AK-47 facts for kids
Quick facts for kids AK-47 |
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AK-47 with 6H3 bayonet
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Type | Rifle |
Place of origin | Soviet Union |
Service history | |
In service | 1949–present (worldwide) |
Wars |
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Production history | |
Designer | Mikhail Kalashnikov |
Designed | 1946–1948 |
Manufacturer | Kalashnikov Concern and various others including Norinco |
Produced | 1949–present |
No. built | ≈ 75 million AK-47s, 100 million Kalashnikov-family weapons. |
Specifications | |
Mass | Without magazine: 3.47 kg (7.7 lb) Magazine, empty: 0.43 kg (0.95 lb) (early issue) 0.33 kg (0.73 lb) (steel) 0.25 kg (0.55 lb) (plastic) 0.17 kg (0.37 lb) (light alloy) |
Length | Fixed wooden stock: 880 mm (35 in) 875 mm (34.4 in) folding stock extended 645 mm (25.4 in) stock folded |
Barrel length | Overall length: 415 mm (16.3 in) Rifled bore length: 369 mm (14.5 in) |
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Cartridge | 7.62×39mm |
Action | Gas-operated, rotating bolt |
Rate of fire | Cyclic rate of fire: 600 rds/min Practical rate of fire: Semi-auto 40 rds/min Full-auto 100 rds/min |
Muzzle velocity | 715 m/s (2,350 ft/s) |
Effective firing range | 350 m (380 yd) |
Feed system | 30-round detachable box magazine There are also 5- 10-, 20- and 40-round box and 75- and 100-round drum magazines available |
Sights | 100–800 m adjustable iron sights Sight radius: 378 mm (14.9 in) |
The AK-47 is a Russian assault rifle first used in 1949. It and an updated version called the AKM were used by the Soviet Union's military (which was called the Soviet Army). It was later replaced by the AK-74.
The AK-47 was designed in 1947 by Mikhail Kalashnikov.
The AK-47 quickly became famous and spread all around the world because it was simple to fire, clean and maintain, and also because of its reliability, meaning that it can be fired for a long time without jamming. The AK-47 and its successors continue to be used by many of the world's armies. Many terrorist and insurgent groups also use the AK-47. It is a cheap, reliable, and easy-to-use weapon. The AK-47 was also available with a folding stock, the AKS-47, and a shortened version with the AKS74 folding stock, the AKMSU (used by armoured vehicle crews), although this was soon replaced by the AKS74U, which fires the 5.45 cartridge of the AK-74. There was also a light machine gun variant with a longer barrel and different shaped stock called the RPK.
The Russian military liked the AK's design so much that it was even used to design other types of weapons as well, including the Dragunov sniper rifle and the Saiga-12 semi-automatic shotgun.
The AK-47 uses gas-operated reloading. When the bullet is moved down the barrel, a little bit of the gas behind the bullet is made to go up a small tube that pushes away the bolt. The shooter does not have to reload by hand for every shot - the gun reloads by itself. When you pull the trigger, the bullet in the chamber fires. You then release and then pull the trigger again to fire another round. When used this way, it is called a semi-automatic firearm. A few AK-47's are made to be used only this way but most are fully automatic firearms.
Spread in third world countries
In the pro-communist states, the AK-47 became a symbol of the Third World revolution.
They were used in the Cambodian Civil War and the Cambodian–Vietnamese War. During the 1980s, the Soviet Union became the principal arms dealer to countries embargoed by Western nations. This included Middle Eastern nations such as Iran, Libya, and Syria, which welcomed Soviet Union backing against Israel. After the end of the Soviet Union (1989/90), AK-47s were sold openly and on the black market. More recently they have been seen in the hands of Islamic groups such as Al-Qaeda, ISIL, and the Taliban in Afghanistan and Iraq, and FARC, Ejército de Liberación Nacional guerrillas in Colombia.
The proliferation of this weapon is shown by more than just numbers. The AK-47 is included in the flag of Mozambique, an acknowledgment that the country gained its independence in large part through the effective use of their AK-47s. It is also found in the coats of arms of East Timor and the revolution era Burkina Faso, as well as in the flags of Hezbollah, FARC-EP, the New People's Army in the Phillipines, TKP/TIKKO and other "Revolutionary Peoples" groups.
Images for kids
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Việt Cộng soldier armed with an AK-47 with the fire selector in the safe setting
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Burundi peacekeepers prepare for next rotation to Somalia, 2006
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A U.S. Army M.P inspects a Chinese AK-47 recovered in Vietnam, 1968
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A Soviet Spetsnaz (special operations) group prepares for a mission in Afghanistan, 1988
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During the Soviet–Afghan War in the 1980s, several sources simultaneously armed both sides of the Afghan conflict, filling the country with AK-47s and their derivatives.
See also
In Spanish: AK-47 para niños