List of 7.62×39mm firearms
Appearance
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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AR-M1 | Assault rifle | Bulgaria | 1998–present | 7.62×39mm variant of AR-M1 rifle, copy of the AK-47 and AK-74. | |
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. | |
Maadi arm | Assault rifle | Egypt | 1960–present | Indigenous version of the Soviet AKM rifle. | |
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. | |
Valmet M-76 | Semi-automatic | Finland | 1972–present | Civilian semi-automatic variant of the RK 62. | |
RK 95 TP | Assault rifle | Finland | 1990–present | ||
Sako M90 (M92S & M95S) | Semi-automatic | Finland | 1993–present | Civilian semi-automatic variant of the RK 95. | |
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. | |
KLS
KLF KLT |
Assault rifle | Iran | ? | Iranian versions of the AK platform modeled after the Type 56 , MPi-KMS 72 and the AKM. | |
AK-113 | Assault rifle | Iran | 2018–present | Iranian versions of the AK-103. | |
IWI Galil ACE | Assault rifle | Israel | 2008–present | 7.62×39mm variant of IWI Galil ACE. | |
Beretta ARX160 | Assault rifle | Italy | 2008–present | 7.62×39mm variant of Beretta ARX160. | |
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 | ||
TKB-408 | Assault rifle | Soviet Union | 1946 | Prototype only. | |
AK-47 | Assault rifle | Soviet Union | 1949–present | ||
TKB-517 | Assault rifle | Soviet Union | 1952 | Prototype only. | |
TKB-059 | Assault rifle | Soviet Union | 1960 | Prototype only. | |
Dlugov assault rifle | Assault rifle | Soviet Union | 1953 | Prototype only. | |
AKM | Assault rifle | Soviet Union | 1959–present | Improved variant of the AK-47. | |
AKMSU | Carbine assault rifle | Soviet Union
Pakistan |
1980 | ||
RPD | Light machine gun | Soviet Union | 1944–present | ||
RPK | Light machine gun | Soviet Union | 1961–present | ||
Zastava M19 | Carbine modular assault rifle | Serbia | 2022–present | Based on the FN SCAR. | |
Malyuk | Bullpup Assault rifle | Ukraine | 2015–present | 7.62×39mm variant of Malyuk. | |
M4-WAC-47 | Assault rifle | Ukraine | 2018–present | ||
Colt CM901 | Assault Rifle | United States | 2013–present | Its semi-automatic variant is the LE901-16S. | |
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. | |
Desert Tech MDR | Assault rifle | United States | 2014 | 7.62×39mm variant of Desert Tech MDR. | |
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. | |
STL-1A | Assault rifle | Vietnam | 2019–present | Vietnamese copy of AKM. | |
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 M72 | Light machine gun | Yugoslavia | 1973–present | ||
Zastava M92 | Carbine assault rifle | Yugoslavia Serbia |
1992–present | Variant of Zastava M70. | |
Zastava M21A | Carbine assault rifle | Yugoslavia Serbia |
2005–present | 7.62×39mm variant of the Zastava M21. |
See also
[edit]- List of assault rifles
- List of 7.62×54mmR firearms
- List of 5.56×45mm NATO firearms
- 5.45×39mm
- 5.8×42mm
References
[edit]- ^ 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.
- ^ "Chinese Arisakas in 7.62x39mm". March 28, 2011.