "Wieger"
  • FPK, AKM-R, (Romania), WASR-10 a low quality semi-auto civilian version that only accepts smaller magazines.
  • HungaryAMD-63, AMD-65, AMP-69
  • North Korea Type 58 and 68, The 68 has a distinctive perforated stock-strut.
  • The South African R4 and R5 rifles.

Many foreign variants and foreign produced models exist.

See also: List of modern armament manufacturers

Sources

Edward Clinton Ezell, "The AK-47 Story." Ezell is curator of weapons at the U.S. Smithsonian Museum.

External link