WRITTEN BY A NOTED AUTHORITY, THIS FULLY ILLUSTRATED STUDY DESCRIBES
AND DEPICTS THE MACHINE GUNS EQUIPPING SOVIET AND RUSSIAN TROOPS AFTER
1945.
Following the USSR's victory in World War II, the Soviet armed forces
adopted a succession of new or improved machine guns. At squad level,
the 7.62mm RPD and RP-46 light machine guns replaced the DPM,
themselves being supplanted by the RPK from 1961. Firing the lighter
5.45×39mm cartridge, the RPK-74 was issued from 1974 and remains in
use today. The 5.45mm RPK-16 entered Russian service in 2018.
Having served alongside the 7.62mm PM M1910 Maxim during World War II,
the 7.62mm SG-43 medium machine gun was updated as the SGM before
being supplanted by the 7.62mm PK general-purpose machine gun, issued
from 1961. The improved PKM made its debut in 1969 and still equips
Russian troops today, being joined by the PKP in 2001 and the AEK-999
in 2008.
First issued in 1938, the formidable 12.7mm DShK heavy machine gun
remains in Russian service today as the DShkM. It was joined by the
14.5mm KPV from 1949, the 12.7mm NSV from 1971 and the 12.7mm Kord
from 1998.
In this illustrated survey, Leroy Thompson investigates the origins,
development, combat use and legacy of all of these machine guns since
1945, from the start of the Cold War to the 2020s, casting light on
their battlefield effectiveness and tactical influence.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472867582
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter